Ccss Math Lesson Plan
Ccss Math Lesson Plan
Class/Grade: _____________________Teacher(s):_____________________________________
1. Cluster:
2. Relevance/Rationale: (The following are process questions to help you decide the
appropriate lesson type.)
a) Why are the outcomes of this lesson important and applicable in the real world?
b) Why are these outcomes essential for future learning?
c) What level of rigor is appropriate?
Conceptual Understanding Procedural skill & fluency Application
d) How is conceptual understanding going to be developed?
e) How will students interact with the mathematics?
4. Learning Target(s):
Lesson Concept(s): Students will understand Lesson Skills(s): Students will be able to
Key Questions: What questions will you use to promote mathematical thinking?
7. Resources/Materials: (What texts, digital resources, & materials will be used in this lesson?)
8. Access for All: (How will you ensure that all students have access to and are able to engage
appropriately in this lesson? Consider all aspects of student diversity.)
EL Learners-
Special Needs-
Low Performing-
Advanced-
9. Reflection: (The following are process questions to help with reflect and reteach)
Debate: Students are able to analyze situations by breaking them into cases, and can recognize
and use counterexamples. They justify their conclusions, communicate them to others, and
respond to the arguments of others. Students at all grades can listen or read the arguments of
others, decide whether they make sense, and ask useful questions to clarify or improve the
arguments.
Direct Instruction: A systematic method of instruction wherein the teacher leads the students
in a carefully constructed step-by-step lesson.
Discovery: Students will grapple with a math task that requires them to discover or uncover
mathematics that has not been presented directly. This will position students to necessitate the
mathematics the teacher intends to draw out through the lesson. Students will personalize the
mathematical ideas which will in turn create a deeper independent understanding.
Drill and Practice: Students will acquire rote skills through repetitive practice. These are small
tasks such as memorizing or practicing facts and procedures. Practice does not necessarily
make perfect, but does make permanent.
Modeling: Students will apply the mathematics they know to solve problems arising in everyday
life. Students make assumptions and approximations, and then analyze those relationships
mathematically to draw conclusions. Students interpret their mathematical results in the
context of the situation and reflect on whether the results make sense.
Reinforcement: A lesson that encompasses several mathematical concepts that have been
previously taught. This new lesson would present or repackage them in an integrated format.
This is different from direct instruction or drill and practice is that students are applying
multiple skill sets simultaneously.