Module 5
Module 5
Module 5
MODULE NO. 5
INTRODUCTION
For many teachers, having a classroom full of engaged students who all feel challenged can seem
like a pipe dream – especially when time and resources are limited. While it may be impractical to provide
each student with a personalized learning experience, you can increase your reach by understanding your
students’ abilities, motivations, and roadblocks and designing lesson plans around them. Though students
are at the heart of every lesson plan, not every lesson plan is created equal. Incorporating more
collaborative, creative, and intentional methods into your teaching will not only enhance your student’s
classroom experience but can also offer you the satisfaction of knowing your pupils are truly grasping – and
enjoying – their newfound knowledge.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
a. identify the different parts, functions, and characteristics of a learner-centered lesson plan;
b. compare and contrast an exemplar learner-centered lesson plan with teacher- or content-
centered lesson plans;
c. craft a lesson plan chunk emphasizing the use of a selected strategy; and
d. implement the designed lesson plan chunk and the appropriately chosen/selected strategy in
response to learners’ diverse needs, learning styles, and backgrounds (i.e. linguistic, cultural,
socio-economic, and religious)
LEARNING CONTENTS
A. LEARNER-CENTERED LESSON PLANS.
Here are five tips to bolster interest, improve retention of information and strengthen rapport with
your students.
Mix it up. Use a combination of delivery methods (lectures, text, videos, quizzes, and group
activities) to ensure each lesson appeals to auditory, visual, and kinesthetic learners.
Make it relatable. Putting the content in the context of real-life can help students see it from a
different vantage point and thus improve understanding.
Flip your classroom. Some schools have found success by “flipping” their classrooms, i.e.,
switching up how a student’s time is traditionally spent with their teacher.
Make a personal connection. Getting to know your students as individuals not only establishes
credibility and trust, it also provides valuable insight that can guide your teaching.
Provide options. Typical classrooms include students of varying comprehension and skill levels,
which means they need varying levels of support and practice.
• A detailed lesson plan is a thorough description of a teacher’s instructions for a particular class. A
teacher usually makes a daily lesson plan to teach a specific course of instructions. If a teacher
plans on delivering more than one lesson in one class, he or she can divide the material into
multiple lesson plans.
• Detailed Lesson Plan (DLP) is a teacher’s “roadmap” for a lesson. It contains a detailed description
of the steps a teacher will take to teach a particular topic. A typical DLP contains the following parts:
Objectives, Content, Learning Resources, Procedures, Evaluation, and Assignment.
• A daily lesson log or DLL is a template used by teachers to log parts of their daily lessons/classes. It
covers days or a week of lessons and contains 6 components- objectives, content, learning
materials/resources, procedures, remarks, and definition of terms.
Purpose of Lesson Planning
• A lesson plan serves as a ground that a teacher uses every day to determine what students will
learn.
• Now lessons will be taught as well as how learning will be evaluated.
• It enables them to function more effectively in the classroom by giving a detailed outline that they
adhere to among each class.
• To make sure that every moment spent in class is used to teach meaningful concepts
Importance of Lesson Planning
• Objectives of learning
• Giving learning chance to discover
• It focuses on the class as a whole rather than contracting on the teacher.
Benefits:
Objective
- it provides goals to be attained (Behavioral Objectives - CPA)
-it gives directions for the class discussion, and it calls for what outcomes to expect.
2 Types of Objectives
◽Specific Objective
◽General Objective
Subject Matter and Its Sources
-textbooks, library references, etc. should be stated in the lesson plan.
Materials
-necessary aids to teaching and should be included in a lesson plan.
Teaching Aids and Devices
-these are maps, graphs, flashcards, pictures, objects, slides, etc.
Procedure
-both teacher and learners’ activity in a detailed plan.
Evaluation
Assignment
Moves the focus away from the teacher toward the student, emphasis on students’ perceptions of a
positive learning environment & interpersonal relationships with the teacher
• Lesson Objectives. Lesson objectives list what students will be able to do after completing the
lesson.
• Related Requirements. Related requirements are national, state, or school standards that dictate
what you need to teach in a class.
• Lesson Materials. The third section of your lesson plan is the list of materials that you need to
teach the lesson and measure student outcomes.
• Lesson Procedure. Your lesson procedure is an in-depth explanation of how the lesson will
progress in the classroom.
• Assessment Method. The assessment method measures whether your students learned a
lesson’s information and met your lesson objectives.
• Lesson Reflection. The lesson reflection portion of a lesson plan encourages teachers to take
notes on how to improve a lesson after it has been completed
a) Learning objectives.
-is an assessment tool that allows a teacher to quantify their impact on student achievement
b) Teaching Content
-The topics, themes, beliefs, behaviors, concepts, and facts, often grouped within each
subject or learning area under knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes, that are expected to
be learned and form the basis of teaching and learning.
c) Lesson Planning
- A lesson plan is a teacher's daily guide for what students need to learn, how it will be
taught, and how learning will be measured. Lesson plans help teachers be more effective in
the classroom by providing a detailed outline to follow each class period.
Pre-planning. Preplanning is deciding how to get something done before starting on it.
An example of preplanning is making a list of how you're going to accomplish getting
everything done in a day.
- Implementation
Chunking
A chunking activity involves breaking down a difficult text into more manageable pieces and
having students rewrite these “chunks” in their own words. Chunking helps students identify
keywords and ideas, develops their ability to paraphrase, and makes it easier for them to organize
and synthesize information.
Procedure:
1. Preparation. Chunking can be used with challenging texts of any length. A paragraph can be
chunked into phrases and sentences, while a reading of several pages can be chunked into
paragraphs or sections. It is often helpful to have students record information about each
“chunk” in a graphic organizer, which you may want to prepare in advance.
2. Review Reading Strategies. Before having students work on paraphrasing the text, it is helpful
to go over specific decoding strategies. You may want to post the following “reading reminders”
on the board:
Circle words that are unfamiliar.
Use context clues to help define these words.
Look up the meaning of unknown words.
Write synonyms for these new words in the text.
Underline important places and people and identify them.
Read aloud.
Read multiple times.
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3. Chunk the Text. “Chunking the text” simply means breaking the text down into smaller parts.
Sometimes teachers chunk the text in advance for students, especially if this is the first time
students have used this strategy. Other times, teachers ask students to chunk the text. Students
can work on chunking texts with partners or their own. Depending on students’ reading levels,
the lengths of chunks can vary. A struggling reader may work with phrases rather than
sentences. A stronger reader can often work with longer chunks.
4. Students Paraphrase Meaning. Students should rewrite “chunks” in their own words. By the
end of this activity, students should have a paraphrased version of the original text.
5. Assess and Share. The paraphrased text can be used to evaluate students’ understanding and
reading ability. You can also have students compare their versions of the text. This step often
leads to interesting discussions about interpretation – how people can often find different
meanings in the same words.
Microteaching Basics
Micro-Teaching is one form of teaching practice model or teaching training. In actual contexts,
teaching contains many actions, including technical delivery of materials, use of methods, use of media,
guide learning, motivation, classroom management, assessment, evaluation, and so on. In other words,
it is a very important act for the teaching and learning process. Therefore, to master basic teaching
skills, prospective teachers need to practice partially, meaning that each component of basic teaching
skills needs to be mastered separately. Practice mastering basic teaching skills such as those called
micro-teaching.
This is a simple table to show the comparison between Micro Teaching and Real Teaching :
A. Online Resources
https://www.startheregoplaces.com/teacher/professional-development/tips-creating-more-
student-centered-lesson-plans/
http://www.psychology.sunysb.edu/hwaters/psy327/slide%20sets/
327Set12a_TeacherInstruct.pdf
https://www.facinghistory.org/resource-library/teaching-strategies/chunking
https://steemit.com/steemiteducation/@affiedalfayed/the-basic-concept-of-micro-teaching-
for-prospective-teachers-201797t204224811z#:~:text=The%20concept%20of%20micro
%20teaching,ability%20of%20the%20prospective%20teachers.