What Is A Lesson Plan
What Is A Lesson Plan
What Is A Lesson Plan
A lesson plan is the instructor’s road map of what students need to learn and how it will be done effectively during the class time. Then, you can
design appropriate learning activities and develop strategies to obtain feedback on student learning. Having a carefully constructed lesson plan for
each 3-hour lesson allows you to enter the classroom with more confidence and maximizes your chance of having a meaningful learning experience
with your students.
Learning Objectives
Learning activities
Assessment to check for student understanding
A lesson plan provides you with a general outline of your teaching goals, learning objectives, and means to accomplish them, and is by no means
exhaustive. A productive lesson is not one in which everything goes exactly as planned, but one in which both students and instructor learn from
each other. You may refer to an example of a 3 hour lesson
plan here.
Before Class: Steps for preparing a lesson plan
Listed below are 6 steps for preparing your lesson plan before your class.
Characteristic Description
Free from jargon and complex vocabulary; describe specific and achievable tasks (such as ‘describe’, ‘analyse’ or ‘evaluate’) NOT
Clearly stated tasks
vague tasks (like ‘appreciate’, ‘understand’ or ‘explore’).
Important learning goals Describe the essential (rather than trivial) learning in the course which a student must achieve.
Achievable Can be achieved within the given period and sufficient resources are available.
Demonstrable and
Can be demonstrated in a tangible way; are assessable; achievement and quality of achievement can be observed.
measurable
Fair and equitable All students, including those with disabilities or constraints, have a fair chance of achieving them.
Linked to course and
Consider the broader goals - i.e. course, program and institutional goals.
program objectives
The Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (link) is a useful resource for crafting learning objectives that are demonstrable and
measurable.
As you plan your learning activities, estimate how much time you will spend on each. Build in time for extended explanation or discussion, but also
be prepared to move on quickly to different applications or problems, and to identify strategies that check for understanding. Some questions to
think about as you design the learning activities you will use are:
What will I do to explain the topic?
What will I do to illustrate the topic in a different way?
How can I engage students in the topic?
What are some relevant real-life examples, analogies, or situations that can help students understand the topic?
What will students need to do to help them understand the topic better?
Many activities can be used to engage learners. The activity types (i.e. what the student is doing) and their examples provided below are by no
means an exhaustive list, but will help you in thinking through how best to design and deliver high impact learning experiences for your students in a
typical lesson.
Learning
Activity Type Description
Activity
Drill and Problem/task is presented to students where they are asked to provide
practice the answer; may be timed or untimed.
Interaction with content Convey concepts verbally, often with visual aids (e.g. presentation
Lecture
slides).
Students are more likely to retain information presented in these ways if they Exercise to assess the level of student understanding and questions
are asked to interact with the material in some way. Quiz
can take many forms, e.g. multiple-choice, short-structured, essay etc.
Student Oral report where students share their research on a topic and take on
presentation a position and/or role.
Interaction with digital content Goal-oriented exercise that encourages collaboration and/or
Game
competition within a controlled virtual environment.
Students experiment with decision making, and visualise the effects and/or Replica or representation of a real-world phenomenon that enables
consequences in virtual environments. Simulation
relationships, contexts, and concepts to be studied.
Verbal activity in which two or more differing viewpoints on a
Debate
subject are presented and argued.
Formal/informal conversation on a given topic/question where the
Interaction with others Discussion instructor facilitates student sharing of responses to the questions and
building upon those responses.
Peer relationships, informal support structures, and teacher-student
interactions/relationships. Information provided by the instructor and/or peer(s) regarding
Feedback
aspects of one’s performance or understanding.
Guest Feelings, thoughts, ideas and experiences specific to a given topic are
Speaker shared by an invited presenter.
Problem solving and Critical thinking Detailed story (true or fictional) that students analyse in detail to
Case Study
identify the underlying principles, practices, or lessons it contains.
Presenting students with a problem, scenario, case, challenge or design Concept Graphical representation of related information in which common or
Mapping shared concepts are linked together.
Planned set of interrelated tasks to be executed over a fixed period
Real-world
issue, which they are then asked to address or deal with provides students and within certain cost and other limitations, either individually or
projects
with opportunities to think about or use knowledge and information in new collaboratively
and different ways.
Reflection
The process of reflection starts with the student thinking about what they
Reflection Written records of students’ intellectual and emotional reactions to a
already know and have experienced in relation to the topic being
journal given topic on a regular basis (e.g. weekly after each lesson)
explored/learnt. This is followed by analysis of why the student thinks about
the topic in the way they do, and what assumptions, attitudes and beliefs they
have about, and bring to learning about the topic.
It is important that each learning activity in the lesson must be (1) aligned to the lesson’s learning objectives, (2) meaningfully engage students in
active, constructive, authentic, and collaborative ways, and (3) useful where the student is able to take what they have learnt from engaging with the
activity and use it in another context, or for another purpose.
Planning for assessment allows you to find out whether your students are learning. It involves making decisions about:
The number and type of assessment tasks that will best enable students to demonstrate learning objectives for the lesson.
o Examples of different assessments
o Formative and/or summative
The criteria and standards that will be used to make assessment judgements.
o Rubrics
Student roles in the assessment process
o Self-assessment
o Peer assessment
The weighting of individual assessment tasks and the method by which individual task judgements will be combined into a final grade for the
course.
o Information about how various tasks are to be weighted and combined into an overall grade must be provided to students.
The provision of feedback
o Giving feedback to students on how to improve their learning, as well as giving feedback to instructors how to refine their teaching.
1.Gain attention: Obtain students’ attention so that they will watch and listen while the instructor presents the learning content.
o Present a story or a problem to be solved.
o Utilize ice breaker activities, current news and events, case studies, YouTube videos, and so on. The objective is to quickly grab student
attention and interest in the topic.
o Utilize technologies such as clickers, and surveys to ask leading questions prior to lecture, survey opinion, or gain a response to a
controversial question.
2.Inform learner of objectives: Allow students to organize their thoughts regarding what they are about to see, hear, and/or do.
o Include learning objectives in lecture slides, the syllabus, and in instructions for activities, projects and papers.
o Describe required performance.
o Describe criteria for standard performance.
3.Stimulate recall of prior knowledge:
o Help students make sense of new information by relating it to something they already know or something they have already experienced.
o Recall events from previous lecture, integrate results of activities into the current topic, and/or relate previous information to the current
topic.
o Ask students about their understanding of previous concepts.
4.Present new content: Utilise a variety of methods including lecture, readings, activities, projects, multimedia, and others.
o Sequence and chunk the information to avoid cognitive overload.
o Blend the information to aid in information recall.
o Bloom's Revised Taxonomy can be used to help sequence the lesson by helping you chunk them into levels of difficulty.
5.Provide guidance: Advise students of strategies to aid them in learning content and of resources available. With learning guidance, the rate
of learning increases because students are less likely to lose time or become frustrated by basing performance on incorrect facts or poorly
understood concepts.
o Provide instructional support as needed – as scaffolds (cues, hints, prompts) which can be removed after the student learns the task or
content.
o Model varied learning strategies – mnemonics, concept mapping, role playing, visualizing.
o Use examples and non-examples.
Estimate how much time each of the activities will take, then plan some extra time for each.
When you prepare your lesson plan, next to each activity indicate how much time you expect it will take.
Plan a few minutes at the end of class to answer any remaining questions and to sum up key points.
Plan an extra activity or discussion question in case you have time left.
Be flexible – be ready to adjust your lesson plan to students’ needs and focus on what seems to be more productive rather than sticking to
your original plan.
Check for student understanding and inform subsequent instruction (adjust your teaching accordingly)
Emphasise key information
Tie up loose ends
Correct students’ misunderstandings
Preview upcoming topics
There are several ways in which you can put a closure to the lesson:
Letting your students know what they will be learning and doing in class will help keep them more engaged and on track. Providing a meaningful
organisation of the class time can help students not only remember better, but also follow your presentation and understand the rationale behind the
planned learning activities. You can share your lesson plan by writing a brief agenda on the whiteboard or telling students explicitly what they will be
learning and doing in class. Click on link here for tips and techniques to facilitate an interactive lesson.
Take a few minutes after each class to reflect on what worked well and why, and what you could have done differently. Identifying successful and
less successful organization of class time and activities would make it easier to adjust to the contingencies of the classroom. If needed, revise the
lesson plan.