Sunday, March 8, 2015

Chapter 6a, 6b, & 6c: Preparing an Instructional Plan

6a
This portion of that chapter covers the components of a unit plan, the methods of teaching your lessons, and it also talks a lot about learning style and modes of your students. I think that the components to a unit are very standard. They are the same things we have been learning since we started to learn how to write lesson plans. The only difference is that units cover a larger chunk of time and they include multiple lesson plans and sometimes cover multiple integrated subjects. This section talks a lot about differentiating instruction. It uses the terms "hands-on" and "minds-on" learning. I think that it is important to keep the students engaged and to mix up the mode of instruction to the best of your ability. However, as much as the traditional method of teaching gets bashed I think that in some situations it is very difficult if not impossible to get information across to students without using the teacher-centered lecture. With that being said, using the traditional teacher-centered lecture format in your classroom will drive your students crazy. They will get antsy and most likely won't get much if anything out of the lecture at all, especially when overused. We are collecting ways throughout our education to keep students moving and engaged while they are learning. At the middle school level students are really trying to figure themselves out. If the content they are learning is connected or relevant to the things going on in their life  they will be more engaged as well.

6b
The second portion of Chapter six talks about lesson planning. Especially as a beginning teacher lesson planning will take a major chunk of your time. It is important to be well prepared for the presentation of each and every lesson. I think that the more prepared you are the better your students will receive and respect you as a teacher and a role model. If you get up in front of the class and have no idea where you are going with your lesson students won't take you seriously. If you don't put the time and effort into creating your lesson plans than how can you expect your students to spend their time and effort trying to learn the material? I know from personal experience the more prepared I feel for a lesson the less nervous I am when teaching it. If I know precisely what I want to cover and how I want to do it then the unexpected isn't as scary. The book also talks about over planning in your lessons. I think that it is important to the whole classroom atmosphere that your students always have something to do that is productive and beneficial to them. If they don't then that always leaves room for chaos and something to go wrong in your classroom. I will definitely prepare plenty of material in each lesson to ensure that students don't have time to get themselves in trouble. No matter what the grade level they are, students will always be mischievous, but particularly in the middle school grades because they are testing their boundaries and seeing how far they can push.

6c
The third portion of chapter six is all about the actual set up of a lesson plan. Throughout my college career I have had set up lesson plans so many different formats. To me it seems as though no format makes any difference to the actual performance of the lesson. As long as you are organized in your lessons and they contain all of the pertinent information than your lesson should be effectively taught. As you develop as an educator you will develop your very own format for your lesson plans. You will discover what works best for you and which format is easiest for you to follow when teaching your students. It's all about making things easier on yourself in order to best benefit your students.

4 comments:

  1. Jen, if you thing that the lecture is the most powerful way to get information across, why did you say that students will not learn much because they will get bored. lets be honest, we will all fall back to the traditional way every now and then, so when you see your students getting bored and losing interest, what will you do then. just something to think about.

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  2. I totally agree that lesson planning and being prepared for a lesson makes it less scary. And as you said, it does make you more prepared when anything does not go according to plan. Students will sense that you know what you are doing and are prepared, and will respond to that by being attentive and moving from activity to activity smoothly.

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  3. Hi Jen! Thank you for sharing your thoughts regarding section 6C. I have also seen multiple formats of lesson plans, just in my short time within the teacher education department at Bradley University. I believe it is best if each educator finds the format that fits his/her teaching style and classroom needs. From there, an educator will clearly see all the necessary aspects of the lesson, especially the goals, objectives, and procedures, and carry it out accordingly. Being organized and prepared is very important in the education field!

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