To prepare, I needed to record the lesson a couple of days before my professors anticipated arrival. Of course, nothing went well. My camera cut the lesson into two parts and I wasn't able to upload either video because of file size. However I do have links to the files saved on my Google drive. The lesson was on Owls and the lesson plan can be found here. We used it with 2nd and 3rd graders. Third graders had an easier time recalling facts after the nonfiction text and owl sounds, but both groups had a lot of fun imitating owl sounds.
All About Owls Lesson Part 1
All About Owls Lesson Part 2
The Great Horned Owl
This is the lesson plan for owls:
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Component I:
Classroom Teaching
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Task A-2: Lesson
Plan
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Your
committee members will review and evaluate your performance on this task
using Standard 1: The teacher demonstrates applies knowledge and Standard 2:
The teacher designs and plans instruction.
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Intern Name: Lindsay Kokai Date: 10-29-15
Cycle: 1
# of
Students: 24 Age/Grade Level: 2nd grade Content Area: Library
Unit
Title: Creepy Crawlies and Creatures of the Night
Lesson
Title: Owls
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Lesson Alignment to Unit
Respond to all of the following items:
a) Identify essential questions and/or
unit objective(s) addressed by this lesson.
Students
will be able to define four facts about owls.
b) Connect the objectives to the state
curriculum documents (I. E., Program of Studies, Kentucky Core Content,
and/or Kentucky Core Academic Standards).
Kentucky
Core Academic Standards (Reading Standards for Informational Text)
RL.2.1: Ask
and answer such questions as who,
what, where, when, why, and how to demonstrate understanding of key
details in a text.
c) Describe students’ prior knowledge or
the focus of the previous learning.
Prior to
this lesson, students will have studied spiders and bats.
d) Describe summative assessment(s) for
this particular unit and how lessons in this unit contribute to the summative
assessment.
The
summative assessment for this lesson is the student’s ability to list four
facts about owls.
e) Describe how the instructional planning
for this lesson addresses the characteristics of your students identified in
Task A-1 who will require differentiated instruction to meet their diverse
needs.
The lesson
is designed to meet the needs of a variety of learning types. Auditory learners will be reached through hearing
the nonfiction text read aloud and listening to owl sounds, and visual
learners will have the book illustrations to help them comprehend the
story.
f) Pre-Assessment: Describe your analysis
of pre-assessment data used in developing lesson objectives/learning targets
(Describe how you will trigger prior knowledge):
Before
reading the nonfiction text students will be asked what they already know
about owls. Then after hearing the
text read aloud students will be asked what new facts they have learned about
owls.
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Procedures:
Describe the sequence of strategies and activities you will use to engage
students ad accomplish your objectives.
Within this sequence, describe how the differentiated strategies will
meet individual student needs and diverse learners in your plan. (Use this section to outline the who, what,
when and where of the instructional strategies and activities.)
1. Remind
students that we have learned about spiders and bats today and that we will
continue our study of “creepy crawlies and creatures of the night” by looking
at owls today.
2.
Activate prior knowledge by asking students what they know about owls.
3.
Introduce All About Owls and read
aloud, using the document camera.
4. After
reading the story aloud listen to the sounds different owls make and practice
making their sounds.
5. Ask
students to help review facts learned about owls.
6. Ask
student assistants to pass out materials.
7.
Circulate around the room, giving assistance if necessary.
8. As
students finish their work allow them to check out if they have returned all
previously checked out materials.
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