Table of Contents

AY 300 - Fall 2010: Third Day Lesson Plan

Goals of today's class

Ethics and Discussion Section Sharing (10 min)

Ethics Information

Go over the homework assignment (25 min)

Worksheets (25 min)

So if group work is so great, how do you facilitate it? Well made worksheets are a good way. Here are some examples:

Each small group will be given a different worksheet. Discuss what makes the worksheet effective for stimulating group work, what could be improved upon, etc. We will share with the class. In the (perhaps near) future, we will return to worksheets and discuss ways of writing your own.

Info from Past Years

Remind everyone that they're required to contribute their “best original worksheet” (or a significantly improved one) to the EBRB.

Worksheets should:
How to present worksheets

Worksheets are intended to get students collaborating in groups, which has been proven a great way to get them to learn the material in depth. How do we get students collaborating the way we want?

What makes a good worksheet?
What makes a bad worksheet?
Instructors present some of their own example worksheets used in their sections.
Worksheet tips:

Break (5 min)

Lesson Plans (40 min)

(10 min) Brainstorm in small groups what a good lesson plan should include. Also consider how specific a lesson plan should be, how long, etc.

(10 min) Aaron will hand out his lesson plan 12-step guide and discuss each step with the class.

(15 min) In groups, write your own lesson plan based around your group worksheet.

(15 min) One group member will take their lesson plan to another group and present it. That group will give comments and suggestions for how to improve upon the lesson plan.

Lesson Plans (15 min)

Here is a 12-step program for writing effective lesson plans. Here is the same content in handout form. Here is a lesson plan template.

  1. Identify topics to cover.
    • Lecture meets for ~150 minutes a week, while discussion section meets only 50 minutes a week. You cannot be expected to recap a week's worth of material. Don't even try! Pick two, at most three, topics to cover during your 50 minutes. Encourage students to attend office hours if they have more questions.
  2. Define the learning objectives of the section.
    • Ask yourself ``What do I want students to leave with at the end of our 50 minutes together?“ Be specific. Are these goals long-term (e.g., mastery of a skill) or short-term (e.g., recapping material)?
  3. Determine what method and materials you will use to accomplish these goals.
    • Will you spend section having a classroom discussion, individualized problem solving, or group work? Will there be demonstrations? What materials will you need?
  4. Think of a motivation or ``hook” to open the section with.
    • How will you get the student's attention? Flashy demos, hypothetical or real-world situations involving material from lecture, or an ungraded quiz of questions from past exams are good ways of getting students focused.
  5. Write a draft of the discussion section. Including an opening hook, procedures, and closing.
    • Do not forget things such as conveying any administrative notes and allowing time for questions.
  6. Add details and specific examples. Eliminate vague words like ``discuss,“ ``introduce,” or ``explain.“
    • HOW will you explain a particular topic? Give details. What will you write on the board to aid in your explanation? What prompts will you give to the class?
  7. Criticize your timetable.
    • The average attention span is 10–15 minutes. Are you spending longer than this on a particular exercise? Break up your discussion section with demos, lecture work, group work, class discussions, etc. that last only 10 minutes or so.
  8. Come up with a backup plan.
    • Wednesday lecture was canceled and students are not ready to discuss the material you had planned to cover. Or your students are so smart that you finish your discussion section in 30 minutes. What do you do now? Have backup plans.
  9. Critique your lesson plan globally.
    • Look over your entire plan. Does it work to accomplish your learning objectives? If not, have your learning objectives changed or does your plan need revising?
  10. Critique your lesson plan meticulously.
    • You should be able to write a sentence on how each part of your lesson plan goes to accomplishing your learning objectives. If you cannot, that may be alerting you to revise your learning objectives or to revise your plan.
  11. Determine how you will assess the success of your discussion section.
    • Will you ask questions near the end of section to probe whether section was successful? Will you ask for written or oral feedback?
  12. Repeat any of the above steps as necessary.

Optional Reading

Assignment 3 (Due two weeks from now)