Lesson Planning Template & Reflection



Similar documents
Masconomet Regional High School Curriculum Guide

ELL Considerations for Common Core-Aligned Tasks in English Language Arts

CURRICULUM MAPPING. Content/Essential Questions for all Units

Helping English Language Learners Understand Content Area Texts

Here are some examples of gustar in action:

Content Strategies by Domain

Be courteous and respectful. - treat others the way you would like to be treated.

Spanish (TR 9:30 10:50) Course Calendar Spring 2015

Visual Arts. Assessment Handbook. September edtpa_visarts_02

TASIS England Summer School. TASIS English Language Program (TELP) Description of Levels and Key Learning Objectives

Analyzing TV Commercials

TOP 10 RESOURCES FOR TEACHERS OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS. Melissa McGavock Director of Bilingual Education

Exemplar for Internal Achievement Standard. Spanish Level 1

BSD Spanish 1 Scope and Sequence August 2011

CELEBRA EL AÑO NUEVO CHINO LESSON PLAN FOR GRADES K 2

Grade 3: Module 4: Unit 1: Lesson 3 Language Workshop: Simple, Compound, and Complex Sentences

Lesson 7 Dealing with Troublesome Feelings

Content-Area Vocabulary Study Strategies Appendix A 2 SENIOR

YASAR UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF FOREIGN LANGUAGES COURSE SYLLABUS SPANISH I

Grade 3: Module 1: Unit 1: Lesson 8 Paragraph Writing Instruction

90 HOURS PROGRAMME LEVEL A1

Grade 3: Module 2A: Unit 2: Lesson 6 Mid-Unit Assessment: Close Reading of The Spadefoot Toad

econtent Construction for the ipad: Designing for comprehension

Reading Street and English Language Learners

Spanish III Honors Summer Assignment

SAMPLE LESSONS PLAN UNIT: TOPIC: OBJECTIVES Classification

ESL I English as a Second Language I Curriculum

WiggleWorks Aligns to Title I, Part A

Using Science Notebooks

Grade 4: Module 2A: Unit 1: Lesson 2 Inferring from a Primary Source: Close Read of Colonial Times Inventory

The Verb gustar. By Jami Sipe Teacher s Discovery

WA TPA. Secondary English- Language Arts. Assessment. Handbook. Teacher Performance. Consortium (TPAC) Field Test Pre-Release Handbook September 2011

Learning Goals & Success Criteria

Biography-Driven Culturally Responsive Teaching

Teaching a year 5 & 6 class visualisation strategies using the R.I.D.E.R method increases reading comprehension in students with low comprehension.

FINAL SIOP LESSON PLAN. Preparation

TOOL KIT for RESIDENT EDUCATOR and MENT OR MOVES

21st Century Community Learning Center

Teaching Standards-Based, Accessible Web Design

Catering for students with special needs

Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Professional Development Self- Assessment Guidebook

27 Before, During, and After Reading Activities with Graphic Organizers to be used with nonfiction passages for students in Grades 2 5!

Strategies to use When Working with ELL Students

Practical Strategies to Improve Academic Discussions in Mixed Ability Secondary Content Area Classrooms

Program Overview. This guide discusses Language Central for Math s program components, instructional design, and lesson features.

Topic 5 Locations of Spanish towns

PROFICIENCY TARGET FOR END OF INSTRUCTION, SPANISH I

Past Tense Activities - Lesson 1

Grade 6: Module 3A: Unit 2: Lesson 9 Making a Claim: Emma Burke s Point of View of the Immediate Aftermath of the Earthquake

Effectiveness of Direct Strategy Instruction through SIOP

SCHOOL: YEAR: DATE: CLASS:

COURSE SYLLABUS SPANISH IA

How To Write The English Language Learner Can Do Booklet

English Language Learners (ELLs), Academic Language & Physical Education

Unit/Lesson Planning Guide: Key Questions to Consider While Planning

Framework for Teaching Possible Evidence List

Study Guide. Developing Literate Mathematicians: A Guide for Integrating Language and Literacy Instruction into Secondary Mathematics

demonstrates competence in

Grade Level: Grade 3-5. Duration: 60+ minutes. Economic Concepts: Consumption, Money Management

COURSE TITLE: PHOTOGRAPHY 2 GRADES 9-12 LENGTH: ONE SEMESTER SCHOOLS: RUTHERFORD HIGH SCHOOL RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY DATE:

COURSE TITLE: ART BY COMPUTER DESIGN GRADES 9-12 LENGTH: ONE SEMESTER SCHOOLS: RUTHERFORD HIGH SCHOOL RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY DATE:

Tools to Use in Assessment

Tips for Working With ELL Students

National Health Education Standards and Performance Indicators. Interpersonal Communication [4.12.1; ; ] Self Management [7.12.2; 7.12.

Up Close with Close Reading: Principal Professional Development Session

MAP for Language & International Communication Spanish Language Learning Outcomes by Level

Secondary English Language Arts

Lesson Title: Argumentative Writing (Writing a Critical Review)

GUIDELINES FOR THE IEP TEAM DATA COLLECTION &

Bexley City School World Language Program Overview

Prepare to speak Spanish Out There

"Why is it important for ELL students to be active in listening, speaking, reading and writing on a daily basis?"

Grade 4: Module 3B: Unit 3: Lesson 2 Reading Opinion Pieces, Part II: How Authors Support Their Opinions with Reasons and Evidence

CURRICULUM MAP/UNIT LESSON PLAN. TEACHER: Gilda Talamante COURSE: Spanish - Advanced Intermediate

Seven Strategies of Assessment for Learning

FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT STRATEGIES, DEFINITIONS, EXAMPLES

Sideways Spanish Transcript. Why Spanish Verb Charts Cause Failure and How to Fix It so Anyone at Any Age Can Speak Spanish

School and classroom structures for comprehensive ELD instruction

Grade 3: Module 2B: Unit 3: Lesson 8 Revising: Using Simple and Compound Sentences in Writing

Spanish I, Quarter 4

Kelly Anne Stahl Backward Design Lesson Plan

Grade 5: Module 2B: Unit 1: Lesson 9 Using Quotes and Comparing and Contrasting Structure: The Invention of Basketball

Lesson Plan for Level 1 Spanish. Essential Question of year: What are my routines?

E/I. EQuIP Review Feedback. Lesson/Unit Name: Louisiana Believes- Romeo and Juliet Content Area: English language arts Grade Level: 9.

Note to Teachers/Parents

The Academic Language of Tests

English Language Proficiency Standards for Precalculus

Blended Instructional Design

NOTE-TAKING. Rutgers School of Nursing

2. In pairs discuss the questions that follow. Excerpt from Valdés, Kibler, & Walqui: Recent Examples of Possible Roles for ESL Professionals

EVALUATING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE IN PRIMARY EDUCATION

Critical Components of Lesson Design Guide

Reading Competencies

Duval County Public Schools District Curriculum Guide. Grades 9-12

1 Objetivos didácticos_unit 1 2 Objetivos didácticos_unit 2

WARREN TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS World Language Curriculum: Spanish/Reading Program Grade 7R

Correlation Map of LEARNING-FOCUSED to Marzano s Evaluation Model

TEST-TAKING STRATEGIES FOR READING

Fluffy Cloud Walk. Materials Used: Pictures of three types of clouds: cirrus, stratus, cumulus

Using Ser and Estar Lesson Plan

Transcription:

5. Core Standard(s): The newly revised, 2014 Utah WL Core Standards are available at: http://www.school s.utah.gov/curr/ worldlang/home/ UtahWorldLangua gecore2014.aspx 7. Essential Vocabulary: 1. Teacher Name: Jill LandesLee 2. Course/Content/Grade: Spanish 2. Unit/Module/Topic: Unit 1?Quién soy yo? 4. Plan Duration: 90 minutes Note: WL lesson plans should include state standards from all 3 modes of communication standards every day interpretive reading and/or listening interpersonal speaking IR: I can understand personal descriptions about presentational speaking and/or writing nationality. NH.IR (NoviceHigh Interpretive Reading): I can IR: I can understand what someone likes to do in understand familiar words, phrases and sentences their spare time. within short and simple texts related to everyday 6. Objective(s): IL/IS: I can get to know someone by asking and life. answering questions about nationality and favorite NH.IC (NoviceHigh Interpersonal activities. Communication): I can communicate and PW: I can write about my nationality, what I like to exchange information about familiar topics using do in my spare time, and compare that to others. phrases and simple sentences, sometimes supported by memorized language. NH.PW (NoviceHigh Presentational Writing): I can write short messages and notes on familiar topics related to everyday life. Vocabulary: *for the purpose of this model lesson, examples are given in both Spanish and English. Words to add detail: With whom? (con mis amigos) When? (los jueves, los fines de semanas) Where? (al lago, en la playa, al centro) Why? (porque ) How? (a pie, por autobus) New vocabulary: levantar pesas, tirar, lanzar, duele la, patear Sentence frames: Soy de?de dónde eres? (I am from Where are 8. Inter Disciplinary Connections: Connections to ELA: reading for information reading difficult texts respond thoughtfully to diverse perspectives, summarize points of comparison and contrast, and state your own view

9. Assessing for Student Learning: you from?) Me gusta (I like to )?Qué te gusta hacer? Con quien? Porque? (What do you like to do? With whom? Why?) For writing basic paragraph of comparison: Por lo general, los estudiantes de los Estados les gustan (In general, students in the U.S. like to ) Según la lectura del estudiante en Madrid, los chicos allí les gustan (According to the reading about the student in Madrid, kids there like to ) En mi opinión, los estudiantes son más semejantes / mas diferentes que los estudiantes en (In my opinion, student in are more similar / more different than students in ) Students will be able to: 1. Read a short passage about what a 15 yearold boy in Spain likes to do on the weekend; fill in a chart to demonstrate comprehension of the activities the boy likes to do best and what he does not like to do. 2. Speak: Students interview 5 partners, describing their favorite activities. 3. Write: Students take notes during each interview; Students utilize sentence frames to write a summary paragraph comparing similarities and differences between interviewees and the student (reading Lesson Planning Template & Reflection 10. Technology Integration: (When applicable) Teacher Use: Computer/projector for video clip Student Use: passage) from Spain. 11. Area for Content Specific Additions Target proficiency indicator (from CSD rubric): MAJORITY SOLID FORMULAS WITH DETAIL & EMERGING CREATED SENTENCES: You can write about yourself and your life. Much of the time you write well enough to express your own thoughts and accomplish what you need. You write in phrases and some sentences with greater detail.

Intercultural Competencies: I can function at a survival level in an authentic cultural context. 12. Pacing (mins.) 1 st day 10 min. 13. Lesson Sequence (What You Do When: Including Explicit Instruction/Guided Inquiry) Starter: Listen to a 1min. clip of an interview during the World Cup with Gordi Alba from the Spanish soccer team for Barcelona. Pre- teach verbs heard in the passage relating to soccer. Students listen 3 times, check off which activities they hear Alba say. Report out in pairs, A Gordi Alba le gusta 14. DOK Level 15. Grouping and Scaffolding Structures (including interventions for diverse learners) 1 Listen independently Pair speaking Graphic organizer 16. Engagement & Checking for Understanding (OTRs: What will students be saying, writing, reading & doing) Report out in pairs Pair/share Students turn in graphic organizer

15 20 min Read the paragraph about what a 15yearold boy in Madrid likes to do on weekends. The purpose of this reading is to collect information and use it to create a cultural comparison between Spain and the U.S. 2 Scaffolding Prereading: prediction and questioning Graphic organizer Annotation Cold call Check list Graphic organizer Annotation Before you read: Prediction Do you think that teenagers in Spain do similar or different activities than teens in Utah? Questioning: What are typical activities that teens in Utah or in the U.S. do? Make a list with your partner. Cold call to share with class. Grouping Think/pair/share Active Reading: Step 1: Annotation While you read, underline the activities this boy likes to do. Circle activities he does not like to do. Teacher models with 1 sentence. Students complete the rest on their own. Step 2: Students transfer information from the reading into a comparison/contract chart with 2 columns In Spain In the U.S

20 min Prepare for interviews, using the graphic organizer provided. Preteach the sentence frames for interviewing (ex: Soy de /?De dónde eres? Me gusta /?Qué te gusta hacer con por qué? (I am from / Where are you from? I like / What do you like to do? With whom do you like? Why do you like?) 3 Explicit Instruction (I do, we do, ya ll do, you do) Sentence frames White boards Whiteboards I do: Teacher models sample sentence stating favorite activities with added detail. Fill in this model sentence on the graphic organizer using a doc camera. We do: Students help teacher create a second model sentence with greater detail. Ya ll do: Using whiteboards, pairs work together to create a sentence with fabulous detail. Share out and celebrate! Prize for most creative sentence? You do: Students use sentence frame to create their own sentence. This will be the sentence they use during their interview.

25 min Students conduct interview with 5 other peers. Record each response on the graphic organizer provided. For each interview, record the following: 1. Name 2. Where they are from: 3. The 35 activities they like to do best. 2 Pair conversations with 5 people (must establish routine to mix up grouping) Teacher walks around to listen to interviews, strategically noting errors or successes in language production, record as a formative speaking assessment each day for as many people as you are able to hear. 10 min Explicit instruction of writing starters for comparison. Teacher model and write a paragraph comparing (with student input) about what students in Spain and in the U.S. typically do. Decide if the cultural norms are more similar or more different. 23 Model sentence frames and model structure of paragraph of comparison/contract Students hand in final written product for teacher feedback For writing basic paragraph of comparison: Por lo general, los estudiantes de los Estados les gustan (In general, students in the U.S. like to ) Según la lectura del estudiante en Madrid, los chicos allí les gustan (According to the reading about the student in Madrid, kids there like to ) En mi opinión, los estudiantes son más semejantes / mas diferentes que los estudiantes en (In my opinion, student in are more similar / more different than students in )

Independent Practice at home: Ask 3 of your peers (teens) at school what their favorite activities are. Write a sentence stating if your friends are similar or different from the students you interviewed in class. In my opinion, my friends are more similar / more different than students in Spain. 17. Closure: (Students reflecting on their learning and providing feedback on their understanding to the teacher) 18. Feedback to students: (Teacher providing feedback to students on their learning and growth) Lesson Planning Template & Reflection 34 Student exit ticket, written in English: Independent Sentence frames Modeling Graphic organizer Extend ideas outside of the classroom Teacher uses responses to start class the next day. Each student must have a copy of the unit s I Can statements. Students selfassess progress on I Can statements: rate self on IR: I can understand personal descriptions about nationality. IR: I can understand what someone likes to do in their spare time. IL/IS: I can get to know someone by asking and answering questions about nationality and favorite activities. PW: I can write about my nationality, what I like to do in my spare time, and compare that to others. Review graphic organizers for understanding Read and provide feedback on comparison/contrast paragraphs, focusing on 1. Correct use of sentence frames and 2. Quality of detail in their writing (tied to proficiency indicator) Teacher do a quick visual check on how students rate themselves on I Can statements

19. Lesson Plan Reflection Questions 1. Were my students ready for this lesson? What data supports this? 2. Was the instructional objective met? How do I know students learned what was intended? 3. Were the students productively engaged? How do I know? 4. Did I alter my instructional plan as I taught the lesson? How and why? 5. If I had the opportunity to teach the lesson again to the same group of students, would I do anything differently? What? Why? 6. Are my students ready to move on? If yes, how do I know? If not, what adjustments/reteaching do I need to make to ensure student understanding?