Post on 21-Dec-2015
Nature & Importance
of
Lesson Planning
By: Carol Gaerlan
WHAT IS A LESSON PLAN?
A LESSON PLAN IS:
A model of organized learning events within a set period of time or session
A projection of real lesson filled with concrete processes, assignments, and learning tools
A blueprint on which to construct a learning process made up of clearly stated goals and objectives
A tool that moves from theory to practice by carrying out a methodological approach (based on latest research)
COMPARE THE STUDENTS
WHY IS LESSON PLANNING IMPORTANT?
The key to good teaching, purposeful class management and the achievement of sustained educational progress lies in effective preparation and planning. (Butt, 2008)
Consistent effective lesson planning is essential for successful experiences in both teaching and learning process. (Serdyukov and Ryan, 2008)
STAGES IN LESSON PLANNING
PREPARATION
Who is to be taught?
By knowing the learners, the desired outcome can be determined and the teacher can identify the purpose of the lesson.
DEVELOPMENT
What is to be taught? This stage covers the substance of the lesson
such as subject matter, instructional goals, specific learning objectives, concepts and skills.
An effective activity or lesson plan begins with a specific objective.
Bloom’s taxonomy provides good examples of appropriate action words to use in learning objectives. With this, the learning objective becomes student-focused and outcomes oriented.
IMPLEMENTATION
How do you teach students? Methods or strategies employed Learning activities and methodological approach
Materials and technology applications
REFLECTION
Will/ Is my lesson plan effective?
the teacher evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of the lesson plan before implementing it and after it has been delivered
TY
PES
OF L
ESS
ON
PLA
N
There are different ways to make a lesson plan. But ALL effective lesson plans have structure.
Description/ Introduction
•date, subject area, topic, grade level
Goals and Objectives
•may include academic and culturally relevant content standards, adaptations for diverse populations
Materials and Tools
•instructional resources such as texts, visuals, handouts, etc.
•educational technology
Procedures•content presentation and activities
Evaluation
•reflection and assessment (tests, quizzes, essays, etc.
DETAILED LESSON PLAN
The detailed lesson plan has five parts: Objectives Subject Matter
(topic, references, materials)
Procedure (motivation, activity, routines, lesson proper)
Evaluation Assignment
Everything is written down like a script of a play.
It contains what the teacher does and says and what the students are expected to say and do.
EXAMPLES
SEMI-DETAILED LESSON PLAN
Has all the components of a detailed plan but does not include a complete description of pupils’ activity.
It contains the important subject matter and a description of teaching-learning activities. (Beltran, 1992)
BRIEF LESSON PLAN
Only guide statements or brief explanation of the activities to be performed in each part are provided
UNDERSTANDING BY DESIGN Jay McTighe describes
UbD as a framework for curriculum planning, assessment by design and ultimately for teaching with the goal of understanding and transfer
Grant Wiggins emphasizes that Ubd is not a philosophy and not an approach to teaching but a planning framework.
There are 3 stages in UbD:
Desired Results
Assessment Evidence
Learning Plan
CONCLUSION
Lesson planning is integral in the teaching-learning process
It encourages research teachers have foresight to think deeply about the lesson maximize learning opportunities
LP’s don’t always have to be detailed
Planning can be an internal process
A GOOD LESSON PLAN IS –
Apparent Serves as a Guide Flexible Clear & Understandable Well-documented
It becomes a historic document of the class which can aid in performance evaluation, student assessment and curriculum development.
TH
AN
K Y
OU
!!!