Acei 2 7 Lesson Plan
Acei 2 7 Lesson Plan
Acei 2 7 Lesson Plan
Memory Fitness
Name: Taylor Rae Sugimoto
Content Area: PE
Duration: 62 minutes
Materials needed:
-
What do you need to prepare in advance? Which part of the school campus will your
lesson take place (if applicable)
-
prepare memory cards (total of 32 cards) by printing and laminating each card
print out exit slips
Guiding Questions:
-
Enduring understanding:
Different exercises build strong muscles that improve the health and fitness of a person.
What component/s will be the lesson
focus?
Exercise, muscle growth
Purpose of lesson
The purpose of this lesson is to identify the importance of muscles and how students
can participate in exercises to strengthen their muscles.
Language modalities to be used in this lesson:
-
Observing: Students will observe peers participate in various exercises during the
engaging activity.
Writing: Students will show their understandings by writing an exit slip as a form of
assessment.
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DIFFERENTIATION PLAN
ACEI 3.2 Adaptation to diverse students.
List type of
differentiation
(learning environment, content,
process, product, performance task)
SPED
ELL
Process, Performance
Task
Accelerated Learners
Process
Striving Learners
Process, Performance
Task
Instructional approach
(Write the instructional approach/accommodations that will
be used for these learners)
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1. Standards/Benchmarks/GLOs
ACEI 2.1-2.4 Content Area Knowledge. List CCSS, HCPS III, GLOs
I will use an exit slip to assess students content knowledge of HCPS III: PE.3-5.4.3
Fitness and Conditioning-Related Activities (see pages 8 and 9). Students will be
assessed on their understanding of how exercises can promote muscle growth and
strength by identifying which exercises strengthen specific muscles. Students will
demonstrate four exercises: push ups, sit ups, jumping jacks, and jogging in place. I will
use a narrative summary to gain a better understanding of students content knowledge,
which will help me to reflect and strengthen my areas of improvement for future lessons.
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3. Activities/Lesson
Attention getter/s
to be used in this
lesson.
Introduction
2 minutes
Closing
5 minutes
To close this lesson, I will review the answers for the exit slip and
ask students to share other exercises that they know and talk
about what muscles they think they strengthen with those
exercises.
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Name: _____________________
Date: ______________
Push ups
3.
Jogging in place
2.
Sit ups
4.
Jumping Jacks
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5 Pushups
7 sit-ups
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Jogging in
place
30 seconds
Jumping Jacks
10 times
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Reflection Questions
1. What were any advantages and/or disadvantages of writing a one-page lesson
plan?
I feel that, due to being in the classroom for four semesters, there were more
advantages than disadvantages in writing a one-page lesson plan. During the first few
semesters in the program, I needed a detailed lesson plan as a support system when I
taught because I would tend to forget that I planned to say. However, as I became more
comfortable teaching lessons and being in front of the classroom, I also became more
confident in my teaching abilities. Solo teaching has taught me how to be able to teach
curriculum without creating a detailed lesson plan for each lesson, so I no longer felt
that I needed a lesson plan as a support system. For this lesson, I used this one-page
lesson plan as a guideline and planning sheet for what I needed to teach, rather than
writing a lesson plan to remind me exactly what I needed to say. Therefore, when I
taught my PE lesson, I had more of a freedom to go with the flow of the lesson, and
adjust the discussions based on students responses, questions, and interests. I am
proud that I have enough confidence in my teaching to no longer refer back to my
lesson plan to ensure that I say every single phrase that I planned to say.
I feel that the only disadvantage that would occur when I write a one-page lesson
plan is not being able to write everything that is necessary to teach in the allotted space.
For example, some of my lessons in my unit plan included scaffolded and structured
planning that ended with a higher-level thinking discussion or activity. With these higherlevel thinking lessons, I would like to include all of the guiding questions that may occur
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during the lesson, and I feel there would not be enough room on one page to write
everything that I anticipate will happen throughout a lesson.
2. What information from the instrument did you find useful? In what ways can this
information help you with the remainder of the semester and/or in the future?
I chose to focus on Instrument 6.6: Observing Low-Profile Classroom Management
because I was curious to have a better understanding of what types of classroom
management skill that I use on a daily basis. I feel that classroom management is one
of the hardest things to reflect upon because I often do not realize what I do to manage
the classroom environment. When I first looked at the instrument, I thought that I use
both verbal and nonverbal deflection the most when Im teaching. However, after getting
the results from the instrument, I found that I mostly used anticipation throughout the
lesson. I was pleased with the results because I believe the low-profile anticipation does
not waste instructional time or distracts the class from learning.
This instrument has helped me to understand the importance of constantly reflecting
upon my own teaching, and also to make sure to ask others to reflect upon your
practice as well. The results of this instrument has taught me that my style of teaching
may not be evident to myself as I teach because there are so many other things on my
mind, but that does not mean I should just trust my own opinions. Feedback from others
is just as important, if not more important, than my own personal feedback that I note
after each lesson. This instrument has also taught me that I may not put my focus on
anticipating, but it is something that I naturally do in front of the classroom. I want to
continue on using all four types of low-profile classroom management throughout the
day according to students behavior.
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3. Sort your students exit slips by these categories 1) full understanding, 2) partial
understanding, 3) no understanding. Answer these questions.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
Push-up
X
P
P
P
P
P
X
X
P
X
P
X
X
P
P
P
P
P
X
P
P
P
X
X
Sit-up
X
P
P
X
P
P
P
X
P
P
X
X
P
P
X
P
P
X
P
P
P
P
X
P
Jogging
P
X
P
P
P
P
P
X
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
X
P
P
P
P
P
P
X
Jumping
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
Open
Response
X
P
X
P
P
X
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
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b. If any, what are some of the challenges with students understanding of the
content? How many students?
Based on the results from the exit slips, the largest challenge with students
understanding was identifying the muscles that were worked with each exercise. In
particular, students had the most trouble identifying the correct muscles used when
doing push-ups. Nine out of twenty-four students thought that push-ups worked the
quad (leg) muscles instead of the biceps, deltoids, and tricep (arm) muscles. Eight out
of twenty-four students thought that sit ups worked the biceps, deltoids, and triceps
along with abdominal muscles instead of just labeling the abdominal muscles.
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d. What are the next steps for you to reteach the content and/or help students
progress to the next level of the content?
My next step would not necessarily reteach the entire lesson, but to inform
students of the misunderstanding and clarify any confusion that students may have had.
I would reteach the mini lesson, and instead of focusing on certain muscles that are
used in each exercise I would have the class discuss all the muscles that are used in
each exercise. After we identify all the muscles that are used, then we may start a
conversation about what muscles are being worked out the most and the intensity of
each muscle that is being used. Therefore, that will give students a better understanding
of how muscles are being used, and how certain muscles are used more than others I
each exercise.
e. What are any advantages and/or disadvantages with using exit slips as a
quick formative assessment?
The advantages of using exit slips as a quick formative assessment is that it is an
effective way of finding evidence of students understanding of concepts. For example,
with the exit slip that I used for this PE lesson, I was quickly able to assess students
knowledge of each exercise within five minutes. Exit slips are also a quick way to see
what content students understand and which content still needs improvement.
Therefore, exit slips can help to drive instruction for future lessons.
The disadvantage with using exit slips is that some students may not be able to
have enough time to process what was taught by the end of the lesson. For example,
my high school math teacher made us complete exit slips at the end of each lesson for
a grade. However, sometimes I would need time to process and review the information
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on my own before I had a full understanding of the concept. Even though I may have
had a full understanding of the content by the end of the day, I did poorly on my exit
slips because I did not have time to process everything I learned in that short amount of
time.
4. Select three words that describe your student teaching experience during the fourth
semester. Explain each word.
The first word that I will use to explain my student teaching experience is fun. Every
morning, I would be excited when I woke up in the morning to get to school and prepare
for the school day to begin. I talked to my mentor teacher about the joy that I have in the
classroom with the students. The best part of the day is just spending time teaching
them and overall enjoying their company. The work that needs to be done before and
after school may seem time-consuming, boring, and stressful, but I find that to all just be
part of the job criteria. I learned that as long as I am efficient and hard-working
throughout the day, I am able to find the time to talk and get to know my students better.
This semester has been so much fun getting to know and making personal connections
with each student in the classroom. I am truly going to miss this class when I leave in a
couple weeks.
The second word that I will use to explain my student teaching experience is
unpredictable. I feel that teaching is all about anticipating students questions, actions,
and behaviors in order to fix problems before they occur. However, student teaching has
taught me that some things are just unpredictable. A perfect example is what happened
during one of my first days of solo teaching. A student walked through the door in the
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morning, put his backpack on his chair, and threw up all of over the desk, bag, chair,
and ground within thirty seconds of entering the classroom. I had to call the custodian,
but no one picked up, so I had to call my mentor teacher to walkie-talkie the custodians.
Another example is that one of my students was writing on his clipboard as he began to
walk, and just walked straight into a pole. Although those moments are not always the
easiest to handle, that is what makes teaching so enjoyable for me. The unpredictability
is what makes teaching so different from other professions.
The third word that I will use to explain my student teaching experience is grateful.
This experience has just made me feel so grateful that I decided to pursue my dreams
and enter this profession. Coming from a private school, there were so many high
expectations put on me by my peers and teachers. However, I tried my best to turn their
negativity into strength. I wanted to prove to everyone that teaching is not just a lowpaying, easy job. I entered this profession to make a difference, and maybe one day
make a different at a state or even national level. I am so grateful that I had the
opportunity to learn from so many great mentor teachers, cohort coordinators, and other
educators, and I feel that I am now ready to go out, make a difference, and change the
way people look at the education profession.