Big Ideas: Seton Hill University Lesson Plan Template Name Subject Grade Level Date/Duration
Big Ideas: Seton Hill University Lesson Plan Template Name Subject Grade Level Date/Duration
Big Ideas: Seton Hill University Lesson Plan Template Name Subject Grade Level Date/Duration
Essential
Questions
DETAILS
Miss Lacey Weiner
ELA
2
2 class periods, 60 minutes each
Writers write stories to tell a moral or message about
life.
PA/Common
Core/Standards
Objectives
Bloom's
Taxonomy
Webb's Depth of
Knowledge
(DOK)
Formative &
Summative
Assessment
Evidence
CK
ISTE Standards
for Students
Framework for
21st Century
Learning
Accommodation
s, Modifications
SUPERVISING
TEACHERS
SIGNATURE
Explicit
Instructions
CK
Activating Prior Knowledge
When was a time you were curious about something?
SEI (2) For ELLs What was one American custom you
wanted to learn more about when you moved here?
(For example, the Fourth of July)
Hook/Lead-In/Anticipatory Set
To hook my students into this lesson, I will read to them
Goldilocks and The Three Bears. SIOP (1): To
accommodate for not only my ELL students, but to
help the comprehension of all my students, I will
utilize Total Physical Response throughout my
reading.
Big Idea Statement
CALP: SIOP (2): The Big Ideas will be written on
the board, and the teacher will ask the students to read
the ideas once to themselves, and then once in the form
of choral reading.
Essential Questions Statement
The teacher will write the essential questions on the
board along with the big ideas. The teacher will describe
the questions that students should be able to answer by
the conclusion of the lesson. The teacher put extra
emphasis on telling his or her student to think about
how Goldilocks and the bears are feeling throughout the
story so that the ELL can make better (SIOP 3) text-toself connections. For example, imagine how sad baby
bear was when he found that his chair was broken, have
you ever broken a toy and felt very sad?
New Assessment for ELLs:
Students will listen to different music clips, and pick which one
they think best describes what the personality of Goldilocks,
Papa Bear, Mama Bear, and Baby Bear if they were portrayed
in music.
The music clip for Papa Bear would be loud and fast
The music clip for Mama Bear would be soft and slow
The music clip for Baby Bear would be high-pitched and whiny.
The music clip for Goldilocks would sound much like The Pink
Panther theme song sneaky.
Objective Statement
The teacher will write and orally describe to the students
what their ultimate goals of the lesson are. The teacher
will show the students examples of the story map, as
well as all of the premade pictures that will be used to
place the events of the plot in sequential order.
Transition
Stomp like bears to your seat in the circle.
Key Vocabulary
Character: Who the story is about.
Characterization: How the author shows who the
characters are, what their personalities are, what they
want, etc.
Narrative: Words that tell a story.
Plot: The order of events in a story.
Problem/Solution: A type of story structure where the
author presents a problem and then gives one or more
solutions to it.
Setting: The time and place in which a story happens.
Porridge: a dish consisting of oatmeal or another meal
or cereal boiled in water or milk.
Frightened: afraid or anxious.
New assessment for ELLs
Ells will be given definitions, to which they will have to
choose the appropriate vocabulary word. The format of
the worksheet will be a word bank at the top, followed
by three definitions. Instead of the students having to
pick the best word out of 8, they will only have to pick
the best word out of three. After the student completes
that section, they will move on to the next where there
is another word bank, followed by another three
definitions.
Lesson
Procedure
Must include
adaptations &
accommodation
s for students
with special
needs
PreAssessment of Students
The teacher will ask students if they have ever read a
story that has taught them a lesson. For example, The
Rainbow Fish teaches students the importance of
sharing.
ELLs will discuss lessons they think should be taught in
books. (Sharing, helping, caring)
The teacher will explain that there is a lesson to be
learned in this story as well, and to think about what
that lesson may be. The teacher should stress that there
can be more than one correct answer.
Reading
Materials
Technology
Equipment
Supplies
Teacher
Self-reflection
Homework/Assignments
Pretend to be an author and think about a lesson that
you would want to teach through a narrative story. Think
about all of the things you need to make a story a
narrative, and bring your ideas back to school with you
tomorrow we will begin to plan out our own narrative
stories tomorrow!
Goldilocks and the Three Bears story
Story Map
Pencil
Pictures of events in the story
Magnets to hang pictures of events on the board
Computer or iPad to access website with translated story
For the ELL student:
Pictures of the bears and different emotions for the ELL
to place on the character cards to express what they are
feeling throughout the story.
http://www.esc1.net/cms/lib/tx21000366/centricity/doma
in/63/linguistic_scaffolding_strategies_for_ells.pdf
http://www.d11.org/Instruction/Science/Curriculum/912/Pages/SIOP-Strategies.aspx
http://soe.unc.edu/news_events/news/2009/090917_esl_
workshop/4_Overview_of_SIOP_model_Thrower.pdf
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/en/ 1