Saturday, January 9, 2010

Reflection 1- What is a lesson plan?

A lesson plan is is the basic molding of the overall curriculum in a classroom. A lesson plan is a guide that indicates what teacher will be teaching each individual day. A lesson plan incorporates a lot of thinking and brainstorming. A teacher is responsible for gathering materials and ideas together to deliver a certain instruction or lesson to students in a creative way. Lesson plans should be interesting and fun. In order to create one it is necessary to do some “planning”. A teacher must observe the age group they are going to be working with and built a lesson that will fit them adequately. A lesson plan should contain elements such as materials, objective, time, and evaluation. There is a purpose to every lesson, a certain subject you are planning to cover and educate students about. That would be the objective. For example, if the lesson is having children classify items under “paper” “plastic” or “glass”, the teacher is trying to increase awareness and inform students about recycling. That would be her objective. There are different approaches and methods to deliver a lesson. There are three different approaches to guide students in a lesson; behaviorism, cognitivism, and constructivism. Behaviorism is just basically repeating a behavior until it is obtained. Cognitivism is observing the behavior and making changes to receive the feedback you want. Constructivism is making students experience things on their own in order to prepare them to face different situations. These three methods or “approaches” are very efficient and useful when coming up with a lesson plan. They help thing of an objective and a purpose to every lesson. They may also help spark creativity in the lesson you want to create. It is very important that a lesson plan covers the needs of the students in terms of what they should be learning at a certain time in the school year. However, it is also important that the lesson sparks the interest of the student in order to increase motivation. If a child is not interested in the lesson they are being taught, they are more than likely to not gain much from it. Lack of interest is one of the major reasons students do not grasp a lot of information they should be learning in school. Themes are a good way to make a lesson plan interesting. For example, learning math through helping “Timmy the Turtle” get to his mom. The  child will be so caught up in getting the turtle there they will not even notice how much they’re learning along the way. Overall, a lesson plan is one of the most important things in a teaching career. 

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