TPA Lesson Plan #__1_____
1. Teacher
Candidate
|
Amanda Hennings
|
Date Taught
|
11/24/14
|
Cooperating Teacher
|
Sean Agriss
|
School/District
|
Eastern
|
2. Subject
|
English Language Arts
|
Field Supervisor
|
|
3. Lesson
Title/Focus
|
Night/Life is Beautiful Comparison
|
5. Length of Lesson
|
20 minutes
|
4. Grade Level
|
9th
|
||
6. Academic &
Content Standards (GLEs/EARLs/Common Core)
|
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.9-10.3
Analyze how complex characters (e.g., those with multiple or conflicting motivations) develop over the course of a text, interact with other characters, and advance the plot or develop the theme. |
7. Learning
Objective(s)
|
Given “Night” and the video “Life is Beautiful”, students
will compare the two characters and the attitudes they have in their given
situation as well as understand how Elie’s attitude changed through the
course of the text by participating in discussion and group work.
I can compare and know the difference between attitudes of
characters in two different stories.
I can see how a characters attitude has changed throughout
the story.
|
8. Academic
Language
|
Some language that will be used are words like compare,
develop, and plot. Students should already know what these words mean but we will
be using them throughout the lesson. If students do not remember, I will
explain the words again and have them write them in their notes.
|
9. Assessment
|
In order to assess my students, I will have them do an
exit slip. In order to leave the classroom, they will need to write a short
paragraph asking what they took from this book, if they liked the book and
how they can relate it to the world and their lives. This will be a formative
assessment.
|
10. Connections
|
In the
book “Discussion as a way of Teaching”, Stephen Brookfield says, “…conversation
is one of the most important ways for human beings to make meaning, to construct
a world view, and to provide a meeting place of various modes of imagining
(Brookfield 5). Students are more likely to learn more from each other than
me. I think discussion based learning is the best way for students to learn.
This lesson
connects to the lesson that we did the day before on social justice. The themes
of this book like freedom of religion and social justice are directly
related. In order to build on prior
knowledge, we will be talking about events that happen in the book that we
have discussed on other days such as the young boys hanging. Prior to this
lesson, we have had a lesson about being respectful during discussion and how
to take notes. World War II had a major impact on our world and probably many
people have a connection to it, whether students’ grandparents were involved
in some way or some students may be Jewish. Hopefully, all students will have
a connection with this story. It may be through family and friend connections
or religious connections.
|
11. Instructional
Strategies/Learning Tasks to Support Learning
|
|
Learning Tasks
and Strategies
Introduction
In order to communicate the learning objective, I will
write it on the board. I will ask them to write the objective in their own
words. In order to introduce the lesson, I will ask them how many of them
have seen “Life is Beautiful”. I will then ask them to tell the class what it
is about. Then I will show a clip from the movie.
Learning Tasks
Students are learning to compare complex characters from
different stories and how “Night” relates to their lives. Students will watch
the video, talk in small groups about several questions I will give them, and
then they will answer questions for an exit task.
Introduce “I Can” statements (2 minutes)
Introduce “Life is Beautiful” and watch clip (5 minutes)
Group discussion
(10 minutes)
-How is the man’s attitude in “Life is Beautiful”
different than Elie’s in “Night”?
-How did Elie’s faith in God change from the beginning to
the end?
-Did life seem easier when he let go of his hope and faith
in God? Or was it harder for him?
Exit task (3 minutes).
What did you get from this book? Did your perception about
the Holocaust change after you were done reading “Night”? Did you learn
anything new? What did you find interesting or especially disturbing?
Closure
Given “Night” and the video “Life is Beautiful”, students
will compare the two characters and the attitudes they have in their given
situation as well as understand how Elie’s attitude changed through the
course of the text by participating in discussion and group work.
I can compare and know the difference between attitudes of
characters in two different stories.
I can see how a characters attitude has changed throughout
the story.
Sequenced
Instruction
|
|
Teacher’s Role
Teacher will be facilitating discussion.
Teacher will be monitoring group work.
Teacher will be assessing student knowledge through the
exit task and discussion.
|
Students’ Role
Students will be respectfully participating in discussion.
Students will be watching a clip from “Life is Beautiful
and comparing the character to Elie in “Night” using a Venn Diagram.
Students will process knowledge to compare “Night” to
their daily lives.
|
Student Voice to Gather
I will give the students “I Can” statements to rewrite
into their own words. Students will always know they can ask me for extra
help. I am a resource to them. They can also use their book as a resource as
well as the internet when they need extra help.
|
|
12. Differentiated
Instruction
|
Plan
In order to be helpful to all learning styles, Students
will be participating in discussion, watching a video clip and writing notes
and exit slips. For students with special needs, I will place them with one
of the students that is more advanced in order to help them understand.
|
13. Resources and
Materials
|
Plan
Brookfield, S., & Preskill, S. (1999). Discussion
as a way of teaching: Tools and techniques for democratic classrooms. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Life is beautiful
[Motion picture]. (2000). Miramax Home Entertainment. [Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Y9aKqawdUQ].
I will need a whiteboard and markers and students will
need their notebooks and writing utensils.
|
14. Management and
Safety Issues
|
Plan
Students will need to be respectful during discussion. At
the beginning of the year, we will have a specific lesson on how to be
respectful during discussion and how they can have meaningful discussion with
each other. They will also need to stay on topic during group work which will
also be taught during the lesson on discussion. If students are disrespectful
to others during the discussion, I will warn them. If they continue, they
will be sent to the principal’s office.
|
15. Parent &
Community Connections
|
Plan
Lesson notes will be made available on the class blog. Students
and parents will have access.
Some students may be directly connected with the Holocaust
and World War II. Many may have a family member that was involved in this
terrible war. Some may relate because they are Jewish. All students should be
informed because this happened in our history and will broaden their view of
certain cultural events.
|