TPA Lesson Plan
1. Teacher Candidate
|
Grace Knowles
|
Date Taught
|
11/28/2016
|
2. Subject
|
English Language Arts
|
Field Supervisor
|
Dr. Sean Agriss
|
3. Lesson Title/Focus
|
Plot Within Fall of the House of Usher
|
5. Length of Lesson
|
30 minutes
|
4. Grade Level
|
9th
|
||
6. Academic & Content Standards (Common Core/National)
|
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.10
By the end of grade 9, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and poems, in the grades 9-10 text complexity band proficiently, with scaffolding as needed at the high end of the range.
|
7. Learning Objective(s)
|
· Students will be able to define the elements of plot (exposition, rising action, climax, and falling action).
This objective aligns with CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.10
· Students will be able to make a plot pyramid for “The Fall of the House of Usher” with written and visual representations of each element
This objective aligns with CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.10
|
8. Academic Language
demands (vocabulary, function, syntax, discourse)
|
Content Vocabulary
Exposition, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, Resolution
Process Vocabulary
Snowballing Discussion: Discussion starts in pairs and slowly progresses to add more people, eventually involving the whole class.
Kahoot: An online quiz format that projects questions for the class and has students respond to the questions using their phones or computers.
|
9. Assessment
|
· Student learning will be measured through a Kahoot quiz that will ask them the definitions of the content vocabulary (exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and conflict) and quiz their knowledge of applying it to the reading, The Fall of the House of Usher.
· This is assessment is formative.
· The lesson will be an introduction to creating plot pyramids, so I will be using the assessment to determine where the students are at in their understanding and what kind of additional instruction or review will be necessary.
· The lesson is intended to help students improve their reading comprehension skills. In order to become better readers, students need to understand what they are reading. Plot pyramids allow students to think about the story they have read and its structure, thus allowing for increased comprehension.
**Attach** all assessment tools for this lesson
|
10. Lesson Connections
|
· This lesson is supported by Cris Tovani in her pedagogical book I Read It, But I Don’t Get It. Although Tovani does not include plot pyramids in her book, she recommends many strategies for ensuring students aren’t fake reading (reading the words without extracting meaning). Creating plot pyramids is a way for students to think about what they have read, make sense of it, and ensure they are understanding it correctly through discussion and application.
· Students are building onto their prior learning of exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution, and what a plot pyramid is. They will not only be asked to define each of the terms, but apply them to Poe’s short story.
· This lesson is building onto a prior lesson on what plot, exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution are.
· In order to fully access this lesson, students must have a basic understanding of how to use the internet on smartphones or laptops.
· I am building my lesson on the recognition that many teens use technology on a daily basis. I want to provide ways in which they can incorporate that technology into their education. SmartPhones and laptops are not merely forms of entertainment, but also educational assets.
|
11. Instructional Strategies/Learning Tasks to Support Learning
|
|
Sequenced Instruction
· Introduce SLOs, use of technology, pre-assignment assessment, review plot pyramid, and break class into groups ~4 minutes
· Learning activities ~14 minutes
· Kahoot quiz ~10 minutes
· Exit question and review~ 2 minutes
|
|
Teacher’s Role
· Teacher will orally introduce SLOs, review content vocabulary discussed in the prior lesson, and give a preview of the lesson.
· Teacher will inform students that they will need their phones or computer later in class and ask them to ensure they are on and connected to the internet.
· Teacher will group students into pairs and assign them one element of plot to present to the class--students will still be responsible for finding each of the elements of plot within the story.
· The teacher will encourage students to use their technology as an aid if they believe it will help.
· Teacher will circulate the class to ensure that students are on task and offer help as needed.
· Teacher will instruct the class to come back together and present their findings to the class.
· Teacher will wrap up discussion.
· Teacher will introduce Kahoot, help students get logged into it, and begin quiz
· Teacher will use assessment results to plan for further instruction on the content.
· Teacher will ask the students why they think learning about plot is essential for students to expand their reading skills.
· Teacher will inform students of next lesson—creating visual representation of the plot pyramid—so that they can begin thinking about it.
· Teacher will dismiss the class.
|
Students’ Role
· Students will come into class and listen to the teacher for first few minutes of class to receive instructions.
· Students will be grouped by the teacher and instructed to determine where the elements of plot are found in the story. Students will be informed which one they need to present to the class.
· The teacher will show an example of a plot pyramid so students know how to structure them.
· Students will work together to determine what part of the story contains the exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution.
· A designated speaker from each group will announce their results to the class.
· The class will discuss each group's result and mention any possible issues with answers.
· Students will be instructed to get their phones or laptops out, go to Kahoot.it, and type in the quiz code.
· Students will take the Kahoot quiz on plot, and the teacher will review any wrong answers before moving on.
· After the quiz, students will be asked why they think learning about plot is essential to expanding their reading skills.
· Students will be informed that they will be creating visual representations in their upcoming lesson.
· Students will be dismissed from class.
|
Student Voice
Student voice can be gathered from the Kahoot quiz and mini-presentations in class. Before class, I will ask the students to hold up 1-4 fingers (1 meaning unconfident, 4 meaning extremely confident) to determine their confidence in their understanding of plot. The final question on Kahoot will ask the same question to assess progress toward student’s confidence in understanding plot (aligning with CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.10). At the end of the class, I will ask the students why they think understanding plot is essential for improving their reading skills.
| |
12. Differentiated Instruction
|
· While working on the plot pyramid assignment, students with enough time will have the option to begin drawing visual representations of their plot pyramid.
· This lesson will be part of a unit plan. In the following lesson, students would have more time to work on visuals for their plot pyramids.
· If any students do not have access to the required technology, the quiz can be changed to a partner or group quiz. This will allow students to discuss the questions to work toward the appropriate answer and hopefully take less time for the teacher to need to go over incorrect answers.
|
13. Resources and Materials
|
· This lesson was inspired by an observation of a 9th-grade class at Ferris High School. All worksheets and slides for this lesson were designed on my own with influence from Patricia Schulze’s “Teaching Plot Structure Through Short Stories” unit plan on ReadWriteThink.org.
· The teacher will need a computer, a projector and screen, and a white board.
· Students will need a smartphone or computer, the plot pyramid worksheet, a pen, and a copy of “The Fall of the House of Usher.”
Schulze, Patricia. "Teaching Plot Structure Through Short Stories." ReadWriteThink. N.p., n.d. Web. 27 Nov. 2016.
Tovani, Cris. I Read It, But I Don't Get It. Portland: Stenhouse, 2000. Print.
|
14. Management and Safety Issues
|
The biggest issue that could arise from this lesson is the abuse of technology. In order to prevent it, I will make clear expectations of time allowed for each portion and suggest ways in which they can use technology effectively to supplement the lesson.
|
15. Parent & Community Connections
|
Students will be encouraged to demonstrate their new understanding of plot to inform their parents of what they are working on in class. Students will be encouraged to summarize The Fall of the House of Usher to their parents ensuring they cover exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution in the proper order. This allows students to gain a better understanding of plot through explanation while filling parents in on what is going on in the classroom.
Being familiar with the elements of plot can help them to better succinctly summarize other pieces of literature, videos, and conversations. They can use the skills gained in this lesson to become better communicators outside of the classroom.
|
LINK TO NON-PRINT MATERIALS: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1kRlafLrs_gABoa0Ce7Oj1nB9rp3K3F_PnnFYyaSAv3I/edit?usp=sharing
