Lesson Plan Essay

1089 Words3 Pages

In this essay, I will talk about the components of a lesson plan, the benefits of planning with clear and appropriate goals, selecting age-appropriate goals and objectives that align with state academic content standards, and selecting goals and objectives that are differentiated for varying abilities and learning styles and for multiple intelligences. A lesson plan is a teacher’s detailed description of the course of instruction for one class. There are many different parts of a lesson plan. For example, there is the title, which is where one would explain what it is the lesson plan is going to be about. Then, there are the learning outcomes, which are what the students are required to be learning after completing the lesson plan. After …show more content…

Then, there are the activities, which are the things that the students will do to make the learning more entertaining. The alternative assessments are the assessments that you give to the students that can not complete the task that was originally given to them for one reason or another. Finally, there is the author information. Basically, the author information is just information about the teacher that made the lesson plan, that includes where they teach, what they teach, etc. Goals determine purpose, aim, and reasoning for what teachers and their classes will engage during class time. Goals tell what students will be able to do at the end of units. Goals are general . Objectives determine what students will do to acquire further knowledge and skills. Objectives define the broader goals of lesson plans. Objectives are specific and …show more content…

People all learn at a different pace, some may be faster than others at learning something. It just depends on how the specific person learns best, or how much they already know on a specific topic. Other than the obvious fact that people learn differently, you as a teacher also have to take into consideration those that can not understand because of a mental disability that they may have. It is really common for someone of special needs to be put into a classroom and you have to be sure to not leave them behind, and make sure that they understand what you are teaching. It may be a slower process, but it is necessary. On the opposite side of that, there are the people who get all that you throw at them really easily. Those people may get bored, so you may have to give them something harder to do so that they are challenged and interested. To be fair and sure that people all learn properly, you should split them into three groups for each lesson that you teach. The group that completely understands what they need to, the group that is average and kind of gets it, that may need a little more help, and the group that definitely needs help with the topic. Doing this, you can ensure that each group will eventually be on the same level of understanding. You could also do some sort of different activity for each group, getting harder as you go up in difficulty level. This may take longer than you

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