Lesson Planning: Mapping a Clear Route to Learning Introduction 1. A quality teacher always marks a positive impression on his students’ learning. He owns an aura that combines mind, body and heart. He learns by himself, teaches others with commitment, and reflects upon his teaching practice. He teaches through a good understanding of context, content, purpose, students, procedures and ability to organize a broad array of techniques to meet learning needs. He sets high expectations and supports students in achieving them. He creates an environment conducive to learning, and leverage available resources outside as well as inside the classroom. 2. Recent studies identified very strong association between teaching quality and student achievement. Teachers teach students in an organized setting, and learners learn lessons as opportunity offered to them. Thus, lesson planning is an essential in teaching learning scenario. Teachers acquire this skill all along the teaching engagement. Having the skill of planning lessons helps teachers to own the subjects they teach. All teachers might have surely planned events, trips, parties, and so on. Lesson planning uses the same skills, except the objective is to teach students in a very specific way and under very specific conditions. The process of lesson planning always results in producing a lesson plan. It may be written in a sheet of paper or a digital computer file, but there is always a visible dimension to any lesson plan. The purpose of planning is making a clear description of how a teacher will teach a lesson and how students will attain the specific learning objectives. 3. Lesson planning is a learned skill acquired in the same way as any other skill. It is not retrieving lesson plans from different sites and adapting them to ones needs. It is developing own lesson plans. Honing this skill needs systematic thinking and practicing. It doesn’t happen overnight, but defines an individual as a teacher. Knowing "how to" is more important than knowing "about" when it comes to lesson planning. It marks the way to becoming a professional teacher. There is no one best way to plan lessons. Regardless of the form or template, there are some fundamental components of all lesson plans that teachers should learn to write, revise, and improve. 4. Lesson Planning does not by itself ensure students’ learning of a new lesson, but it certainly contributes to better learning. It also helps new teachers to organize content, use materials, calculate time, address unforeseen and employ methods. Learning this craft is fundamental to effective teaching. Teachers get better in teaching as they do it more, reflect on improvement and respond to feedback from students, parents, and other teachers. 5. Teachers create lesson plans to communicate to students various activities regarding a specific lesson. Standard lesson plans contain student learning objectives, instructional procedures, the required materials, and some written description of how the students will be evaluated. Many experienced teachers often reduce lesson plans to a mental map or short outline. New teachers usually find detailed lesson plans to be obligatory. Writing a good lesson plan needs motivation and diligence and always serves teachers well. 1 Aim 6. The aim of this paper is to empower teachers with the basic tools of effective teaching so as to enable them raise their students fullest to their potential. Outline 7. Precise information required for achieving the defined objectives is as follows: a. b. c. d. d. Concept of Lesson Planning Factors Affecting Lesson Planning Function of Lesson Planning Components of a Standard Lesson Plan Writing a Comprehensive Lesson Plan Concept of Lesson Planning 8. Lesson is a specific knowledge, skill or attitude taught in a single class period. Available literature shows two approaches to lesson planning: teachers centered and students centered. Though individual difference is enormous, purpose is same. Some are as follows: a. Lesson planning is visualizing the details of a course of teaching, or the learning trajectory for a lesson. Description of a lesson plan may vary depending on teachers’ preference, uniqueness of lesson, and students’ needs. Institutions may have agreed upon guidelines regarding lesson plans. Generally, a lesson plan is the teacher's guide for running a particular lesson, and it includes objectives, procedure and assessment. b. Lesson planning is drawing a road map to effective learning. Firstly, learning objectives are identified. Secondly, appropriate learning activities are designed consistent with the learning objectives. Thirdly, strategies to obtain feedback on student learning are developed. Specifying concrete objectives for student learning helps teachers to decide what teaching and learning activities to be arranged, and determine how to check if the learning objectives have been accomplished by the students. A successful lesson plan addresses and integrates these three key components: (1) (2) (3) Objectives for student learning Teaching/learning activities Strategies to check student understanding c. Lesson planning is a thought process of deciding the activities in consistent with a set of objectives in a given context. Coherent assessment tools are also devised to confirm learning. d. Lesson planning is a basic skill usually taught to teachers in training institutions specially designed for it. Planning in considering factors affecting the lesson, developing clear learning objectives based on a standard curriculum, or set of clear content goals. It requires selecting and sequencing activities in which the teacher and students interact, and devises consistent tools for a reliable assessment of performance. 2 e. Lesson planning identifies students to be unique, thus diverse. There has never been a teacher who has a class of students with equal learning ability. Activities planned for a particular lesson must take into account of having students with different ability. There is no substitute for doing this. The range of abilities in which students differ is truly staggering such as cognitive disorders, emotional handicaps, physical handicaps, and student mastery of appropriate prerequisites for any given lesson. Planners keep this issue in mind while planning a lesson. f. Lesson planning is a dynamic process. Teaching activities or procedures are not static as new situation may arise during the lesson. A good teacher makes necessary adjustments responding to feedback from students. The idea is to keep students focused and involved in learning. To keep students continually involved in learning activities requires spontaneity of teacher. It is a consideration important to planning any lesson. g. Lesson planning is specific to focus students, defined objectives and intended learning outcomes. The best way to ensure specificity is to use measurable and observable action verbs to indicate some level of agreed upon mastery. Teaching is measurable on performance. Teachers check the progress of students learning during the lesson. Assessment means determining the tools of how teachers will assess the progress of students’ learning. i. Lesson planning is anticipating a balanced learning environment. Some students may not get the point first time. The reality is that almost no lesson is 100% reliable. Some students may not learn. The problem is compounded when a teacher is confronted with the challenge of handling weak, mediocre and good students. Lesson planning provides a clear space to come out with a reasonable method of helping all types of students. This is one of the undying problems in teaching, and it has really not been solved to anyone's satisfaction. j. Teaching is practicing the right skills in the right ways. Practice does not make a skill perfect. Perfect practice makes a skill perfect. There is no alternative for developing and honing this skill other than continuous practice. The quality of the practice is important and the quality of the feedback from the learner is indispensable. k. Lesson planning is time consuming, but rewarding to laying the foundation for students’ success. Failing to plan a lesson always makes the teachers and students suffer in many ways. The time invested in lesson planning is well worth any investment as students get engaged, class management improves, and student learning increases. l. Lesson planning is aligning all the basics of teaching i.e. goal, objectives, students’ needs, procedure, resources, time and outcomes. It is focused on the short term goals while always being mindfully aware of the long term goals. Lesson planning is sequential in building skills. Primary skills are introduced first while eventually building to more complex skills. Teachers make a tiered checklist allowing them to keep track of what skills have been introduced to give them guidance and direction. m. Lesson planning is focusing on adopted standards. Standards simply give teachers a general idea of what is to be taught. They are very broad in nature. Lessons 3 plans often target specific skills, but also include the methodology for how those skills are introduced and taught. n. Lesson planning is a running checklist for teachers to keep track of what and when standards and skills have been taught. Many teachers keep lesson plans organized in a binder or a digital portfolio that they are able to access and review at any time. A lesson plan should be an ever-shifting document that teacher is always looking to improve upon. No lesson plan should be viewed as perfect, but instead as something that can always be better. Is Lesson Planning Necessary? 9. Although lesson planning constitutes a major part of being a teacher, it is dreaded and sometimes its importance is underestimated by some teachers. Some teachers even advance the unpredictability of some events in the classroom to discredit any attempt to provide any strict planning of what occurs in the classroom. Although this might be true, it should be noted that a lesson plan is a project of a lesson. It’s not (and cannot) be a description of what will exactly happen during lesson delivery. It provides, however, a guide for managing the classroom environment and the learning process. Importance of Lesson Planning 10. Lesson planning is obviously important for effective teaching because good preparation improves confidence and performance. Following are some hints: a. Clarity. Lesson planning helps to be clear about what teachers want to teach. Teachers need to make wise decisions about the strategies and methods they employ in teaching to help students move systematically toward learning goals. b. Unpredictable Events. Lesson planning provides teachers a room for belter managing unpredictable events. This helps teachers to be ready to cope with whatever happens. c. Framework. Lesson planning gives teaching a framework, an overall shape. d. Reminder. Lesson planning plays the role of a reminder for teachers when they get distracted. e. 11. Commitment. It suggests a level of professionalism and real commitment. Lesson planning has many positive impacts on both the teacher and the learner. a. For the teacher. They don’t have to think on their feet. They don’t lose face in front of their learners. They are clear on the procedure to follow. They build on previous teaching and prepare for coming lessons. b. For the learner. They realize that the teacher cares for their learning. They attend a structured lesson: easier to assimilate. They appreciate their teacher’s work as a model of well-organized work to imitate. 4 Purpose of Lesson Planning 12. All lessons taught so far in the history of teaching are planned ranging from poorly to superbly. Lesson planning exists for the following: a. To Create a Suitable Environment. In a planning a lesson objectives are fixed and the teaching strategies, techniques and material aids etc. are decided beforehand. When a proper teaching environment is created, the teaching goes smoothly. b. To Base a New Lesson on Students’ Existing Knowledge. Lesson planning guides teachers to teach a new lesson on the basis of already known knowledge of the learners. This enables the learners to learn new lesson at ease on one side; the teacher succeeds in acquiring his teaching objectives on the other side. c. To Employ Psychological Approach. Teachers use proper teaching strategies, techniques and instruments keeping in mind the interests, aptitudes, needs, capacities and abilities of the pupils for teaching them when the lesson plans are prepared. This makes teachers approach teaching more psychologically. d. To Refine the Subject Matter. It refines the subject matter from general to relevant. This enables the teacher to give up irrelevant things. He only remembers definite matter and its presentation before the pupils become easy. The pupils also receive the knowledge in a concise, systematic and organized way. e. To Decide on All Activities. It decides on all activities to make the lesson aligned, meaningful and purposeful. f. To Select Appropriate Teaching Aids. It helps teachers decide what facts are to be clarified by what strategies, techniques and instruments and what aid is to be used at what time. This prepares the necessary and effective aids before teaching. g. To Improve Teaching Skill. It acts as an important means for developing teaching skills in teachers. h. To Teach with Confidence. It allows teacher get familiar with the main and allied subjects thus arouses self confidence among them. Teachers get the feeling of selfconfidence to teach with more enthusiasm and pleasure. j. To Ensure Discipline in the Class. By preparing lesson plan, the teacher becomes aware of what, when and how much is to be done in the class. This absorbs all the pupils in their respective tasks. Hence, it results in appreciable classroom discipline. k. To Make the Best Use of Time. duration of the periods. Lesson plan is prepared allotting to the l. To Teach at Reflective Level. Lesson planning provides teachers with thought provoking questions to be asked during the lesson to activate students. Also there should be an effort to stretch the teaching from memory level to reflective level. 5 Factors Affecting Lesson Planning 13. There are numerous factors exist in a teaching scenario that influence teachers’ decisions in planning a lesson. Effective teachers often give due consideration to a full range of interlinked factors in designing lessons. It seems like writing a lesson plan is a huge task that requires entire day just to prepare one; however, it really doesn't have to be that way. It is always done in a reasonable time and effort. Where to start is sometimes confusing. Egg first or chicken first like never ending debate may arise in selecting the factors. It is accepted that the following sequence is better for consideration of factors: a. Background. Background is the knowledge about topic that is or necessary to understand a lesson. Reflection on the context gives planners a big picture idea of the lesson. Lessons do not exist in isolation, thus it is important to locate the lesson in its context. Curriculum has unit structures with themes running through all the lessons in the unit. Planners draw the learning objectives for an individual lesson from the broader context of the whole unit so that the purpose of the learning is clear. Main goal or purpose is a reference for lesson planning. b. Students. Knowing the students allows a plan to fit into students’ needs. Existing knowledge paves the foundation of a new lesson. What students already know about the topic is essential for setting the basis for a new lesson. Aptitude and ability of students determine the level of complexity to be accepted to teaching a new lesson. Motivation of students helps teachers to plan for more acceptable approach to the lesson. Commitment of students to other activities allots attention to new learning. Prior knowledge of students on a lesson can be assessed by a diagnostic test. Teachers may be already familiar with the students. For a new teacher it may be difficult but not impossible. He may consult the regular teachers. Assumption about it is undesirable because it backfires. Parameters of knowing students are: ability levels; backgrounds; interest levels; attention spans; ability to work together in groups; prior knowledge and learning experiences; special needs or accommodations; and learning preferences. It is important to design teaching to meet the needs of students. That's the key to successful teaching and learning. c. Learning Objectives. Defining a learning objective is really complex because educators use many different terms for learning objectives, and the terms are used synonymously such as learning objective, outcomes, benchmark, grade-level indicator, learning target, performance indicator, and learning standard. It is always kept in mind before writing the main part of a plan. Teaching is always targeted to achieving a desired result. Why this planning is the primary question to begin with the process. A thorough analysis of inbuilt aim of the lesson allows teachers to determine stage by stage learning objectives. It also establishes and articulates learning expectations for students to know precisely what is expected of them. It clearly communicates students an urge to achieve the intended objectives. It manages confusion, frustration, or other factors that impede the learning. d. Content. Curriculum is based on the standards that schools want students to meet. It specifies core concepts that must be taught, gives suggested time periods that ought to be spent on each concept, and gives specific recommendations on how to teach the concept in a manner those appeals to different kinds of students. Textbook 6 materials are designed by the specialists keeping the standards in view. Teachers muster all the available materials to organize the lesson appropriate for the students. Standards are specified by examination boards or universities to award certificates. Knowing content is essential for lesson planning. Teachers research on the subject matter to be taught. Teachers also utilize curriculum guides published by the competent authority and the institution that runs the teaching. Teaching content influences planning. e. Resources. Resources available in teachers hand allows him to plan the teaching method to be adopted. Teachers evaluate the merit of materials available to facilitate teaching for success. For example, technology, software, audio visuals, teacher mentors, community resources, equipment, manipulatives, library resources, local guest speakers, volunteers, or any material that assists teaching. Teaching also requires classroom, laboratory, outdoor or special equipment. Teaching material is a generic term used to describe the resources teachers use to deliver instruction. It supports learning and increase success. Ideally, the teaching materials are tailored to the content. f. Time. Time available determines learning objectives, assessment and content of the lesson. It is a crucial to estimate and allot time for each activity. Time determines the duration of each teaching activity. Initially, planners may have trouble accurately estimating how much time any given activity will take. However, planning an approximate time for activities, and even writing the time into lesson plan, is still a good idea. Doing so allows teachers to see how your actual chronological progress through the lesson period is matching up with what they had planned, so that they are more quickly alerted to the need to begin taking remedial measures, such as speeding the activity up, slowing things down, or preparing plan B. Functions of Lesson Planning 14. Lesson planning makes teaching effective through performing many functions. It identifies clear learning objectives linking activities to them. It creates quality assignments associated with quality instruction and student work. Lesson is logically structured, sequenced and progress through the content step-by-step. Deploy teaching strategies in the classroom and times activities. Using advance organizers, graphic organizers, and outlines to plan for effective instructional delivery facilitates learning. Considering student attention spans and learning styles when designing lessons. Systematically developing objectives, questions, and activities that reflect higher-level and lower-level cognitive skills as appropriate for the content and the students aligns all elements. Lesson planning decides on selecting every component to be included in the lesson plan. a. Determining Clear Learning Objectives. Determining clear learning objectives is the most important function of lesson planning. Objectives are derived from overall purpose of the lesson. Those are the outcomes that a planner intends students to achieve at the end of the lesson. Objectives are achievable to students and engage students in the learning process. Objectives are behavioral in nature and are specific to performance. Objectives allow teachers to observe students’ performance and describe criteria for performance measurement. Objectives represent indicators of performance for ongoing progress of learning a lesson. Instructional objectives start with a condition that enables students to learn. Condition is an activity, a specific set of directions, materials needed to perform a task, an assignment, or anything that sets up a condition 7 for students to engage in the task being observed and measured for performance. The heart of the objective is the task that the student is expected to perform. It is one of the most important parts of the lesson plan because it is student centered and outcomes based. Objectives can range from easy to hard tasks depending on student abilities. (1) Components of an Objective. Robert Frank Mager (1997) stated that a useful learning objective should include the following three major components: (a) Performance. What are students expected to do? (b) Conditions. Under which conditions should the students perform? (c) Criteria. How well do students have to perform in order to satisfy the requirements? (2) The ABCD Method. The ABCD method is an excellent way of writing learning objectives (Heinich, 1996). It is the acronym of words as: "A" is for audience; "B" is for behavior, "C" for conditions and "D" for degree of mastery. (a) Audience (A). Who? Who are your learners? (b) Behavior (B). What? What do you expect them to be able to do? This is an overt, observable behavior, even if the actual behavior is covert or mental in nature. If you can't see it, hear it, touch it, taste it, or smell it, you can't be sure your audience really learned it. (c) Condition (C). Learning occurs in a given opportunity. How? Under what setting or context will the learning occur? What will the students be given or already be expected to know to accomplish the learning? (d) Degree (D). How much? How much will be accomplished, how well will the behavior need to be performed, and to what level? Do you want total mastery (100%), do you want them to respond correctly 80% of the time, etc. A common (and totally non-scientific) setting is 80% of the time. (3) SMART Objectives. Objective is something that a teacher intends students to achieve. It gives teachers and students something to focus on. It is a direction that provides location of the class in relation to reaching the objective. Setting clear objectives is the prerequisite of defining the route to achieving the final destination. SMART (S.M.A.R.T.) is an acronym formed by the first letters of the following words: S M A = = = Specific Measurable Achievable/ Attainable 8 R T = = Relevant/ Realistic/ Results Focused Timed (4) Examples of Well-Written Objectives. Below are some example objectives which include Audience (A), Behavior (B), Condition (C), and Degree of Mastery (D). Many objectives actually put the condition first. (a) Cognitive (comprehension level) -"C: Given examples of activities in a college classroom, A: the students B: will be able to accurately identify the constructivist examples and explain why each example is or isn't a constructivist activity D: in 20 words or less." (b) Cognitive (application level) -"C: Given a sentence written in the past or present tense, A: the students B: will be able to rewrite the sentence in future tense D: with no errors in tense." (c) Cognitive (problem solving/synthesis level) -"C: Given two cartoon characters of the student's choice, A: the students B: will be able to list five major personality traits of each of the two characters, combine these traits (either by melding traits together, multiplying together complimentary traits, or negating opposing traits) into a composite character, and develop a short (no more than 20 frames) storyboard for a cartoon D: that illustrates three to five of the major personality traits of the composite character." (d) Psychomotor - "C: Given a standard balance beam raised to a standard height, A: the student C: (attired in standard balance beam usage attire) B: will be able to walk the entire length of the balance beam (from one end to the other) D: steadily, without falling off, and within a six second time span." (e) Affective - "C: Given the opportunity to work in a team with several people of different races, A: the student B: will demonstrate a positive increase in attitude towards non-discrimination of race, D: as measured by a checklist utilized/completed by non-team members." 9 (5) Notes on Objective Writing. Some features of writing objectives are: (a) As moving up the "cognitive ladder," it gets increasingly difficult to precisely specify the degree of mastery required. (b) Affective objectives are difficult for many instructors to write and assess. They deal almost exclusively with internal feelings and conditions that can be difficult to observe externally. (c) It's important to choose the correct key verbs to express the desired behavior you want students to produce. (6) Bloom's Taxonomy and Measurable Verbs. Bloom developed six categories of intellectual skills in the cognitive domain in 1956. A group of cognitive psychologists led by Lorin Anderson updated the taxonomy during the 1990's. Six categories are shown in the pyramid to start from the simplest behavior at the bottom to the most complex at the top. Bottom ones must normally be mastered before the higher ones can take place. In order to teach students higher order thinking skills, basic knowledge should be provided first. Before asking students to apply, analyze, evaluate, and extend what they are learning, students need to clarify their understanding and practice recall. Critical thinking exercises can deepen students' understanding and help them recall what they have learned. Measurable verbs are the verbs that describe the actions that can be observed. In other words, measurable verbs refer to specific activities that we can observe a student doing. Most of our courses fall into the cognitive domain. We should refer to Bloom's Taxonomy and select measurable verbs when we describe student performance, which can help us focus on specific cognitive processes and use correct measurable verbs. a. Remembering Skill: Verbs used to measure the performance at this level are: Draw, Identify, Locate, Label, Select, Write, List, Recite, Name, State, Record, Repeat. Knowledge is memorized information. Knowledge is assessed by asking students to recall or recognize terms, ideas, procedures, theories etc. b. Understanding Skill: Understanding is the ability higher than memorizing information. It implies a dipper familiarity with the information with personal interpretation. Verbs used to measure the performance of understanding skills are: Confirm, Infer, Explain, Convert, Discuss, Relate, Match, Describe, Estimate, Paraphrase, and Predict Comprehension is assessed by asking students to translate, interpret, extrapolate the information memorized. It does not mean to see full implications or transfer of knowledge to other situations, but closer to literal translation. What does the summer solstice represent? c. Applying Skill: Applying is putting or adapting translated information into use in real sense. Verbs used to measure the performance of application skill: Apply, Modify, Build, Construct, Solve, 10 Report, Sketch, and Produce. Application skill is measured by asking students to apply abstractions, general principles, or methods to specific concrete situations. What would Earth's seasons be like if its orbit was perfectly circular? What would Earth's seasons be like if its orbit was perfectly circular? d. Analyzing Skill: It is the ability to examine learned information methodically by separating into parts and studying their interrelations. Verbs used to measure the performance analyzing skill are: Analyze, Sort, Categorize, Investigate, Compare, Debate, Differentiate, and Examine. Analysis is separation of a complex idea into its constituent parts and an understanding of organization and relationship between the parts by realizing the distinction between hypothesis and fact as well as between relevant and extraneous variables. Why are seasons reversed in the southern hemisphere? e. Synthesizing Skill: It is combining all known information to form a new idea. Verbs used to measure the performance synthesizing skill are: Combine, Compose, Design, Generate, Invent, Plan, Formulate, Originate, Devise, Revise, and Hypothesize. Synthesis ability of students are assessed by asking them to demonstrate something creative, mental construction of ideas and concepts from multiple sources to form complex ideas into a new, integrated, and meaningful pattern subject to given constraints. If the longest day of the year is in June, why is the northern hemisphere hottest in August? f. Evaluating Skill: It is determining the importance, effectiveness, or worth of an idea in specific parameters. Verbs used to measure the performance of evaluation skill are: Solve, Critique, Criticize, Assess, Conclude, Justify, Judge Evaluation is assessed by asking students to make a judgment of ideas or methods using external evidence or selfselected criteria substantiated by observations or informed rationalizations. What would be the important variables for predicting seasons on a newly discovered planet? (7) Learning Objectives vs. Learning Activities. A learning objective describes a learned ability which is not a one-time event. Writing learning objectives for a unit of instruction starts from the sentence "upon successful completion of this lesson, students will be able to". Learning activities are the learning experiences that provide students the opportunity to practice the desired skills. They are different. Students will write an essay on one of the major theories of the cause of glaciation. This statement describes a learning activity that can help students better understand the major theories of the cause of glaciation, so the desired skill that students are expected to acquire is to understand the major theories of the cause of glaciation. Thus learning objective uses simple sentences and words understandable by students without sacrificing technical accuracy. Following principles are important for describing student performance: 11 (a) Clear description of the desired student performance. (b) Reference to Bloom's Taxonomy to focus on specific cognitive process. (c) Selection of measurable verbs. b. Selecting the Content. Teachers select learning information appropriate to achieving the learning objectives. (1) Seven Criteria for the Selection of lesson content (a) Self-sufficiency. To help learners attain independence in the most economical manner is the main guiding principle of content selection. Although the economy of learning implies less teaching effort and less use of educational resources, students gain more results. They can cope up with the learning outcomes effectively. This criterion means that students should be given a chance to experiment, observe, and do field study. This system allows them to learn independently. (b) Significance. The content is significant if it is selected and organized for the development of learning activities, skills, processes, and attitude. It also develops the three domains of learning namely the cognitive, affective and psychomotor skills and considers the cultural aspects of the learners. In short, select content that can achieve the overall aim of the curriculum. (c) Validity. It refers to the authenticity of the content selected. Modern curriculum experts are after current trends, relevance and authenticity of the curriculum; otherwise, the school or the country becomes obsolete. (d) Interest. This criterion is true to the learner-centered curriculum. Students learn best if the subject matter is meaningful to them. It becomes meaningful if they are interested in it. However, if the curriculum is subject-centered, teachers have no choice but to finish the pacing schedule religiously and only teach what is in the book. This approach explains why many fail in the subject. (e) Utility. Another criterion is the usefulness of the content or subject matter. Students think that a subject matter or some subjects are not important to them. They view it useless. As a result, they do not study. Here are the questions that students often ask: Will I need the subject in my job? Will it give meaning to my life? Will it develop my potentials? Will it solve my problem? Will it be part of the test? Will I have a passing mark if I learn it? Students only value the subject matter or content if it is useful to them. 12 (f) Learnability. The subject matter or content must be within the schema of the learners. It should be within their experiences. Teachers should apply theories in the psychology of learning to know how subjects are presented, sequenced, and organized to maximize the learning capacity of the students. (g) Feasibility. Feasibility means full implementation of the subject matter. It should consider the real situation of the school, the government, and the society, in general. Students must learn within the allowable time and the use of resources available. Do not give them a topic that is impossible to finish. For example, you have only one week left to finish the unit but then, the activities may take a month for the students to complete. Thus, this requirement is not feasible. Do not offer a computer subject if there is no even electricity in the area, or there are no computers at all. Further, feasibility means that there should be teachers who are experts in that area. For example, do not offer English for Business Communication if there is no teacher to handle it. (2) Teachers appreciate needs of students in collecting, collating and designing content appropriate to them. They adapt materials by simplifying the content available. They group the content into must know, should know and may know categories. List the important facts, key concepts, skills, or key vocabulary terms that you intend to cover. You can also prepare an outline with key learning outcomes. Remember to refer to your curriculum guides. (3) Maxims of Teaching. These are the universal facts found out by the teachers on the basis of experience. They are significant and trustworthy. Maxims help teachers to proceed systematically. The different maxims of teaching are: (a) Known to Unknown. This is based on the assumption that the students know something. New lesson is to increase knowledge and widen outlook. Teachers interpret all new knowledge in terms of the old. Old knowledge serves as a hook on which the new one can be hung. Known is trustworthy and unknown cannot be trusted. Teaching proceeds from known to go towards unknown. For example, while teaching any lesson, the teacher can link the previous experiences of the child with the new lesson that is to be taught Teaching of English (b) Simple to Complex. Teachers present simple things first to grow interest and confidence. Once they are comfortable at the beginning gradually complex ideas are taught. By learning simple things, they feel encouraged and they also gain confidence. On this basis, they become further receptive to the complex matter. On the other hand, if complex types of things are presented to the learner first, he become, upset, feels bored and finds himself in a challenging situation lot which he is not yet ready being immature and unripe. Gradually more difficult items of learning may be presented to the students. It will smoothen teaching being done by the teacher and make learning convenient and interesting for the students. For example, while teaching sentences of English simple 13 sentences should be taught first and complex type of sentences may be taken afterwards. (c) Concrete to Abstract. Concrete things are solid and they can be affected with five senses. But abstract things can only be imagined. It is rather hard to teach abstract things. The students are likely to forget them soon. Teaching concrete things is easy. For example when we teach counting to the students we should first examine concrete nouns like, laptop, book, Pen etc. and then proceed to digits and numbers. The stars, the moon, the sun etc. being taught first whereas the abstract thing, like planet, satellites etc. should be taught afterwards. (d) Analysis To Synthesis. Analysis means breaking a problem into its convenient parts while synthesis means grouping of these separated parts into one complete whole. A complex problem can be made simple and easy by dividing into different parts. “Analysis is the approach for understanding and synthesis is for fixation.” Analysis of a sentence’ is taught to students to help them understand the different parts of a sentence. Later on, synthesis of sentences is taught. (e) Particular to General. Teachers take particular statements and then on the basis of those particular cases, generalization is made. (f) Empirical to Rational. Empirical knowledge is based on observation and firsthand experience. It is concrete and simple. We can see, feel and experience it on the other hand; rational is based on our arguments, and explanation. The stage of arguments is the last whereas seeing things or feeling them is the first stage. Empirical is less general statements whereas rational is more general statements. So the safe approach in teaching is to proceed from empirical to rational. It is a journey from less mental maturity to more mental maturity. (g) Induction to Deduction. Induction means drawing a conclusion from a set of examples whereas deduction is its opposite. The teacher should proceed from induction to deduction. For example, in English while teaching conversion of active voice into passive voice, the teacher should first convert a few sentences of active into the passive voice and on the basis of those conclude the general rule for conversation of active voice into passive voice. (h) Psychological to Logical. Teachers first keep in mind the interest, aptitudes, capacities, development level etc. of the children during selection of subject matter and then on to its logical arrangement. The psychological appeal of the thing is more important at the early stages. Then the’ logic behind it should be seen. (i) Actual to Representative. Teachers usually show the actual objects to students as far as possible. It gives them concrete learning which is more desirable. The learners are able to retain it in their minds 14 for quite a long time. Firsthand information impresses them a good deal. Representative things are used in the form of pictures, models etc. for students who are already familiar with the actual objects. For example, the teacher should show the elephant, the camel, the horse, the railway station, the post office etc. and thereby he should make them understand about these things. The representative of these things in the form of pictures or models may be used at later stages. (j) Near to Afar. Teachers refer to the elements present in the surroundings to which he belongs. So are well acquainted fully with his immediate environment. Gradually he may be taught about those things which are far from his immediate environment. This principle refines the leaching-learning process considerably. Thus the child should be taught the home, followed by the street, the bazaar, the school and then the distant environment of the city to which he belongs. In the same way, acquaintance with the city should lead to acquaintance with the Tehsil, the District, the Division, the Stale and then the Country as a whole. This type of teaching will be incremental and will be step by step learning. (k) Whole to Part. In teaching, the teacher should try to acquaint the child with the whole lesson first and then the different portions of it may be analyzed and studied intensively. This principle holds good while teaching a thing to the small children. At the early stages, the child loves to speak full sentences because in daily life situations, full sentences are used. The child should be given a full sentence. Then he may have full familiarity with the different words contained in that sentence. Later he may have the knowledge of words. Then he will have the knowledge of different letters forming the words. Suppose a poem is to he taught to the students. They should be acquainted with the full poem first. Gradually they may be asked to grasp the poem stanza by stanza In the case of average students, their first attempt may be on full stanza, taking it as a whole and then to the different lines con I. lined in the stanza as parts. It will help the teacher to teach better and the learners to learn things conveniently. (l) Definite to Indefinite. Teachers teach students definite things first because the learner can easily have faith in them. Then afterwards he should give the knowledge of indefinite things. Definite rules of help the learner to have good knowledge. Gradually he can be taught about indefinite things. c. Selecting Appropriate Teaching Methods (1) Academic Games or Competition. Learners compete with each other one to-one or team-to-team to determine which individual or group is superior at a given task such as "spelldowns," anagrams, technology trivia, Odyssey of the Mind, or project competition. Commercially available, academic computer games are also very popular. 15 (2) Activity. It is a general teaching method (e.g., problem solving, design challenge, field trips, and role playing) based on planned, purposeful involvement of students. (3) Brainstorming. In order to generate creative ideas, learners are asked to withhold judgment or criticism and produce a very large number of ways to do something, such as resolve a problem. For example, learners may be asked to think of as many they can for eliminating world hunger. Once a large number of ideas have been generated, they are subjected to inspection regarding their feasibility. (4) Case study. A detailed analysis is made of some specific, usually compelling event or series of related events so that learners will better understand its nature and what might be done about it. For example, learners in a technology lab might investigate the wear and tear of skate boarding on public works. Another class might look at cases of digital technologies and privacy. (5) Centers of interest and displays. Collections and displays of materials are used to interest learners in themes or topics. For example, children may bring to school and display family belongings that reflect their ethnic heritage. The intention may be to interest the class in the notion of culture. Or, the teacher might arrange a display of different devices used in measurement to prompt interest in that topic. (6) Colloquia. A guest or guests are invited to class for the purpose of being interviewed in order to find out about the persons or activities in which they are involved. Thus, a guest musician might serve as a stimulus for arousing interest in music and musical performance. (7) Contract. Written agreements entered into by students and teachers which describe academic work to be accomplished at a particular level in a particular period of time such as a week or month. (8) Controversial Issues. An issue based, teacher directed method that focuses on controversies. Students are directed through a process that assists them in understanding how to deal with controversial and sensitive issues and clarifies issues in a group involving critical thinking and discourse analysis. (9) Cooperative Learning. Learners are placed in groups of four to six. Sometimes the groups are made as diverse or heterogeneous as possible. In such cases, group members are often rewarded for the group's overall success. Student groups might be given a teacher presentation on division of fractions. They would then be given worksheets to complete. Team members would first help and then quiz one another. (10) Culture Jamming. A method used to empower students to speak back to mass advertisements and media images that enforce stereotypes and select 16 representations of individuals or groups. Empowers students to mock or jam images of popular culture. (11) Debate. Debate is a form of discussion whereby a few students present and contest varying points of view with regard to an issue. For example, students could take different positions and debate an issue: "Should rights to free speech on the internet be extended to students in schools?" (12) Debriefing. Debriefing is a method used to provide an environment or platform for the expression of feelings and transfer of knowledge following an experience. Debriefing may come at the hands of a tragic event or may be used more generally following an intentionally educational experience. Debriefing relies on the skills of the facilitator to reframe an experience or event to appropriately channel emotions and knowledge toward understanding and transformation. (13) Demonstration. It is a teaching method based predominantly on the modeling of knowledge and skills. It is a form of presentation where the teacher or learners show how something works or operates, or how something is done. For example, a teacher could demonstrate how to use a thesaurus, how to operate a power drill, how to scan an image, or what happens when oil is spilled on water as when an oil tanker leaks. Next, students practice under teacher supervision. Finally, independent practice is done to the point of proficiency. (14) Direct Instruction. It is a term used to describe explicit, step-by-step instruction directed by the teacher. The format or regimen advocated is demonstration, guided practice, and independent practice. Thus the teacher might teach a reading, mathematics, geography or technology concept or skill. Following that, students practice under teacher supervision. Finally, independent practice is done to the point of mastery. (15) Discovery or Inquiry. It is used when students are encouraged to derive their own understanding or meaning for something. Such as, students are asked to find out what insulation acts as the best barrier for cold or hot environments. Experiments that are not teacher demonstrations are part of discovery learning. (16) Discussion. It occurs when a group assembles to communicate with one another through speaking and listening about a topic or event of mutual interest. To illustrate, a group of learners convenes to discuss what it has learned about global warming. (17) Drill and Practice. Drill is a form of independent study. Once the teacher explains a task, learners practice it. After students are shown how to use Ohm's Law, they are asked to make calculations of current, resistance and voltage. (18) Feedback. It is a semi-formal mode of communicating to students’ constructive criticism regarding their performance during an activity. 17 (19) Field Observation, Fieldwork, and Field Trip. Observations made or work carried on in a natural setting. Students visit the local museum of natural history to see displays about dinosaurs, or they begin and operate a small business to learn about production and marketing. (20) Independent Study or Supervised Study. It occurs when learners are assigned a common task to be completed at desk or at home as assignment. (21) Individualized Instruction. It is one of the teaching maneuvers where teaching and learning are tailored to meet a learner's unique characteristics. (22) Installation. Students present material within a formal structure for displaying audio, multimedia or visual artifacts. (23) Module. It is a self-contained and comprehensive instructional package that basically contains everything a student needs. A form of individualized instruction where students use a self-contained package of learning activities that guides them to know or to be able to do something. Students might be given a module containing activities intended to help them understand good nutrition. (24) Mastery Learning. As a class, students are presented with information to be learned at a predetermined level of mastery. The class is tested and individuals who do not obtain high enough scores are retaught and retested. Those who passed undertake enrichment study while classmates catch up. (25) Mixed mode Instruction. It is a combination of face-to-face and on-line methods. (26) Online Instruction and Learning. It is a self-directed and automated approach that utilizes hypermedia (internet browsers, etc.) for communication that generally provides independence from the architectural constraints of classrooms. (27) Performance. Students act out through dance, drama, music or other expressive forms. (28) Presentation and Lecture. Students listen to a person who talks about a topic. To illustrate, the teacher, or a guest speaker, tells the class all about the invention of the transistor. (29) Problem Solution. It is a general teaching method and organization of curriculum and knowledge where students work purposefully toward a solution, synthesis or cause. It is often called problem-based learning. (30) Programmed and Automated Instruction. A form of individualized instruction whereby information is learned in small, separate units either by way of reading programmed texts or using computer-based programs. 18 (31) Project. Students work through a series of activities and problems culminating in the completion of something tangible. It is a form of individualization whereby learners choose and work on projects and activities that facilitate and support the development of skills and knowledge. Often, learners not only choose topics but also the means of their conduct and production. (32) Protocols. Learners study an original record or records of some important event and then try to understand the event or its consequences. They might watch a film depicting actual instances of discrimination and then consider its causes and effects. (33) Recitation. Students are given information to study independently. They then recite what they have learned when questioned by the teacher. For example, students read about what causes pollution, and the teacher, though questioning, determines the extent and nature of their knowledge and understanding. (34) Reports (Written and Oral). Individuals or groups of learners are given or choose topics. For example, each may be asked to find out about one planet in our solar system, or about solar powered vehicles. What they learn is shared with other class members by way of oral or written presentations. (35) Role Playing. Learners take on the role of another person or character to see what it would be like to be that person or character. Thus, a student could play the role of an imaginary student no one likes or a news reporter. (36) Simulation Game. Students play a specially designed, competitive game that mirrors some aspect of life. For example, they might play the Ghetto Game to find out about the problems and pressures that ghetto dwellers face and to sense how difficult it is to improve one's lot in life. (37) Simulation. Learners engage with something intended to give the appearance or have the effect of something else. Thus students may engage in a simulation of the United Nations General Assembly in order to have "firsthand experience" with how it works and what its delegates do. (38) Synectics. It is a problem solving methodology that stimulates thought processes of which the subject may be unaware. It is the use of specific techniques to foster creativity in students. For example, the students may be asked to develop metaphors to describe mobility across different terrains. (39) Tutoring. A form of individualization whereby either a teacher, or perhaps a fellow student, provides a learner or small group of learners with special help, usually because they are not learning well enough with only conventional instruction. 19 (40) Unit. It is an intentionally designed, integrated, thematic organization of curriculum and knowledge through combinations of demonstrations, discussions, activities, problems, and projects. (41) Values Clarification. Teachers lead students through a series of moral and ethical dilemmas, such as birth control or clear-cutting forestry practices, to assist them in clarifying their values and moral choices. d. Determining Tools for Assessment for Learning (1) Overview. Lesson planning determines a set of reliable assessment tools to confirm that learning occurred as mentioned in the objectives. Assessment is a critical in teaching. Students are expected to learn the material and its application to their lives and future learning. That means to assess student knowledge authentically and accountably. This doesn't stop with classroom activities like quizzes, tests, and memorizing facts. (2) Characteristics of a Good Assessment. Assessment is eliciting evidence of learning from subjective observation, watching students apply prior learning, working in groups, or participating in classroom discussions. Good assessments should verify that: Students have unpacked a lesson and applied it rigorously. Students have linked lessons to old ones and applied it to their lives. Students take charge for own learning by embracing deep learning. Students think creatively with new information. Lessons are scalable and dependent upon each child's learning style. Students are stakeholders in this effort, not passive consumers. (3) Ideas of Assessment for Learning. Following are some of the effective ways to assess learning in ways that transform your classroom: (a) Polls. Polls are used to measure student learning as much as lesson effectiveness. Polls are fast – three to five minutes – and are anonymously graded and shared immediately with students. They let everyone know if the big idea of the lesson is understood and if the essential questions have been answered. These can be graded, but are usually used formatively, to determine organic class knowledge before moving on to other topics. (b) Warm ups and Exit Tickets. Warm-ups help learners put aside their daily distractions and focus on lesson. They make students shift into lesson. Warm-ups also encourage whole-group participation which can build a sense of community within the group. Warm ups are given at the beginning of class to measure what students remember from prior lessons or know about a subject before jumping into a unit. They inform teachers how to optimize time by teaching what students need to learn, not wasting time on what students already know. Exit tickets are similar, but assess what students learned during the lesson. In this way, teachers 20 know if they should review material, find a different approach to teaching a topic, or students are ready to move on. Like warm ups, exit tickets are a few minutes, and delivered in a wide variety of creative methods. (c) Quick Quizzes. These are one or two question checks during class to measure understanding. They are either delivered at an assigned time during class (where everyone participates at once) or are questions students answer when they gain that knowledge from a lesson. Both approaches are a great way for a teacher to determine if she has explained a topic clearly enough that students have a useful understanding of it. A nice by-product of letting students answer the questions when they are ready is you may find they get a topic much faster than you expect. That means you know when to move on to more challenging information. (d) Game Shows. Team students up and give them study materials and prep time as a group. This may be 15 minutes or an entire class -- you decide. Encourage them to strategize how to work best as a team. For example, they may decide to assign experts on topics or all are generalists. They may also select a captain, depending upon what type of game show is being played. When prep time is completed, review the rules of the game show. Rules will differ depending upon which game show you select. Then, get started! They'll think it's a game. You'll see how much they really know on a subject. (e) Brainstorm. Give a topic and ask learners to think of anything related to it. Write the responses for all to see, or ask a volunteer to do the writing. You can use this to elicit vocabulary related to your lesson. Create a group mind map to evaluate what the class knows on the subject. This is well-suited to informing you what the class as a whole understands from your teaching, but also creates an excellent study guide for students. (f) Differentiation. Ask students to select a tool you've used in class to share their understanding of a topic. This can be visually, orally, written, or artistically. It can use screencast programs, word processing, storytelling tools, or another that they are familiar with. They must select a tool they know how to use (because this isn't the time to learn new ones) and it must be completed in a specified amount of time. It can be done individually or in groups. Assessments that work best are those that are fresh and new to students, requiring they think critically and creatively as they share knowledge. What do you use to organically assess student learning? (g) Preparing key questions. In their lesson planning teachers identify the learning intention for the lesson and a small number of key questions related to that learning intention. These are the questions that the teacher wants the students to be able to answer by the end of the lesson. Key questions give shape to a lesson by keeping the focus on the 21 learning intention and assist teachers in their assessment of what students have learnt. (h) Describe the Picture. Show a picture and have learners take turns saying one descriptive thing about it. Beginners can make simple observations like "three cats" while advanced students can make up a story to go with the picture. They aren't allowed to repeat what someone else said, so they need to pay attention when each person speaks. Variation for individual: take turns with the teacher. (i) Prompting students. Prompting students to explain, add to or amend their initial response to a question can encourage the student to think more deeply and provide the teacher with more information about the student as learner. e. Planning Assessment for Learning. Assessment is acquiring evidence of learning. It ascertains the learners existing status of knowledge, skills, behavior and attitude about the lesson and to confirm students have learned the new lesson. Questioning is the most used technique. Teachers prepare a set of questions keeping the purpose in mind to ask and gather answers from the learners. Diagnostic testing ascertains the existing status of the learners. Formative assessment confirms lesson has been learned by the learners to provide feedback. Summative assessment grades the performance at the end of the course. 22 (1) The Need for Assessment. Assessment happens to be an integral part of teaching, as it determines whether or not the goals are met. Assessment affects decisions about grades, placement, advancement, needs, curriculum, and, in some cases, funding. Assessment inspires us to ask these hard questions: "Are we teaching what we think we are teaching?" "Are students learning what they are supposed to be learning?" "Is there a way to teach the subject better, thereby promoting better learning?" (2) Every lesson needs to be assessed on objectives. It is a very complex debatable process. Objectives indicate performance for students to demonstrate as an evidence of learning. At the end of the lesson, teachers like to know whether or not the objective has been realized. For this, they need assessment tools. These allow teachers to measure how well students have understood a topic. One of the most basic tools is worksheets. Assessment allows both teachers and students to improve their performances. In a multiple-choice question, students may pick the right answer out of luck. Similarly, in a math test, a student may pick the wrong answer due to an error in calculation and not because of incomplete understanding of the concept. These drawbacks call for better assessment methods. This has given rise to the concept of performance assessment, where students are judged on task performance. Teachers use assessment tools like rubrics to grade the student’s performance. Once the tools are designed, teachers share them with the students. This gives students an understanding of what the evaluator will be looking for, and students can hone their skills accordingly. In this method, students are learning even while being tested. (3) How a teacher will know that students are learning as they are expected to learn. Teachers need to check for student understanding. How will teachers know that students are learning? They think about specific questions to be asked to the students in order to check for understanding. Questions are written down and paraphrased so as to ask the questions in different ways. Teachers predict the answers the questions will generate. They also decide on whether they want students to respond orally or in writing. Teachers also ask themselves these questions: What questions will I ask students to check for understanding? What will I have students do to demonstrate that they are following? Going back to my list of learning objectives, what activity can I have students do to check whether each of those has been accomplished? An important strategy that will also help you with time management is to anticipate students’ questions. When planning your lesson, decide what kinds of questions will be productive for discussion and what questions might sidetrack the class. Think about and decide on the balance between covering content (accomplishing your learning objectives) and ensuring that students understand. (4) Assessment for learning. Assessment for Learning (AFL) is an approach to teaching and learning that creates feedback which is then used to improve students’ performance. Students become more involved in the learning process and from this gain confidence in what they are expected to learn and to what standard. One way of thinking about AFL is that it aims to ‘close the gap’ 23 between a learner’s current situation and where they want to be in their learning and achievement. Skilled teachers plan tasks which help learners to do this. AFL involves students becoming more active in their learning and starting to ‘think like a teacher’. They think more actively about where they are now, where they are going and how to get there. Effective teachers integrate AFL in their lessons as a natural part of what they do, choosing how much or how little to use the method. AFL can be adapted to suit the age and ability of the learners involved. AFL strategies are directly linked to improvements in student performance in summative tests and examinations. Research shows that these strategies particularly help low-achieving students to enhance their learning. The goal of AfL is not just to motivate students to work hard on challenging problems, but also to develop their identities as capable learners. For lowattaining students, AfL refocuses their attitude towards assessment as something that can help them learn rather than a process that highlights their incompetencies. For high attainers, it offers a more challenging curriculum that focuses on their progress rather than simply meeting targets. (5) Main processes in assessment for learning: (i) Questioning enables a student to find out what level they are at. (ii) Students get feedback about how to improve their learning. (iii) Students understand what successful work looks like. (iv) Students become more independent in their learning, taking part in peer assessment and self-assessment. (v) Summative assessments are also used formatively to help them improve. (6) Strategies of Assessment for learning Providing a clear vision of learning objectives Using examples and models of strong and weak works Offering regular descriptive feedback Teaching students to self assess and set goals Designing lessons to focus one aspect of quality at a time. Teaching students focused revision Engaging students in self reflection and letting them keep track of and share their learning. 24 f. Create a realistic timeline. GSIs know how easy it is to run out of time and not cover all of the many points they had planned to cover. A list of ten learning objectives is not realistic, so narrow down your list to the two or three key concepts, ideas, or skills you want students to learn. Instructors also agree that they often need to adjust their lesson plan during class depending on what the students need. Your list of prioritized learning objectives will help you make decisions on the spot and adjust your lesson plan as needed. Having additional examples or alternative activities will also allow you to be flexible. A realistic timeline will reflect your flexibility and readiness to adapt to the specific classroom environment. Here are some strategies for creating a realistic timeline: Estimate how much time each of the activities will take, then plan some extra time for each When you prepare your lesson plan, next to each activity indicate how much time you expect it will take Plan a few minutes at the end of class to answer any remaining questions and to sum up key points Plan an extra activity or discussion question in case you have time left Be flexible – be ready to adjust your lesson plan to students’ needs and focus on what seems to be more productive rather than sticking to your original plan 25 Components of a Standard Lesson Plan 15. Components of lesson plans vary based on context, content and objectives of a lesson. General Information Date Name Subject Topic: Procedure Time Place Grade Aids Strategy Objectives 1. 2. Duration Institution Standards Supports Special needs Assessment/Key Questions 1. 2. Procedure Time Activity/Procedure Note 1. Introduction 2. Teaching a. Input b. Activity c. Assessment 3. Conclusion 4. Evaluation 5. Feedback Conclusion 16. Lesson planning is a usual thing to do for every teacher. It prepares teachers to visualize the future teaching opportunities for his students to achieve learning goals. It helps students to focus efforts to clearly identified learning objectives. Though it is a complex process at the beginning all teachers, it surely rewarding for teachers and students. A simplified approach to lesson planning suits all and facilitates effective learning. For the sake of our future generations lesson planning is not expensive than any other commitment we make for them. 26