Title: Early English Settlements & Colonies, Day 2 Author: ICG Subject: Social Studies Grade Level(s): 10 Unit Description This second lesson of four is part of a larger unit that focuses on early English settlements and colonies. In this particular set of lessons, students will learn about the existing economics, geography, culture, government, and Native American relations during that time period. Students will engage in several different activities to support their learning and they will have several different opportunities throughout the four days to share their new knowledge. Lesson Description for Day These lessons will begin with students filling-out a KWL chart (What I Know, What I Want to Learn, What I Learned) as a way to summarize what they learned in Day 1 about Early English Settlements, and to provide a focus for their project research. Students will become familiar with the resources for conducting their research, explore project options, learn roles & responsibilities for group members, and plan and develop their products. Over the course of the next few days, they will continue to study the resources and develop their findings into polished presentations. Alabama Content Standards, Social Studies. United States History to 1877 (Grade 10): Compare various early English settlements and colonies on the basis of economics, geography, culture, government, and Native American relations. Goals Unit Goals: 1. Students will describe the economic, culture, government, and Native American relations that existed in the early English settlements and colonies. 2. Students will successfully complete a cooperative research project that refines their basic understanding of rock formation processes. 3. Students will apply their understanding of the economic, geography, culture, and government in Early English settlements to making predictions about how current political climate in the United States may impact these variables today. Lesson Goals: 1. Students will learn the routines, roles, and responsibilities they need to establish in order to successfully complete their research projects. 2. Students will become familiar with available resources and assess what further resources they will need to acquire. 3. Students will learn effective strategies for project planning. Methods Anticipatory Set: KWL Chart (What I Know, What I Want to Learn, What I Learned) Fill in the first two columns of a KWL chart with the whole class in order to summarize what everyone currently Knows about the economic, culture, government, and Native American relations that existed in the early English settlements and colonies, and What they still want to learn. At the end of the lesson today, what the class Learned will be discussed and entered on the chart. Introduce and Model New Knowledge: 1. Establish Routines and Responsibilities: Explain that students will work in small groups to learn more in-depth information about the economic, culture, government, and Native American relations that existed in the early English settlements and colonies. Each group will describe (in writing, orally, and/or visually), at least three 'big ideas' related to their investigation. Explain that a 'big idea' is a general statement that can be made about what they have studied. Big ideas should describe facts as well as contain explanations of why something happens. In addition, for each big idea students generate, they are responsible for providing at least three details that support it. Before beginning, explain to students that even though they will work in small groups, within their groups, there will be opportunities to work individually or with partners on key elements of the project, in order to ensure that everyone has choices for how to best accomplish their goals. Also let students know that they will be evaluated on the accuracy of the information they present, the quality of their presentations, and on how well they work together as a group. Organize the class into heterogeneous, small groups of no more than 5 students, and make the following assignments: Group 1: Big ideas and supporting details related to the economic factors in the early English settlements and colonies. Group 2: Big ideas and supporting details related to the cultural factors in the early English settlements and colonies. Group 3: Big ideas and supporting details related to the government factors in the early English settlements and colonies. Group 4: Big ideas and supporting details related to Native American relations in the early English settlements and colonies. Each group should designate jobs for each individual. All individuals gather information, work on sections of the draft, and help with design tasks. Then, each student should have one of the following additional roles: Fact checker: checks accuracy of all information for final product Scribe: writes outline as group generates it, provides polished copy of final product (based on everyone's input and work) Designer: does final art work, video, or PowerPoint editing, or fine-tunes any presentation features Presenter(s): students should designate sections of the product for different students to present Timeliner: Ensures that the group develops all phases of the work according to the timelines. Checks in with everyone to see if they're on track to meet deadlines for each stage of work: outline of their product, draft, revised/edited copy, and final product according to the teacher's timelines. **Provide the above roles as a handout 2. Preview Resources Have the books from this lesson's materials list and lists of websites on hand. Provide an overview of the resources—hold up key books and discuss their features, preview one or two of the websites. (Books and websites should represent different reading levels). Point out that students' social studies textbook is another resource. Finally, explain that students will need to seek additional resources for their study as needed. 3. Discuss Project Options Each group can choose from among the following options as ways to present their Big Ideas and Supporting Details. All projects will be presented to the class. Students should also be encouraged to develop their own product ideas, as long as they meet project criteria. Use colony map material to construct, paint, summarize, and label information about the targeted topic. Develop power point slides with illustrations, labels, and explanations. Develop a multi-media presentation that includes elements such as music, photographs or other illustrations, and a narrator or dramatic overview. Develop a simulated newscast that describes the assigned topic. Include sufficient detail so viewers will have a full understanding of the impact of the factor in the early English settlements and colonies. Illustrate and label posters that could have been from the time period communicating relevant information about the factor in the early English settlements and colonies. Create a detailed scene using a shadow box Develop a book with illustrations, text, and labels of the assigned factors in the early English settlements and colonies. Develop a mock travel brochure that provides a description of an early English settlement or colony. In the brochure, provide an overview of the history of the location and specific attention on the assigned factor. Provide Guided Practice: Project Planning Have small groups get together and begin planning their projects. Once they're in their small groups, share the attached Project Planning Organizer in order to facilitate students' planning and work flow. Help students work backwards from the final due date in order break their projects into smaller parts. outline facts, concepts, & information collected drafts completed (both text and art) revising/proofreading polished product Rotate among the groups in order to determine whether they are developing a solid plan for their projects. Ask questions as needed in order to facilitate their planning. Provide Independent Practice: Students should spend the remainder of the class time today, the next two class periods, and out-of-class time studying their resources, collecting and organizing the information they learn, and generating their products. Wrap-Up Have the class wrap-up by completing the L section of the KWL chart. Ask students to reflect on what they learned today about the properties of rocks and how they're formed, while previewing resources and developing project plans. As work on the projects continues over the next few class periods, have students continue to add to the KWL chart. Assessment Formative/Ongoing Assessment: As students work on their projects, maintain ongoing observations of their learning behaviors, questions they ask, and their expressions of new knowledge. Take notes and make decisions about which students need additional support based on these ongoing observations. Summative/End Of Lesson Assessment: Evaluating the Reports: Use the attached rubric to evaluate students' reports. Attach a copy of the rubric to each report, with each sub score highlighted, so students have a detailed analysis of their projects. Materials Other Resources Evaluation Rubric Project Planner Model Project Planner