Clark University Master of Arts in Teaching Program Learning Activity Plan I. Content: We will continue to work with poetic devices, focusing on personification today. We will be reading the poem “Abandoned Farmhouse” by Ted Kooser. Students will work to complete written responses to the poem after we read and analyze them together. II. Learning Goal(s): Students will be able to respond to a poem independently of the teacher. Students will know how to approach a complex poem and what strategies to use to make sense of the poem. Students will know when and how to use the various strategies we have been learning for the past few weeks. III. Rationale: This is moving towards a more summative part of the unit, where students begin to work more independently and with less help from their peers and the teacher. Students will be required to identify poetic devices as well as the author’s purpose, meaning, and point of view in the poem as they write by themselves for the first time. IV. Assessment: Written responses will allow for the teacher to know if students have reached my learning goals. I will be giving them feedback as they write and finish their writing to go back and look at parts needing improvement. Students will receive copies of the questions before they begin. V. Personalization: Students will begin by reading the poem as a class. After that, they will break up into groups to analyze the poem. This will help to support students who might struggle with the poem on their own. Each student will have a physical copy of the questions they are answering as well as those questions being written on the whiteboard. Time will be spent with IEP students reviewing and breaking down each question before the writing process begins. VI. Activity description and agenda: Describe the activities that will help your students understand the content of your class lesson by creating an agenda with time frames for your class. Be prepared to explain why you think each activity will help students on the path toward understanding. Time frame: 0-5 minutes Students will: Listen to poetry read aloud. 5-25 minutes Read “Abandoned Farmhouse” aloud and break into groups to analyze the poem. Students will write responses to “Abandoned Farmhouse.” 25-65 minutes Revised 5/12/11 Teacher will: Read “No Man is an Island” by John Donne Read “Abandoned Farmhouse” aloud and then circulate among students. Circulate the room; support IEP students by reading and reviewing individual response questions. Clark University Master of Arts in Teaching Program Learning Activity Plan VII. List the Massachusetts Learning Standards this lesson addresses. a. RL.6.1: Cite textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text. b. RI.6.6: Determine an author’s point of view or purpose in a text and explain how it is conveyed in the text. W.6.1c,d,e: Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence: c: use words, phrases, and clauses to clarify the relationships among claim(s) and reasons; d: establish and maintain a formal style; e: provide a concluding statement or section that follows the argument presented. VIII. Reflection a. Today was a huge struggle. Mrs. Seles was out of the room testing while students were responding to the text and they were not focused and not interested in responding. It was very difficult to get them going and I did not have a great day keeping my head. We made the decision to skip Fast ForWord (our reading intervention program everyday after lunch) and have the students spend more time writing their responses. They were slightly better in the afternoon and it was clear to me that part of the frustration and lack of effort of the morning was that I had not provided enough support to some students. If I did this again, I would DEFINITELY provide more support for all students in the class, not just the select few that I thought needed it most. b. I learned that students are still in need of support, even as we approach the end of the poetry unit. I must keep this in mind as we progress and move forwards, or else students will be left behind or remain frustrated with me and the work they are facing. I also learned that there are many students in my class that are capable of even higher level texts than we have been facing lately, which is a pleasant surprise. Revised 5/12/11