Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Lesson plans are plans that teachers develop to help students meet a specific learning goal (a.k.a objective). Lesson plans have different element - Wridemy

Lesson plans are plans that teachers develop to help students meet a specific learning goal (a.k.a objective). Lesson plans have different element

Lesson plans are plans that teachers develop to help students meet a specific learning goal (a.k.a objective). Lesson plans have different elements and are written using a variety of formats. Schools, teachers, districts, and states have different ideas of what a lesson plan might look like and what information it requires. As you become more experienced, you will develop your own style of lesson planning. For this course, I will show you a foundational sample for you to begin with. Later in the course, you will use this knowledge when developing your lesson plans for your MicroTeach experiences. 

Take a look at this lesson plan on Education.com: Click here for the link to the lesson planLinks to an external site..

Click here for the lesson plan sample PDF if you can not access it through the website.

This is one example of how a lesson plan can be created and developed. Read through the entire lesson plan. What do you notice about each element/part/section as you read through it? Why do you think each one is necessary? 

Download the attached document below. After reading the lesson plan, reflect on the FUNCTION of each element. Use the worksheet below to respond with your ideas of the function of each element by answering these 2 questions: 

What is the function of this element in a lesson plan? Why is this element necessary in a lesson plan?

This assignment asks you to describe the function of each section of the lesson plan, NOT to provide a summary of the lesson plan.

Note: Please use and complete this document as is and upload it. Confirm that you are uploading your completed assignment and not a blank form.

Math + Love = Valentine's Day Bar Graph

Second Grade Math

What's more romantic than a bar graph on Valentine's Day? In this Valentine's Day lesson plan, students will use information from a data set to create their own tally charts and bar graphs and then analyze these graphs to answer questions.

Learning Objectives

Students will be able to identify the features of a bar graph and draw a bar graph to represent a data set.

Materials and preparation Key terms

Class set of the Graphing Valentines worksheet data One copy of the Picnic Bar Graph worksheet for tally marks projection tally chart Projector bar graph Chart paper graph title Class set of graph paper horizontal axis Class set of rulers or straight edges vertical axis

axes labels Markers scale

bar height The Ice Cream Bar Graph worksheet (optional) The Winter Sports: Practice Reading a Bar Graph worksheet (optional) The Blank Bar Graph worksheet (optional)

Attachments

Valentine Graph (PDF) Picnic Bar Graph (PDF) Ice Cream Bar Graph (PDF) Winter Sports: Practice Reading a Bar Graph (PDF) Blank Bar Graph (PDF)

Introduction (5 minutes)

Share with students that people across the world will be celebrating Valentine's Day this month, and one of the biggest Valentine's Day traditions is to give cards to people you care about. Explain to students that today they will learn about Mr. Mason's second graders who celebrated Valentine's Day in class by exchanging cards with one another. Tell students that we have information about the types of Valentine's Day cards that Mr. Mason's students exchanged, and we are going to use this information to create graphs and answer some questions.

Explicit Instruction/Teacher modeling (10 minutes)

Project the Graphing Valentines worksheet onto the board, and distribute one copy to each student. Refer students to the information in part 1, and explain that this is the information, or data, that we will use during this lesson. Read this information aloud.

Get more lesson plans at https://www.education.com/lesson-plans/ Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com

Draw students' attention to the tally chart. Review that a tally chart represents data using tally marks, which are a quick way of keeping track of numbers in groups of five. Tell students that to make a tally mark, draw one vertical line for the first four numbers and one diagonal line across the first four lines for the fifth number. Model for students how to fill in the first row (Heart Candies) using tally marks. Call on a student volunteer to come to the board to fill in the second row (Lollipops) using tally marks. Ask students to complete the remaining two rows independently and review answers as a class.

Guided Practice (10 minutes)

Tell students that they are going to use the information in the tally chart to create a bar graph. Review that a bar graph is a simple graph where the heights of each bar provide information. Project the Picnic Bar Graph worksheet onto the board. Refer students to the different features of this bar graph including: the graph title, which tells us the information we can find on the graph, the vertical axis, which goes from top to bottom, the horizontal axis, which goes along the bottom of the graph, the axes labels, which tell us what information is presented on each axis, the scale, which tells us how much or how many, and the bar height, which tell us the value of each bar. Write each of the features on a piece of chart paper titled: Bar Graph Features.

Independent working time (20 minutes)

Explain to students that they will make their own bar graph using the information from the Graphing Valentines worksheet. Prompt students to look at part 2 on the Graphing Valentines worksheet, and review the features of the graph. Tell students that they can refer to the Bar Graph Features anchor chart to help them. Tell students that when they have finished creating their bar graphs, they will answer the questions in part 3 of the Graphing Valentines worksheet. Remind students to use their tally chart and/or bar graph to help answer the questions.

Differentiation

Support:

Provide students with more examples of bar graphs during Guided Practice/Modeling (see optional worksheets).

Enrichment:

During Independent Work Time, distribute the Blank Bar Graph worksheet to students who can create their own bar graph from scratch. In this Valentine's Day lesson plan, introduce students to a third type of graph (such as a picture graph), and ask students to graph this information in a new visual representation.

Assessment (5 minutes)

Draw a bar graph on the board that is missing—or has mixed up—some of the bar graph features. For example, the horizontal and vertical axes are switched or the title does not match the information presented. Go over the Bar Graph Features anchor chart and ask students to give you a thumbs up if your bar graph has the information correct and a thumbs down if the information is incorrect. Ask students to help correct the errors in the bar graph.

Review and closing (5 minutes)

Tell students to think about what was easier to use to answer the questions: the tally chart or bar graph? Ask students to share their opinions and provide specific reasons why one chart was easier to look at and analyze than the other.

Get more lesson plans at https://www.education.com/lesson-plans/ Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com

Graphing Valentines Mr. Mason’s class exchanged valentines to celebrate Valentine’s Day!

Name Date

Aditi, Ellie, and Yahia gave valentines with heart candies.

Sarah, Abigail, Denver, Jakayla, and Claire gave valentines with lollipops.

Fiona and Thomas gave valentines with pencils.

Penny, Felix, Hannah, Trent, Talia, Alec, and Rehan gave valentines with stickers.

1. How many students gave out valentines with stickers?

2. How many students gave out valentines with heart candies?

3. Which type of valentine was given out the most?

4. Which type of valentine was given out the least?

5. How many more students gave valentines with lollipops than heart candies?

Types of Valentines

Heart Candies

Lollipops

Pencils

Stickers

Heart Candies

Lollipops Pencils Stickers

Part 2. Use the tally chart to complete the bar graph.

Part 3. Answer the questions about the valentines in Mr. Mason’s class.

Part 1. Use the information below to create a tally chart that shows the di�erent types of valentines in the class.

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Valentines in Mr. Mason’s Class

N u

m b

er o

f St

u d

en ts

Types of Valentines

students

students

more students

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

Get more lesson plans at https://www.education.com/lesson-plans/ Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com

Picnic Bar Graph Read the bar graph to learn which picnic games were the most popular.

Then answer the questions below. Show your work when possible.

12

11

10

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Frisbee Tag Races

Types of Picnic Games

N um

be r

of P

eo pl

e

Horseshoes Tug-o-war

1. How many people love races?

2. How many more people chose tug-o-war than frisbee?

3. Add the number of people who love horseshoes and the number of people who love races. What’s the difference between that total and the number of people who love tag?

4. How many more people would it take to make frisbee the most loved picnic activity?

5. List the activities in order from most favorite to least favorite.

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

Get more lesson plans at https://www.education.com/lesson-plans/ Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com

Coming Up with Questions Glenn wanted to know what his friends’ favorite flavors of ice cream are,

so he surveyed his friends and made a graph of his findings. Look at the bar graph, and come up with three questions about the graph to ask a friend or

family member. Write them in the spaces below.

Example: Which flavor of ice cream is the most popular?

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Chocolate Vanilla Cookies and Cream

Favorite Ice Cream Flavor

N um

be r

of S

tu de

nt s

Strawberry

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

Get more lesson plans at https://www.education.com/lesson-plans/ Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com

Winter Sports: Practice Readng a Bar Graph The class took a survey about their favorite winter sport. Read the bar graph to learn which winter sports were the most popular. Then, answer the questions below. Show your work.

1. How many people chose snowboarding?

2. How many more people chose ice skating than sledding?

3. What’s the difference between the number of people who chose ice skating and sledding compared to those who chose skiing?

4. How many more people would it take to make ice skating the favorite winter sport?

5. List the sports in order from most favorite to least favorite.

Types of Winter Sports

Ice Skating Skiing Sledding Snowboarding

N um

be r o

f P eo

pl e

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Name Date

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

Get more lesson plans at https://www.education.com/lesson-plans/ Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2022 Education.com

Colleen’s Chart

10

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

0

Bar Graph

Name Date

More worksheets at www.education.com/worksheetsCopyright © 2010-2011 by Education.com More worksheets at www.education.com/worksheetsCopyright © 2010-2011 by Education.com © 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

© 2007 – 2019 Education.com Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources

Get more lesson plans at https://www.education.com/lesson-plans/

Find worksheets, games, lessons & more at education.com/resources © 2007 – 2022 Education.com

,

Lesson Plan Dissection Reflection

Be sure to read the directions for this assignment on Canvas before completing.

Link to Sample Lesson Plan Here

Lesson Plan Element

Answer these 2 questions for EACH element listed:

What is the function of this element in a lesson plan? Why is this element necessary in a lesson plan?

Learning Objective

Materials and Preparation

Introduction (Set)

Explicit Instruction (I Do)

Guided Practice

(We Do)

Independent Working

(You Do

Differentiation

Assessment

Review and Closing

Time given for each element (in minutes)

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