Lesson Plan Framework
Eastern
Washington University
Washington
Teaching Performance Assessment (WA edTPA)
This
framework (adapted from University of California, Gervirtz Graduate School of
Education, Teacher Education Program) is designed to help you with the
construction of your lesson plans and as you prepare for the WA edTPA. Questions are presented below the headings to
help direct you as you are completing the framework. You might not need to respond to each one of
the questions; it is recommended that you consider as many of them as you think
are appropriate, practical, and essential for your lesson. Moreover you do need to include the basic
structures such as context for learning, lesson rationale, standards,
objectives, assessment, instructional strategies, closure, and materials.
You
will select a learning segment of 3-5 lessons (or if teaching within a large
block, 3-5 hours of connected instruction).
Context for Learning: (Attention
to students’ backgrounds, interests, and needs)
WHO are the students in this class (or in this
group)?
·
How
many students will you be teaching? How many males? Females?
·
What
is the age range or grade level(s) of the students?
·
What
are the identified English language proficiency levels of the students? What do
you know about the students’ conversational and academic English? How do you know?
·
What
prior knowledge, skills, and academic background do students bring to the
lesson (consider previous learning experiences, assessment data, etc.)? How do
you know?
·
What
additional needs might students have (describe any special considerations
and/or exceptional needs)? How many students have Individualized Educational
Plans or 504 plans?
·
What
are the represented socio-economic, cultural and ethnic backgrounds of the
students? How might these influence your planning, teaching and assessment?
WHAT conditions might impact the planning and
delivery of the lesson?
·
Describe
conditions/limitations that might impact the planning and delivery of your
lesson, pacing, texts or instructional practices.
·
Describe
district, school, grade-level and cooperating teacher’s requirements or
expectations. Include such things as curricula, standardized tests or other
assignments.
·
What
classroom management issues might affect instruction? How might you proactively
address those issues in your lesson design?
Content Standards
(EALRs/GLEs/National Standards):
·
Cite
the grade level and standards using the numbers as well as the text. Use only
the relevant parts to help focus your lesson planning.
Big Ideas/Essential
Questions/Established Goals:
§ What
is the Big Idea or Goal for student learning?
Research and Theory Evidence
·
How is your lesson/instruction
supported by research and theory?
Content and Academic Language:
·
What key vocabulary (content-specific terms) do you need to
teach and how will you teach students that vocabulary in the lesson? What
instructional language do you need to teach (discuss, share ideas, asking
questions, summarizing, following and giving instructions, answering
multiple-choice questions)? Academic language functions: What are students
doing with language to express their developing understanding of the content
you are teaching?
·
Linguistic forms: What words and phrases do students need
in order to express or communicate their understanding of the content you are
teaching? How will you teach students the grammatical constructions (this is
where you identify sentence frames)?
·
Nonlinguistic forms: What visuals, illustrations, charts,
or multimedia, will you provide to assist students’ understanding of Academic
Language?
·
What opportunities will you provide for students to
practice the new language and develop fluency (written or oral)?
Assessment
Formative Assessment (Process):
·
How
will you know that the students are learning/working towards your goals?
·
How
will students demonstrate their understanding?
·
In
what ways will you monitor student learning during the lesson and how might
this guide your instruction?
·
What
specific actions do you expect to observe?
·
How
will you record what you see and hear?
·
What
criteria will you use to judge whether your students are/are not meeting the
goals of the lesson?
·
What
feedback will you provide? How will your
feedback support students in meeting the goals of the lesson?
·
Describe
the ways in which you will use these assessments to inform your teaching
decisions during the lesson.
Summative Assessment (Product):
·
What
evidence of student learning will you collect and in what ways will the
evidence document student achievement?
·
In
what ways will the evidence document student achievement?
·
Does
your assessment allow all students to show what they know or have learned?
·
How
might you modify your assessment/s for the students with whom you are working?
·
How
will your students be able to reflect upon and self-assess their learning?
·
What
are your evaluative criteria (or rubric) and how do they measure student
proficiency for your objectives? Evaluative criteria are categories that you
use to assess student learning (e.g., the accuracy or quality of the students’
identifications, explanations, solutions, computations, analyses, applications,
designs, judgments, etc.
·
Are
your assessments aligned with your objectives?
Lesson Plan Format
1. Teacher
Candidate:
2. Subject:
3. Lesson Title/
Central Focus:
4. Grade Level(s):
5. Length of
Lesson:
·
Time Required
6. Academic and
Content Standards (EALRs/GLEs/National):
7. Learning Objective(s):
·
WHAT
do you want students to know and be able to do (must be measurable)?
Be specific and use concrete terms.
·
Learning
Objective(s) must align with the Content Standards listed in #6.
8. Academic
Language:
·
Consider
Language Demands (reading, writing, listening speaking) that students will need
to participate in learning tasks and demonstrate their learning?
·
What
are the oral and written academic language (vocabulary and functions and forms
of language associated with learning objective) that students will need to
understand or produce in your learning segment?
9. Assessment:
·
What type of assessment will you use to measure student
learning?
·
Identify if this is formative or summative.
·
Attach all assessment tools for this lesson.
·
Specifically identify what this assessment will measure.
10. Lesson Rationale:
WHY
are you teaching this lesson?
·
How is your lesson/instruction
supported by research and theory?
·
Upon
what assessment data or previous lessons are you building?
·
WHAT
requisite skills do students need in order to access the lesson &
participate fully?
·
How
does the content build on what the students already know and are able to do?
·
HOW
does this lesson fit in the curriculum?
·
By
teaching this lesson, how will this add to student learning?
·
How
does the lesson build on previous lessons or previous learning?
·
How
will the learning in this lesson be further developed in subsequent lessons?
11.
Instructional
Strategies and Learning Tasks to Support Student Learning:
Introduction
·
How
will you communicate the learning objectives to students?
·
How
will you introduce this lesson (draw upon and engage students in examining
their own strengths from prior learning and experience)?
Student Voice
Describe how you will gather
information and data from students that inform you of:
·
Their knowledge of the learning targets and how they are
progressing towards these targets (e.g., “I can…” or “I am learning…”
statements)?
• Their knowledge of the support and resources that can be
accessed to help them achieve the learning targets
·
Their knowledge of the relationship between the assessment and
learning objectives
Learning
Tasks
·
What
explicit learning instruction occurs: what specifically are the students
learning in this lesson?
·
What
are the procedural directions for students to follow?
·
What
learning activities do you have
planned for the students (Note:
these describe what the students do during the lesson)
·
What
instructional strategies will you
use (Note: Instructional strategies describe what the teacher does
during the lesson).
·
How
will you incorporate guided practice? Provide estimates of time.
·
What
are the key teacher questions or prompts?
·
Will
students be grouped and, if so, by what criteria?
Closure
·
Review
and restate the learning objective(s).
·
Preview
connection to future learning/lessons.
·
Attach
all instructional materials (class handouts, PowerPoint or Smart Board slides,
etc.)
12.
Differentiated
Instruction:
·
In
what ways will you ensure equitable learning opportunities for all students?
·
How
will you differentiate instruction based on the needs of your students?
13. Resources and
Materials:
·
Where
did I find the idea for the lesson? (reference)
·
What
materials will you need in order to teach this lesson? What materials will
students need?
14.
Management and
Safety Issues:
·
Are
there management and safety issues that need to be considered when teaching
this lesson? If so, list them.
·
What
will you do to prepare your students for these issues?
15.
Parent and
Community Connections:
·
How
will you engage or involve parents and the community?
EWU Department of Education Revised 8/12
Adapted from University of California
Gervirtz
Graduate School of Education
Teacher
Education Program
Tim
Dewar, Ron Kok, Ann Lippincott, and Catherine Leffler, (2004)
Revised
in 2007 by Ann Carlyle, Linda Hollingsworth, Sarah Jacobs, Ann Lippincott and
Tanya Mishler
Revised
in 2009 by Ann Lippincott, based on CCTC Program Standards and Marsha Honnold,
based on PCT rubrics.
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