Lesson Plan Blues (updated)

A discussion about lesson plans and expectations.
Resources and Links!

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I’ll start with the ending first. This is what we all want:

Creative_High_School_English

Recently on a social media page, a teacher laminated that her English department/administration expects daily lesson plans, and the form of the lesson plans is restrictive and long-form.

Wowza.

And while she received a lot of great advice, ultimately she felt stuck to comply. One commenter summed it up this way:

Creative_High_School_English 2

All of the conversation –most of it so dang discouraging.

form

This must be a sign of a diseased institutional practice, a symptom of larger issues when administrations generate busywork and micro-managing practices so openly and aggressively.

Let’s consider a small revolution: put together the best professional practices, come to an accord?

Some thoughts:

  • Hattie’s learning targets and success criteria do not have to be changed every day.
  • Lesson plans can cover a broad swath of time or unit of study
  • Evaluations and observations align with the teacher’s goals for reflecting on her practice
  • Anyone with over five years’ of experience is encouraged, allowed and asked to choose one teacher-action research/goal as her evaluation.
  • Bring back and build trust into the conversation. Once that is gone, work actively to bring it back. (Unfortunately, it cannot be repaired when the administration has a motive or agenda to harm the teacher professionally.)

Lesson plans are not inherently evil: their purpose and structure sometimes thrill the geek teacher in me. I get a rush when I create a Google doc or overview of the year. Where things fall apart are when I don’t get to share or collaborate with colleagues. But whether I am working in isolation or in a group, here are some basics that help me stay intentional and professional in my practice:

https://www.edutopia.org/blog/webbs-depth-knowledge-increase-rigor-gerald-aungst

Level 1: Recall and Reproduction

Tasks at this level require recall of facts or rote application of simple procedures. The task does not require any cognitive effort beyond remembering the right response or formula. Copying, computing, defining, and recognizing are typical Level 1 tasks.

Level 2: Skills and Concepts

At this level, a student must make some decisions about his or her approach. Tasks with more than one mental step such as comparing, organizing, summarizing, predicting, and estimating are usually Level 2.

Level 3: Strategic Thinking

At this level of complexity, students must use planning and evidence, and thinking is more abstract. A task with multiple valid responses where students must justify their choices would be Level 3. Examples include solving non-routine problems, designing an experiment, or analyzing characteristics of a genre.

Level 4: Extended Thinking

Level 4 tasks require the most complex cognitive effort. Students synthesize information from multiple sources, often over an extended period of time, or transfer knowledge from one domain to solve problems in another. Designing a survey and interpreting the results, analyzing multiple texts by to extract themes, or writing an original myth in an ancient style would all be examples of Level 4.

I don’t watch HGTV or other shows that allow me to fantasize about what my home should look like, or great vacations. I fantasize about beautiful, book-filled classrooms and the perfect, collegial working environment. My dream includes supportive administration who love to geek out over great, standards-based curriculum planning as much as I do and getting students books, collaborating with other teachers in functioning PLCs, having professional and healthy skepticism on how data are used…

…ah, well.

via GIPHY

PS: More dreams:

Oh, and this!!

https://www.cultofpedagogy.com/one-sentence-lesson-plan/

Saving Summer: Rethinking Themes, Essays, and Media

I’m about to do a dangerous thing: post a document long before it’s “ready.” It is not even close, and I think–that’s where it should be. A finished document would mean there is no room for growth or adaptation; it’s a sketch. Flipping my thinking around about the silo type of units, students would be better served if we took a gravitational, or centrifugal force idea. While we’re spinning, we stay connected and use metacognition to be cognizant of what draws us in. Choices are key, here, with a map for guidance. In essence, every UBD and essential questions demand a variety of genresĀ and modes of texts. We think about big issues in a kaleidoscope way, not linear. I started thinking about units I’ve created in the past, and some of the theme topics, and came up with this document:

[embeddoc url=”https://mrskellylove.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/texts-and-media-playlist-2hzrw2w-wngihv.docx” download=”all” viewer=”microsoft” ]

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0ByKyQvl3l_F5QWxjM09NbzAyZjA/view?usp=sharing

Ethical ELA is a huge influencer, and sites such as

https://www.discoverartifacts.com/

https://www.commonlit.org/

Nothing should be off limits: essays, short stories, podcasts, films, novels, poetry, letters, texts, tweets, news, classics and modern re-tellings, pop culture, graphic novels, series: sources for texts and media are bordering on the infinite. If you can write it or read it, it belongs.

Oh, and for the curated list, a wonderful collection of essays that may come in handy:

https://thefutureisred.com/10-personal-essays-that-will-teach-you-how-to-write/

What big questions are ones you come back to again and again in your teaching? No matter how many times I watch Descendants, I see something new.

https://player.vimeo.com/video/8642276?portrait=0

Descendants from Goro Fujita on Vimeo.

 

Pledge.

These are to re-read, read, and organize: the binders need to be gutted and reorganized. Oh, sticky tabs and Sharpies: how I love thee.

I always have this summer break lag–it takes me a bit to realize it actually is break time, and not only relax, but reflect. And just not think at all.

Last summer I had everything planned out, and offered my time and expertise to go over the CCSS and come up with a menu of critical ones I knew our PLC should take a look at and consider for the common/formative/assessments. Well, that didn’t work, and that’s okay: the team decided to focus on one skill through the lens of one or two standards. Am I going to stop coming up with ideas? Did I learn my lesson? Nah. I can’t help myself. I love designing good curriculum.

Next year I’ve been tapped to construct Computer Essentials for 7th grade, and will be teaching only one class of 8th ELA. (Just can’t quit you, Humanities….). To say our students need the computer skills is an understatement. (I’ll post my ideas on that later.) In the meantime, this post serves as a pledge to myself to read: I have the trifecta of my summer: a hammock, sometimes blue sky, and time. My focus is to create a curriculum map that is more reflective of what ELA students are truly expected to know. The horizontal, silo-approach doesn’t work. I’m actually envisioning a circle map, updated, and global: a way to teach units that are connective and authentic, with a heavy dash of choice and design. Give me a week or two, and I’ll have something figured out.

 

Oh, and I need to add some new videos to the list:

What is one thing you taught more than one year, and feel it is a “must?”