Teacher:
Racquel O’Connor-Mesa
|
Class: Junior English
|
Dates: Week of January 7, 2013 through February 11, 2013
|
|||
Learning Development:
|
Performance
Objective: UW.G11.3R.C1.PO 3
C1: Identify, analyze and apply
knowledge of the purpose, structures, and elements of expository text
Learning Objective: Make relevant inferences by
synthesizing concepts and ideas from a single reading selection.
Kid-Friendly Language: I can
interpret the concepts and ideas non-fiction text.
Key
Terms: Inference, Concept, Idea, Relevant,
Explicit, Implicit
Essential Questions:
What is a relevant inference? How do
you identify and connect ideas within the text to build or draw relevant
conclusions?
|
||||
Bloom’s Level
|
Low
Knowledge
Comprehension
|
Middle
x Application
|
High
x Analysis
Synthesis
x Evaluation
|
||
Anticipatory
Set
·
Congruent
·
Active
·
Past Experience
|
Students will recall and write a paragraph regarding what they know
about the Newtown Shooting, noting where they learned their information.
|
||||
Instructional Strategies
|
Student-Led
Identifying
Similarities & Differences
x Summarizing
x Project-Based
Nonlinguistic Representation
x Setting Objectives
x Peer Feedback
Generating/Testing
Hypothesis
|
Teacher-Led
x Lecture
x Discussion
x Homework
x Practice
x Cooperative
Learning
x Instructor Feedback
x Questions, Cues,
Advanced Organizers
|
|||
Learning
Activities & Modeling the H.O.T.S.
|
Week of January 7,
2013
Students will take notes on
inference and observation PPT.
Students will watch the President’s
reaction to the shooting via YOUTUBE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FeeCBU2io0
and answer the following questions regarding this speech.
Identify the main ideas within the
speech. How is the piece organized? Why is it organized in this
manner? Discuss the intent of the speech. What are two of the main ideas from
this speech? What inferences can be drawn regarding these main ideas? How are
they connected? (Use specific textual
evidence).
Week of January 14, 2013
Students
will read President Obama’s speech regarding 9/11 and complete worksheet.
Week of January 21, 2013
Students
will read Mayo Angelo’s eulogy and complete worksheet.
(I
will add more after this week. I want to evaluate where the students are
before planning too far ahead.)
|
||||
Guided
Practice
|
Teacher will model how to connect ideas within a text in order to
produce relevant inferences. Students will be encouraged to actively engage
in discussions and generate clarifying questions.
|
||||
Comprehension
Check
|
The students’ comprehension will be assessed through the successful
completion of the analysis of multiple nonfiction pieces and relevant
inferences drawn.
|
||||
Active
Participation
·
All Students
·
All the Time
|
All students will be active learners and have a role in the successful
mastery of this skill through individual note taking, discussion, observing
teacher modeling, processing/meeting rubric requirements, and successful
completion of activities.
|
Covert
Overt
x Combination
|
|||
Assessment
|
Selected
Response
x Extended Written
Response
x Performance
Assessment x Personal
Communication
|
||||
Closure
·
Congruent
·
Active
·
Past Experience
·
Student Summary
|
Students will summarize the importance of drawing relevant inferences
from nonfiction text. Students will
answer the question, “What is a relevant inference? How do you identify and connect
ideas within the text to build or draw relevant conclusions?” in paragraph
form using exact examples from the previous week’s assignments.
|
||||
Independent
Practice
|
Students will take interactive notes, complete various expressive
writing activities, analyze, assess, and make relevant inferences in non
fiction pieces.
|
||||
*Students will read a class novel and partake on various
curricular assignments, both reviewing and previewing language arts standards;
concomitantly, with the above essential standard.
Teacher:
Racquel O’Connor-Mesa
|
Class: Junior English
|
Dates: Week of January 7, 2013 through February 11, 2013
|
|||
Learning Development:
|
Performance
Objective: UW.G11.3R.C1.PO 4:
Identify, analyze and apply
knowledge of the purpose, structures, and elements of expository text
Learning Objective: Compare (and contrast) readings on
the same topic, by explaining how authors reach the same or different
conclusions based upon differences in evidence, reasoning, assumptions,
purposes, beliefs, or biases.
Kid-Friendly Language: After
reading texts on the same topic, I can explain how conclusions are drawn
based on information presented within the work.
Key
Terms: Conclusions, Differences, Evidence,
Reasoning, Assumptions, Purposes, Beliefs, Bias
Essential Questions:
What is the difference between
factual and biased information? How can authors reach conclusions on the same
topic using combinations of fact and bias? How do our own assumptions
contribute to how we reach conclusions?
|
||||
Bloom’s Level
|
Low
Knowledge
Comprehension
|
Middle
x Application
|
High
x Analysis
Synthesis
x Evaluation
|
||
Anticipatory Set
·
Congruent
·
Active
·
Past Experience
|
Students will recall and write a paragraph regarding what they know
about the Newtown Shooting, noting where they learned their information.
(Piggybacks on coinciding standard)
|
||||
Instructional Strategies
|
Student-Led
Identifying
Similarities & Differences
x Summarizing
x Project-Based
Nonlinguistic
Representation
x Setting Objectives
x Peer Feedback
Generating/Testing
Hypothesis
|
Teacher-Led
x Lecture
x Discussion
x Homework
x Practice
x Cooperative
Learning
x Instructor Feedback
x Questions, Cues,
Advanced Organizers
|
|||
Learning Activities & Modeling the H.O.T.S.
|
Week of January 7,
2013
Students will take notes on
inference and observation PPT.
Students will watch the President’s
reaction to the shooting via YOUTUBE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FeeCBU2io0
and answer the following questions regarding this speech.
Identify the main ideas within the
speech. How is the piece organized? Why is it organized in this
manner? Discuss the intent of the speech. What are two of the main ideas from
this speech? What inferences can be drawn regarding these main ideas? How are
they connected? (Use specific textual
evidence).
ADDITION TO CONCURRENT STANDARD:
Students
will watch an interview with a Parent of a survivor of the Newtown shooting http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epJo_ic_wds.
Students will answer these questions:
What
is the difference between factual and biased information? How can
authors/individuals reach conclusions on the same topic using combinations of
fact and bias? How do our own assumptions contribute to how we reach
conclusions?
Week of January 14, 2013
Students
will read President Bush’s speech regarding 9/11 and complete worksheet.
ADDITION TO CONCURRENT STANDARD:
Students
will read the Democratic response to Bush’s speech and answer the following
question regarding this text:
What
is the difference between factual and biased information? How can
authors/individuals reach conclusions on the same topic using combinations of
fact and bias? How do our own assumptions contribute to how we reach
conclusions?
Week of January 21, 2013
Students
will read or view Mayo Angelo’s eulogy http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mayaangeloueulogyforcorettaking.htm
and complete worksheet.
(I
will add more after this week. I want to evaluate where the students are
before planning too far ahead.)
ADDITION TO CONCURRENT STANDARD:
Students
will read ABC News take on the eulogy and answer the following questions:
What
is the difference between factual and biased information? How can
authors/individuals reach conclusions on the same topic using combinations of
fact and bias? How do our own assumptions contribute to how we reach
conclusions?
|
||||
Guided Practice
|
Teacher will model how to connect ideas within a text in order to
produce relevant inferences. Students will be encouraged to actively engage
in discussions and generate clarifying questions.
|
||||
Comprehension Check
|
The students’ comprehension will be assessed through the successful
completion of the analysis of multiple nonfiction pieces and relevant
inferences and compare different perspective through bias.
|
||||
Active Participation
·
All Students
·
All the Time
|
All students will be active learners and have a role in the successful
mastery of this skill through individual note taking, discussion, observing
teacher modeling, processing/meeting rubric requirements, and successful
completion of activities.
|
Covert
Overt
x Combination
|
|||
Assessment
|
Selected
Response
x Extended Written
Response
x Performance
Assessment x Personal
Communication
|
||||
Closure
·
Congruent
·
Active
·
Past Experience
·
Student Summary
|
Students will summarize the importance of drawing relevant inferences
from nonfiction text. Students will
answer the question, “What is a relevant inference? How do you identify and connect
ideas within the text to build or draw relevant conclusions?” in paragraph
form using exact examples from the previous week’s assignments. How does
one’s bias affect an overall perception of the exact same reading/event.
|
||||
Independent Practice
|
Students will take interactive notes; complete various expressive
writing activities, analyze, assess, and make relevant inferences noting bias
in non fiction pieces.
|
||||
*Students will read a class novel and partake on various
curricular assignments, both reviewing and previewing language arts standards;
concomitantly, with the above essential standard.