Wednesday, April 20, 2016

The Anatomy of a Lesson

The anatomy of a lesson has the same basic structure whether you're teaching a block schedule or a traditional schedule. Today we are going to break down the lesson into it's key components.

Lesson Planning
Planning is crucial for both types of schedules. If you have a limited time with the students, every minute must be used efficiently and purposefully. Everything from passing out materials to getting into groups must have a procedure attached to it to avoid wasted time. If you have more time with students, you still need to make sure you are using your time efficiently. If you are switching from one type of schedule to another, I highly recommend creating lesson plans that are overly detailed until you become comfortable with the new setup. Include every activity, your estimated time for each activity, how you will transition from one thing to another, and questions you plan on asking your students as well as questions you anticipate your students asking you. Once you begin to get a feel for how long everything takes, you can always scale back on your lesson plans, but it is always better to be over-prepared than under-prepared.

Set the Timer
Whether you're teaching a block schedule or a traditional (50-60 minute) class, time management is key. This is often an area where novice teachers struggle the most, but even those of us who have been in the classroom for years still have issues with timing now and again. While teaching block might seem wonderful at first (90 whole minutes to teach! They're going to learn all the things!), often teachers struggle to fill that time. They tend to allow students more down time than a teacher in a 50 minute class would, and lose out on the benefit of having the students in their classroom longer. One of the easiest things to do is time everything from the bell ringer/do now/warm-up to the instructional portion of class to independent practice to the exit ticket/closure. This will not only help your students learn how to manage their own time while working on problems, but also help keep you honest and on track. Additionally, our students have a limited attention span (about 1 minute per year of life on this planet), and changing activities frequently helps keep students engaged. Some teachers think that when they change activities it has to be something big and dramatic, but often something simple like a quick think-pair-share moment is enough.

Variety
Scheduled and structured movement around the room can be a useful way to keep the classroom moving. You can set up Math Stations, a Gallery Walk, or simply have the students change seats to take notes. Block schedules also allow for a more thorough release of responsibility to students. There is time for Direct Instruction (I do), Group Practice (We do), then Independent Practice (You do). While traditional class periods allow for all of these, teachers often have to sacrifice the amount of time spent during group practice or independent practice due to time constraints.

Transitions
All transitions from one activity to another need to be smooth, logical, and clear to students, otherwise you will lose some of them along the way. If students need to put materials away before the next activity can begin, or get materials out, assign that job to a few students. Do not give important information to students during this time. Instead, make sure that students are doing what they need to do (moving desks, passing materials forward, etc.) in order to get ready for the next thing.

Review and Closure
It is imperative that teachers leave some time at the end of class for a review of the topics or skills learned in class. This helps students bring things together in their own mind and to conceptualize what has been taught. Closure activities can be questions asked by the teacher, a think-pair-share activity, or exit tickets. Exit tickets are an excellent way to check for understanding at the end of the lesson, and can be used as a formative assessment for the lesson.

All of these are important components of any good lesson. The trick to make it a great lesson is consistency and practice. If you feel like you are struggling with any of these, observe another teacher and take notes on what they do. Even if they don't teach your grade level or your content area, you can always learn from other teachers. Best practices are best practices no matter the subject.

What is the anatomy of your lessons?

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