TPA Lesson Plan # 1___
1. Teacher Candidate
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Jessica Gaynor and Kylee Welch
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Date Taught
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March 7, 2016
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Cooperating Teacher
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Sean Agriss
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School/District
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Cheney/EWU
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2. Subject
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English Language Arts
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Field Supervisor
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Sean Agriss
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3. Lesson Title/Focus
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Maus
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5. Length of Lesson
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20 minutes
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4. Grade Level
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8th Grade
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6. Academic & Content Standards (GLEs/EARLs/Common Core)
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Cite the textual evidence that most strongly supports an analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience. (Grade-specific expectations for writing types are defined in standards 1-3 above.)
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7. Learning Objective(s)
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Given a Holocaust victim’s identification card, students will demonstrate their understanding of the victim’s biography by producing clear, and coherent journal entry from the perspective of the Holocaust victim, in which the style, and organization are appropriate to the task and purpose.
Today I am researching a specific Holocaust victim and composing a journal entry that captures his or her story.
I know that I got it when I can compose a journal entry writing in first person perspective utilizing relevant dates and information.
This learning objective is aligned with the following Common Core State Standards, CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.8.4, and CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RI.8.1, which are listed in #6, because it asks students to write clearly and coherently by writing a journal entry using the perspective of a Holocaust victim, in which the style and organization are appropriate to the task and purpose. In addition, it asks students to use textual evidence from the identification cards that supports their analysis of what the text explicitly states as well as draw inferences from it.
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8. Academic Language
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Vocabulary: Holocaust, Biography, first person perspective, journal entry, identification card, social justice, and victim.
Discourse: Students will individually read a Holocaust victim’s identification card, write a journal entry from the perspective of a Holocaust victim, and reflect on why the characters in Maus have no specific identity or individuality.
Language Functions: Students will write a coherent journal entry from the perspective of a Holocaust victim, in which the style, and organization are appropriate to the task and purpose
Syntax: Students will write a journal entry using first person perspective after reading a Holocaust victim’s identification card.
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9. Assessment
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The assessment for the lesson will be formative. Each student will complete a journal entry and receive a grade out of five points regarding their participation and completion of the journal task. After students complete the writing activity, we will walk around the room to formatively assess student participation by listening to conversations.
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10.Lesson Connections
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What examples of prior knowledge are you building on? Students have been learning about the Holocaust for the past two weeks. Therefore, this lesson is building upon the knowledge they have accumulated so far throughout this unit through previous research, and their Holocaust novels.
What examples of personal cultural or community assets are you building your lesson on? Students really enjoy when they have an opportunity to share or present their learning with their peers. At the end of the lesson, students will be provided an opportunity to share information about their Holocaust victim, how they connected to that person, and what they wrote about.
Why Teach this? This lesson is post-reading activity for Maus. Due to the lack of individual identity/characteristics Spiegelman gives characters presented throughout the graphic novel, students will be able to read and reflect on the identification cards that describe the experiences of real people who lived in Europe during the Holocaust, which will help students personalize the historical events of the time.
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11. Instructional Strategies/Learning Tasks to Support Learning
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Learning Tasks and Strategies
Sequenced instruction
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Teacher’s Role
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Students’ Role
Once student has read the learning objective out loud, the student will ask the class “what are we doing today, class?” The student will call on another student to summarize or read the learning objective in their own words.
Students will then answer the discussion question “Why do you think the characters in Maus have no specific identity or individuality?” On the back of their handout.
They will then be asked to share some of their answers with the rest of the class.
Then they will listen for instruction for the next part of the lesson. Students will be give real Holocaust victims ID cards to read and reflect upon on their handout journal entry.
After reading their Holocaust victims ID card students will be given time to reflect in their journal entry handout.
When students are finished writing they will be asked to get into groups of 3-4 to discuss their journal entry reflections. They will be provided at newspaper article about their Holocaust's victims fate. They will also discuss this within their group.
If students are struggling to write, they will use the writing questions/ideas displayed on the document camera.
Students will then have a couple minutes to write down on the back of their journal entry under their entry task what they took away from this lesson pertaining to the social justice of the victims of the Holocaust.
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Student Voice to Gather
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12. Differentiated Instruction
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13. Resources and Materials
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Naylor, S. & Keogh, B. (1999). Constructivism in classroom: Theory into practice. Journal of Science Teacher Education, 10, 93-106.
Marzano, RJ, & Pickering, DJ. (2001). Classroom Instruction that Works: Researched based strategies for increasing student achievement, 12, 110-111.
The Anne Frank Center USA. (n.d.). Diary Excerpts. Retrieved March 2, 2016, from http://annefrank.com/about-anne-frank/diary-excerpts/
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (n.d.). Identification Cards. Retrieved March 02, 2016, from https://www.ushmm.org/remember/id-cards
Teacher Materials: Identification cards for students, a copy of the “newspaper” to handout at the end of class, the journal entry template, writing prompt for exit ticket activity, a timer, writing ideas/questions to display on document camera to help prompt student writing.
Student Materials: a writing utensil.
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14. Management and Safety Issues
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The class may have some management issues since students will not only be asked to work individually, but also occasionally share their thoughts with their group partners. These issues can be avoided by monitoring the temperament of the room. If students are having difficulties participating or staying on-task during in-group discussion or the writing time, we will shorten the time, and move students onto the next task. We will actively pay attention to whether or not students are participating in the activity they are currently engaged in, and we will attempt to redirect their attention in the least disruptive way possible. Since this lesson deals with detailed information about a Holocaust victim, it can be emotionally difficult to confront. Because of this, students will have multiple opportunities to share their thoughts with their desk partners to confront their thoughts on their reading. Students may feel more comfortable with the content of their biographies by talking about it in a small group discussion, versus having to share their opinion in front of the whole class and teacher. In addition, when selecting identification cards to present to students, we personally went through each biography to make sure the content was appropriate for 8th grade students.
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15. Parent & Community Connections
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At the end of the lesson, we will ask students to take their newsletter home and share it with a parent or family member, and if they feel comfortable, students can discuss what they learned by reading the identification card of a Holocaust victim. In addition, due to the fact that the unit is on the Holocaust, this unit builds on the idea of people taking action to create positive change in their communities and the world. Students will have to consider the ways they can create change and make a difference in their community.
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