Micro Lesson 1
Micro Lesson 1
I.
RATIONALE:
This lesson is
being taught to meet an Arizona state learning standard for 1st
grade students.
II.
OVERVIEW:
Grade
Level: 1st Grade
Subject(s): Mathematics
Topic
of Study: Measurement of Data (MD). 1.MD.B: Work with time and
money.
Time
Allotment: 30 Minutes
Standards: 1.MD.B.3a: Tell and write time in hours and half-hours
using analog and digital clocks.
Objectives: The
student will be able to tell and write times in hours using analog and digital
clocks.
Reflection:
Assessing Prior Knowledge and Planning Instruction
·
What do the students need to know
prior to the lesson?
The student will need to visually
identify and write the numbers from 0-12. The student will need to know what a
clock’s function is.
·
How will prior knowledge and
experience be assessed?
The student will be shown
flash cards with numbers from 0-12 and asked to tell me what the number is and
write it down. The student will be shown an example of the two types of clocks
and asked if they know what a clock does.
·
How will you use this information in
the planning process?
This information will be
used to determine whether any reteaching is needed regarding numbers or whether
introducing clocks is necessary before the lesson plan aimed at addressing the
learning standard is introduced.
·
When will the lesson be taught in the
course of the school year? Why?
If the lesson were to be instituted
in a general education classroom as part of a formal curriculum, then it would
be taught in the first quarter of the school year and more probably within the
first couple weeks. There are three learning standards from kindergarten
comprising K.CC.A: Know the number names and the count sequence. These learning
standards exceeded the required ability to count to 12 and write numbers from
0-12. Given the required knowledge is considerably less than what was required
in the previous grade, there is no reason for it to be put off until a later
date. Additionally, it also serves as a form of reteaching for students that
may have slightly regressed over summer break. Finally, the second half of the
learning standard, telling times using half-hours, would be addressed in a
follow-up lesson.
III.
IMPLEMENTATION:
Procedure: The
lesson will be introduced with the teacher playing the following YouTube video:
Rock
and Tell the Time on the Clock | Analog & Digital Clock Song for Kids |
Jack Hartmann - YouTube. After the video finishes, the
student will be asked what the video was about. After the student responds, the
teacher will ask the student to think about if they have used a clock before or
seen other people use clocks. After the student answers, the teacher will ask
if the student wants to learn how to tell time on their own. After
confirmation, the teacher will model how to tell time in whole hours on an
analogue clock and digital clock.
The
teacher will open the interactive clock: Interactive
Analog, Digital Clock Online for Teaching Telling Time (subjectcoach.com).
The teacher will explain to the student that an analogue clock has a big hand,
the minute hand, and a small hand, the hour hand. The teacher will explain to the
student that the digital clock has a symbol called a colon separating the hours
and minutes. The teacher will show the student how moving the hands on the
analogue clock changes the way the time is written using only whole hours. The
teacher will explain to the student that a zero is sometimes placed in digital
clock hours less than 10. After these explanations, the teacher will check for
student understanding. Once the teacher has shown how to manipulate the clock,
the teacher will ask the student if they want to join them in playing with the
clock.
When
the student confirms that they want to play with it too, the teacher will ask
the student to tell the teacher a time that they want the teacher to show.
Next, the teacher would ask the student to show a time. If the student is
making mistakes, then the teacher will correct any misunderstandings. Taking turns would continue until the teacher
has given the student ten chances to check for understanding. The teacher would
ask the student if they feel they are ready to try on their own.
The
teacher will verbally tell the student times that they will move the clock
hands to show on their own. If the student successfully answers five prompts in
a row, then the assessment will begin. After the assessment, there will be
lesson closure. The lesson closure will include asking the student what they
learned today and how they think they can use it in their life. Based on
student responses, the teacher will encourage the student to think up different
ways it might help them.
Technology
Integration: YouTube song at the beginning of the
video: Rock
and Tell the Time on the Clock | Analog & Digital Clock Song for Kids |
Jack Hartmann - YouTube. Interactive clock at: Interactive
Analog, Digital Clock Online for Teaching Telling Time (subjectcoach.com)
Differentiated
Instruction: Cognitively Delayed Students: The lesson
split is split in half to focus on telling time with the numbers 0-6. This
would allow additional time for instruction on a more limited number of possible
questions to increase the likelihood of mastery. Gifted Students: The lesson is
extended into telling time with half-hours instead of just whole hours. This
would allow them to work toward mastery of the entire learning objective.
English Language Learner Students: A visual depiction of each clock type
alongside the words for each important part of the clock in both their native
language and English.
Reflection:
Designing Instruction (InTASC Standards 7 and 8)
·
How do the instructional methods align
with what you know about best practices?
The lesson contains an
introductory hook designed to capture the student’s attention and to enable
them to activate prior knowledge. The modeling, guided practice, and
independent practice portions of the lesson are all designed to scaffold
instruction according to the “I do, we do, you do” model that is considered
best practice. The closing segment at the end of the lesson is meant to enable the
student to precisely identify what they have learned and how it connects to
their own life to increase the likelihood of the skill making its way into
long-term memory.
·
How are you engaging students in
creative and higher order thinking?
The student is
engaged in creative thinking by allowing them to experiment with clocks to see
how what they do to it changes the result. Higher order thinking is engaged with
the lesson closure discussion that encourages him to find ways to tie what he
has just learned into its potential effect on his life.
IV.
ASSESSMENT:
Procedure:
The
teacher will hand the student two of the worksheets seen in the “Resources and
Materials” section below. The teacher will explain to the student that the
student will be verbally told a time. The teacher will further explain that the
student will draw the two hands on the analogue clock to show the correct time
and write the numbers in the digital clock. The teacher will explain to the
student that they can ask the teacher to say the time again if needed. The
times the teacher will tell the student to write are 3:00, 6:00, 10:00, 9:00,
and 12:00. The teacher will have already filled out the first analogue and
digital clock using 1:00 as an example. If the student correctly writes the
times for each of the analogue and digital clocks at least 4/5 out of times,
then it will be considered evidence of mastery.
Instruments:
The
student will need a pencil and two copies of the worksheet seen in the
“Resources and Materials” section below.
Reflection:
Planning Assessment (InTASC Standard 6):
·
How do the instructional methods
align with what you know about best practices?
The assessment was
developed prior to the formulation of the rest of the lesson plan to ensure the
selected learning standard was going to be assessed. Furthermore, this made it
possible to precisely identify the required skills needed to perform well on
the assessment. This principle of backward design is considered the best
practice for assessments.
·
How are you engaging students in
creative and higher order thinking?
The student must write
the correct depiction of a verbally described time in both analogue and digital
clock variations. This writing is a creative process as the student is
responsible for correctly placing each digit or clock hand. His higher order
thinking related to the learning standard is informally assessed in the
discussion that occurs after the summative assessment is finished as part of
the lesson closure. The teacher’s attempt to get multiple answers for the
usefulness of what has been learned is a check for higher order cognitive
engagement as the student cannot rely on rote responses.
·
How does the assessment demonstrate
that the students have been successful in learning the content?
The assessment
demonstrates that the student can tell and write times on both analogue and
digital clocks. Being able to convert a verbal command into a visual
representation encompasses both the tell and write portions of the learning
standard.
·
How does the assessment demonstrate
that the individual student needs were met?
The assessment is
directly related to the learning standard being instructed, and the learning
standard is grade-appropriate for the student. If the student performs poorly,
then it will be due to poor instruction and vice versa.
V.
MATERIALS AND RESOURCES:
Pencil.
Laptop.
Rock and Tell the Time on
the Clock | Analog & Digital Clock Song for Kids | Jack Hartmann - YouTube
Interactive
Analog, Digital Clock Online for Teaching Telling Time (subjectcoach.com)
Reflection:
How does your lesson meet ISTE Standards?
·
ISTE Standards for Educators
The lesson is
adapted along the spirit of the ISTE Standard for Educators referred to as
“2.5: Designer.” The use of the interactive clocks resulted in an authentic
learning experience that enabled student-driven experimentation with
technology. Additionally, the possibility of teaching this lesson to a wider
variety of students was accounted for in the development of the lesson under
the differentiated instruction portion of the lesson plan.
·
ISTE Standards for Students
The lesson
satisfies the ISTE Standard for Students referred to as “1.1: Empowered
Learner.” The student the lesson was performed with leveraged technology to
demonstrate competency with their learning goal during the guided practice and
independent practice portions of the lesson. Due to the young age of the
student, this early use of technology should help build a foundation for their
future use of technology in the classroom. In turn, the scope of the standards
addressed would broaden over time.
Reflection:
What occurred during the lesson?
Before beginning the proper lesson,
the student was shown flash cards with 0-12 to on them. The student was eager
to demonstrate that he knew the numbers. When asked what a clock was and what
it does, the student pointed to the clock on the wall and said, “Clocks tell
time.” The preassessment requirements were met, and this activation of
knowledge already had his interest. The video was shown, and the student’s attention
was captured by it as evidenced by him starting to move along toward the end of
the song. When asked if he had used a clock before, the student was confused,
saying that he did not know how to use a clock. The teacher then opened the
interactive clock and explained that he would learn how to use one to tell time
on his own.
The modeling stage that explained
the hands of the clock and how to move it was of interest to the student as
they immediately wanted to do it themselves after seeing the teacher manipulate
it. The teacher had to explain that the student needed to know some things
first before it was their turn. It was clear the explanations were of less
importance to the student than getting to play with the clock, so guided practice
began. The student was told to name a time, and the teacher would move the
hands to create that time. After this example, the teacher gave the student a
turn at moving the hands. At first, the student ignored direction and just
wanted to make circles with the hands. After redirection, the student moved the
hands with the help of the teacher. Eventually, the student caught on to the
fact that the hour hand never moved from the twelve, the minute hand went to the
current hour it was, and that the digital time was just the number of the hour
followed by zeroes. This indicated it was time for independent practice and
assessment.
The student was not pleased that it
was time to stop playing with the clock to use the worksheet. Praising the
student for the good job they had done redirected their attention to the teacher.
After receiving instructions on how to do it, the student was excited to show
what he had learned. Every problem was answered correctly. When asked if he
thought it was hard, the student said, “It was easy.” When asked what was
learned today, the student said, “I learned to move the hands to tell time.”
When asked how he will use what he learned, the student said, “To tell time?”
The teacher praised the student for doing well and telling them they could go,
the student said they wanted to play with the clock some more. The teacher
allowed it for a few minutes before leaving. Unfortunately, the parents did not
want the student’s work shared but did want to keep proof of his good work.
Overall, the lesson was a success.
The student was clearly more attracted to interacting with technology than
anything else the teacher was doing. It certainly facilitated the learning
process, but one is left to wonder whether this interest could conflict with an
ability to receive instructions in a different medium if a student became
overly used to using technology for learning. Ideally, a balance would be
struck over an entire curriculum so that a student can learn by many means.
Currently, evidence suggests that technology should be considered and
implemented when it can strengthen a lesson that would be weaker without it.
Hi Bryan!
ReplyDeleteYour lesson plan was very detailed and thorough. Time is a tricky topic to teach, but it seems this lesson plan would provide students an interactive opportunity to learn this concept. Videos are also a great way to teach a topic, as students usually maintain attention to videos. The assessment is also a valuable approach and can be used to check for understanding. Great post, well done with your lesson plan!