Thursday, April 15, 2010

TPACK Lesson Report

Presentation click HERE

TPACK Lesson plans

Name: Catherine Norris

Title: Fables and Tales from Different Cultures

Summary:


 

Understand the differences between fables and tales from different cultures


 

Primary Core Objective:


 

3rd Grade Objective 3
Recognize and use features of narrative and informational text.

B. Identify different genres: fairy tales, poems, realistic fiction, fantasy, fables, folk tales.

Materials Used by the Teacher:


 

  • Worksheet


     

Materials Used by the Students:


 

  • Worksheet
  • Online stories

Technologies Used by the Teacher:


 

  • Computer with internet access with stories pulled up

Technologies Used by the Students:


 

  • Computer with internet access

Intended Learning Outcomes:

  • Identify the definition and understand elements of fables and trickster stories
  • Recognize Aesop's fables
  • Identify the specific narrative and thematic patterns that occur in fables and trickster tales across cultures
  • Compare and contrast themes of fables and trickster tales from different cultures
  • Differentiate between the cautionary lessons and morals of fables and the celebration of the wiles and wit of the underdog in trickster stories.

    .

Instructional Procedures:

Extensions:

Assessment Plan:


 

  • Have students fill out an online or printed-out version of the Story Structure Chart found on the end of the lesson.


 


 

Story Structure Chart

 

The Lion and the Mouse

Mr. Buffu and the Snake

The Ungrateful Tiger

The Tiger, the Brahman, and the Jackal

Story Elements

  

    

Characters

  

    

Problem

  

    

Solution

   

    

Lesson/Moral

   

    

  

  

  

  


 


 


 

Name: Catherine Norris

Title: Plants

Summary:

Students will learn about the different parts of a plant through a Power Point Presentation and then create their own plants with a computer drawing program.  They will label all the parts of a normal plant in their picture to demonstrate that they have learned the different parts of the plants.

Primary Core Objective:


 

Standard 3
Students will develop an understanding of their environment.

Objective 1
Investigate plants and plant growth.

Materials Used by the Teacher:


 

  • Pictures of Plants & their parts on Power Point
  • Projector
  • Projector screen

 
 

Materials Used by the Students:


 

  • Paper
  • Pencil
  • Worksheets on Plant Parts

Technologies Used by the Teacher:


 

  • Power Point on Computer
  • Projector

Technologies Used by the Students:


 

  • Computer
  • Tux Paint Drawing Software

Intended Learning Outcomes:


 

Students will learn about the different parts of plants and then will create and label the different parts of their own created plant using the drawing program Tux Paint.

Instructional Procedures:


 

  • Reserve the computer lab for the whole class for the activity assessment portion of this lesson.
  • Have students sit in their seats and set up expectations for them to look up at the presentation and to raise their hands when they have a question or input. Pass out a worksheet that has spaces to label the different plant parts.
  • Students observe from their desks a Power point projected onto the projector screen.  This is created to show the different pictures of plants.  There will be pictures of vegetables, fruits and flowers where the class will be asked to see if they can identify any of the plants as they are shown on the screen.


     

  • As a class we will identify the different plant parts : roots, stems, the flower, petals, and the leaf.  Discuss why they are important for the growth of the plant. The students will then fill in their plant worksheet of the different parts of the plant. 
  • Before the lesson reserve the computer lab, so that the students can do the next activity. Students will go down to the computer lab and using the drawing software Tux Paint (this is a free program that has many cool drawing and painting tools.  In partners have the students create a new plant that they will then label based on the information of plants we have already covered in class.


 

Extensions:


 

  • On the computer in the classroom I have set up the internet with a site by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute that allows you to "build a salad". It gives you the different kinds of vegetables that are different parts of plants that go into a salad. This is fun for students to click on and learn.

The website for this activity : http://www.hhmi.org/coolscience/forkids/vegquiz/recipe.html

Assessment Plan:


 

  • Students will go down to the computer lab and using the drawing software Tux Paint (this is a free program that has many cool drawing and painting tools.  In partners have the students create a new plant that they will then label based on the information of plants we have already covered in class.


 


 


 

Name: Catherine Norris

Title: The Census

Summary:

Learn the importance of the census.

Primary Core Objective:

Grade 4th Standard 1
Objective 2
Analyze how physical geography affects human life in Utah.

Materials Used by the Teacher:

  • Video projection equipment
  • Computers with Internet access
  • Map of the U.S

Materials Used by the Students:

  • List all of the materials that the students will need to successfully complete the lesson.

Technologies Used by the Teacher:

  • Video projection equipment
  • Computers with Internet access

Technologies Used by the Students:

  • Identify the technologies used by the students during the lesson.

Intended Learning Outcomes:

  • Is the census an integral part of American democracy? What is its impact on government policy, society and the economy? In this lesson, students consider the purpose of the census and the importance of participating in it. They then examine the issues surrounding the 2010 census and engage in one of several multidisciplinary activities designed to make the census relevant to their experience, perspective and learning.

Instructional Procedures:

  • Tell students that this month, the 2010 U.S. Census forms will be mailed out. Ask students what they know and have heard about the census and why it is conducted.
  • Then explain, if necessary, that every 10 years, the government reports the number of people who live in the United States by conducting a count called the census, which is required by the U.S. Constitution and has been taken since 1790.
  • Then choose one or more of the following ideas to give students a bit of context before they read the New York Times Upfront magazine article "Counting America," below.
  • Tell them that this year, the U.S. Census Bureau is running an advertising campaign that represents the most extensive and diverse outreach campaign in U.S. history, with advertisements appearing in 28 languages. Show them "A Musical Take on Mailing It Back" and/or "A March to the Mailbox", both of which are commercials that are designed to persuade citizens to participate in the census survey.
  • Invite students to share their impressions and further consider the framework and significance of the census. Ask: Were the commercials informative? What did you learn about the census from the spots? Were they persuasive? Why is it important to participate in a census? How and by whom do you think the numbers and other information that are collected are used?
  • -Have students fill out the U.S. Census Bureau's 10 Questions in 10 Minutes, then discuss the questions and have students consider why each one is included on the survey.
  • -Read aloud the April 21, 1910 New York Times article headlined "Ten Census Takers Quit From Nerves: Daily Tilts With Irate Housewives Too Much For Them, So They Resign." How many of these same issues still exist for census takers 100 years later? What new issues might there be?
  • -Give students the following demographic categories: non-Hispanic white, black, Hispanic, Asian and other. Have them quickly sketch a pie graph to show roughly how they think the U.S. population (estimated at nearly 309 million) breaks down in these categories. Then reveal the 2010 (projected) pie chart in the graphic "Then and Now: A Snapshot of the Nation" to see how close students got to the actual breakdown. Then, comparing it with the 1980 graph, ask: How has our national changed demographically in the past 30 years? Are you surprised by any of the figures? How close did you come in accurately estimating how the population breaks down by race? What story do these chart tell you about the change in U.S. population in the past 30 years? What do you think the projected data is based on? How closely do you think our town reflects the national numbers?


     

Extensions:

  • In the New York Times Upfront magazine article "Counting America," Patricia Smith provides an overview of the history of the U.S. census, analyzes its significance and asks "Why is the 2010 census sparking such intense debate?":
  • With an army of 1.4 million census takers and a budget of $15 billion (yes, billion), the 2010 census is being billed as the largest peacetime mobilization in American history. Planning for the census has been going on for 10 years, and Washington is spending $340 million on a national advertising campaign in 28 languages.
  • The goal of all this time, money, and effort? Simply to get as many people as possible to fill out the 120 million questionnaires that will begin landing in Americans' mailboxes later this month.
  • A national head count may sound like a pretty dry exercise, but the census actually has an enormous impact on our daily lives. It determines everything from how many Congressmen your state gets to whether a new Gap opens near your house and which channels cable companies offer in your area.
  • Questions:
  1. How is much money, time and effort is being spent on the 2010 Census?
  2. What "political impact" do the census results have? How else, and by whom, are the data used?
  3. Why and how do Democrats and Republicans differ over on how to conduct the census?
  4. How was the census form changed for 2010, and why?
  5. What are some of the challenges and controversies raised by the census? What communities have particular concerns, and what are they?

Assessment Plan:

Worksheets and questions filled out.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Week 12 PLE

Watch two of the following three videos from the InTime Video Database:
I love Spiders (5:16 min)
Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you see? (5:52 min)
Habitats (4:38 min)
On your PLE Blog write a 150 word description of the most important thing you learned from the videos about using technology with young children.

These videos made me reconsider when technology can be intergraded into a classroom. Children as young as kindergarten age are able to work simple tasks on the computer such as drawing. I hope that I would be able to adapt my lessons for many learning styles by using the computer and other technologies. Technology is also a great way to keep parents involved in the class. You can burn CDs of the work their kids have done or post things on a classsite or even make a video to give to the students and their parents to remember the class by.