Module 10
Making Content Connections Your Name: Alicia Leninger Date: 6/29 |
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Lesson
Goal: |
Complete
the Unit Activity Packet- Understand Civil Rights in the Modern Era |
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Content
Area: |
USVA
History |
Specific
Topic: |
Modern Era- Civil Rights |
Grade |
11th
and 12th |
Estimated
Time: |
45
minutes |
Strategy
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Jigsaw/
Think- Pair- Share |
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Describe
how the strategy is used as a before-during- and/or after-reading activity (List
steps of strategy) |
The class is divided into groups and each group is in
charge of one activity in the packet (assigned by the teacher). Within each
group, students are assigned roles: note-taker, speaker, time taker and so on.
The students will have 20 minutes to complete their individual group activity
and then the remainder of the time, the group will nominate one individual to
travel to the other groups to share their knowledge they have of their
assigned activities. Basically, the students become an “ expert” on their
activity and teach it to their classmates until the packet is completed in its
entirety. |
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Describe how you would
incorporate the strategy into a content lesson (application of strategy) |
Basically, the Unit
would start off with a basic 10-minute lecture introducing the topic. Students
will take notes and follow along with the teacher. After, the teacher will
guide the students through one activity and model what the students will be
doing on their own. They the students will divide into groups to complete
individual activities and then the groups will cross share to ensure that
everyone has all the activities completed. Having the students complete the
packet on their own would a. take too much time and b. result in one student doing
all the work and then simply letting the other copy off them. By dividing
them into groups and assigning them roles we can ensure that there is whole
group and individual accountability. |
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Please
attach any materials needed for explanation of the strategy. |
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1SQZDeh68_-0iNi62RWszksbm1WS_V-T4kl9zUoGmXf4/edit?tab=t.0
When I was in school, I always
looked at groups activities as a horrendous ordeal and some sort of divine
punishment. I would rather work by myself then trust anyone else to do the work.
9 times out of 10, it would be me doing all the work and my classmates simply
putting their name on the final product. Flash forward to modern classrooms and
students absolutely love group projects. Why? Because they sit back have let
one student do all the work and they simple copy from them.
As a teacher, this is incredibly
frustrating. How can these copiers be retaining any of the information they are
copying? Answer: they’re not! For this reason, these readings this week were
very helpful to me because now I feel like I have a solid strategy to combat
this. I learned that students nowadays are very slow, it takes them YEARS to complete
an activity that would have taken me one class period. For this reason, it is almost
required that teacher’s break-up the work if we want to cover anything in class.
I learned that for group work to well work, you need to assign roles to each of
the students. This makes sure that there is not only group accountability, but also
individual accountability.
Above, I use the jigsaw and an iteration of
Think-Pair-Share, but I would also like to try out some other strategies such
as Round-Table, and Reader’s Theater. I
think especially for History, acting certain parts would be easier than explain
it. Round table gives me Socratic Seminar vibes which normally is only associated
with English, but I after reading, I think History may benefit from having
group discussion like this. Finally, I think it is important to have a variety
of different activities for the students because if you do the same thing over
and over, they might get bored. However, it would be essential for us to model appropriate
behavior if we really want it to work. Finally, one question I have is I am really
interested in using the Reader’s Theater for history, but many of the topics
are very sensitive (slavery, holocaust, ect). How would one pick and choose which
activities are appropriate. Furthermore, how to we even student to interact and
move into groups that they may or may not like?
I really liked your strategy on assigning roles during group work. In ESOL classrooms, this helps ensure every student has a clear and manageable task. Scaffolding roles with sentence frames or word banks can support learners at all levels. Reader’s Theater is also a great idea for building fluency and confidence. I agree it’s important to be careful with sensitive topics, but with the right script and context, it can be powerful for helping students connect with the material.
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