Tuesday, October 30, 2012

The 4 P´s of Lesson Planning-Very helpful for Catedra II !

I wanted to share this information with my classmates,as it could be very useful for catedra II and of course our future as English teachers!

The Four "P's" of Lesson Planning



by K.J. Wagner, M.A.
A sure ingredient in a recipe for disaster is "winging it." As in: "I'm not sure what I'll do today, I'll just wing it." Good classroom managers plan the lesson, procure the products needed, list the procedure to follow, and prepare for potential problems and pitfalls. Proper planning leads to less stress for you and more learning for your students!

Preparing a Lesson
Lesson plans do not consist of statements such as: "Today we'll cover Chapter 4 in the text book." Rather, lesson plans are designs for learning. They include these basics:
  • Objectives. What is your objective or objectives for teaching this? Generally, you should write the objective in terms of learning outcomes. In other words, what do you want the student to learn as a result of the lesson or unit? It should be observable and measurable. For example:
-The student will be able to recite the letters of the alphabet.
-The student will be able to sing a song in three part harmony.
-The student will be able to access information from an Internet search engine.
-The student, given informational-type text, will be able to identify the main idea.
-The student will be able to define basic literary terms and apply them to a specific British work.
-The student will be able to describe the causes of acid rain.
There are categories of objectives including: knowledge and skills. Knowledge, of course, involves cognitive functions. Students categorize, analyze, recall, synthesize, recite, define. A skill concerns performing an action. Students measure, sing, play.
Objectives should begin with an action verb. (A list of verbs to use for writing learning objectives is appended to the end of this article.) When appropriate, you should include performance standards or information on how the student will be evaluated. For example: The student will, within a thirty-minute period, write a five-paragraph essay which includes a thesis statement and contains no more than three grammatical and mechanical errors. Or, the student will be able to perform all five take off and landing foot patterns.
  • List of materials needed. This is extremely important to think through ahead of time. Will you need chart paper? A chalkboard? Overhead? Handouts? Art supplies? Power cords? Procure your materials ahead of time and have them ready before you begin your lesson. Much can happen in a classroom of rambunctious fourth graders while the teacher searches for the handouts she wanted to use.
  • Procedures. State, step-by-step, how you are going to implement your plan. How are you going to introduce the lesson? How will you activate prior knowledge? If you are using handouts or manipulatives, when and how will you hand them out? Will you close with a review? How will you tie the lesson together?  
  • Potential Problems and Pitfalls. What will you do if you suddenly realize the students do not have the requisite background necessary for the lesson plan? What will you do if your overhead projector light burns out? What will you do if you plan on showing a video during a history lesson and a student informs you that she feels uncomfortable watching this particular video? Do you have an alternative assignment ready? A place to send her? What will you do if . . .? Think through potential problems and pitfalls ahead of time and have a contingency plan. (Example, in a hands-on science lesson involving rubber bands and a group of eighth graders,when should you pass out the rubber bands? Hint: Not during the introduction.)
  • Method(s) of Evaluation. How will you determine whether or not the student has met the learning objectives? Evaluations do not always have to be the formal, pencil and paper type. You may: observe whether the student has met the objectives, conference with the student,orally review as a group. There are many possibilities. Go here for a list of ways to evaluate learning.
As stated earlier, these are just the "basics" of a lesson plan. The type of lesson plan you design will depend upon your individual circumstances, the lesson being taught, and the type of students involved.
You students will learn more with a properly designed lesson in which you have paid careful attention to detail. It is a truism that "students don't do downtime." Students are astute. They know when their teacher is unprepared. And, unfortunately, on occasion, some students will take advantage of the situation to misbehave. Finally, when you are prepared, you are less stressed and more comfortable while teaching the lesson.

Action Verbs for Learning Objectives
Abstract
Activate
Acquire
Adjust
Analyze
Appraise
Arrange
Articulate
Assemble
Assess
Assist
Associate
Breakdown
Build
Calculate
Carry out
Catalog
Categorize
Change
Check
Cite
Classify
Collect
Combine
Compare
Compute
Contrast
Complete
Compose
Compute
Conduct
Construct
Convert
Coordinate
Count
Criticize
Critique
Debate
Decrease
Define
Demonstrate
Describe
Design
Detect
Develop
Differentiate
Direct
Discuss
Discover
Distinguish
Draw
Dramatize
Employ
Establish
Estimate
Evaluate
Examine
Explain
Explore
Express
Extrapolate
Formulate
Generalize
Identify
Illustrate
Implement
Improve
Increase
Infer
Integrate
Interpret
Introduce
Investigate
Judge

Limit
List
Locate


Maintain
Manage
Modify
Name
Observe
Operate
Order
Organize
Perform
Plan
Point
Predict
Prepare
Prescribe
Produce Propose
Question
Rank
Rate
Read
Recall
Recommend Recognize Reconstruct Record
Recruit
Reduce
Reflect
Relate
Remove
Reorganize Repair
Repeat
Replace
Report Reproduce Research Restate Restructure Revise
Rewrite
Schedule
Score
Select
Separate Sequence
Sing
Sketch
Simplify
Skim
Solve
Specify
State
Structure Summarize Supervise Survey Systematize
Tabulate
Test
Theorize
Trace
Track
Train
Transfer Translate
Update
Use
Utilize
Verbalize
Verify
Visualize
Write

HOMEWORK


"Learning Teaching" by Jim Scrivener



PPP as a lesson sequence


The most basic and maybe common teaching sequence, that teacher use for all type of classes, is known as PPP, Presentation-Practice-Production.
The PPP model is one way of categorizing/planning main stages of a lesson.
  • First, the teacher presents an item of language in a clear context to get across its meaning. This could be done in a variety of ways: through a text, a situation, a dialogue etc.
  • Students are then asked to complete a controlled practice stage, where they may have to repeat target items through choral and individual drilling, fill gaps or match halves of sentences. All of this practice demands that the student uses the language correctly and helps them to become more comfortable with it.
  • Finally, they move on to the production stage, sometimes called the 'free practice' stage. Students are given a communication task such as a role play and are expected to produce the target language and use any other language that has already been learnt and is suitable for completing it.



Here some examples of classical PPP lesson plans, labeled with the E-S-A stages(Harmer):



  1. Build up a situation or context                 (Engage)
  2. (Present) Introduce the grammar point    (Study)
  3. (Practice) Controlled/restricted practice    (Study or Activate?)
  4. (Produce) Freer practice                          (Activate)



  1. Warm up                                    (Engage)
  2.  Listening or Reading                         (Activate)
  3. Careful listening or reading                    (Activate)
  4. (Present) Highlight the grammar point     (Study)
  5. (Practice) Controlled/restricted practice   (Study or Activate)
  6. (Produce) Freer practice                         (Activate)

Conclusion – my personal opinion and proposal


During Methodology I and II we came around with different models of lesson planning, like SIOP lesson plan , Boomerang and Patchwork Lessons (J. Harmer's "How to teach English").  We have learned that structuring a lesson is complex and should be focused on the teaching objectives, the purpose of the task or topic (grammar or vocabulary) or covering a specific language skill( reading, listening, writing, speaking). Reading about PPP in Jim Scrivener´s “Learning Teaching “and how he refers to the first of three steps in traditional lesson design seems to go back to the very roots of lesson planning.

PPP offers a very simplified approach to language learning. It is based upon the idea that you can present language in neat little blocks, adding from one lesson to the next. However, research shows us that we cannot predict or guarantee what the students will learn and that ultimately a wide exposure to language is the best way of ensuring that students will acquire it effectively. Teachers therefore have to adapt their planning to the necessity and level of their students.  Not every lesson has to be (and cannot be) based on a PPP model. There are also other ways of structuring/using the stages of a lesson.


Overall, I think PPP lesson plans are very limited.  It would be convenient if good lessons only needed 3 key steps, but I think good lessons need a lot more. 
During my research I found a really interesting model that called especially my attention. I would like to share it here with you and don’t hesitate to comment! It is called EDUCARE? Normally used in general education, but I think it is very useful for language learning:

EDUCARE?
Explanation (= clarification of language or skills by the teacher, through reading, through discovery tasks, etc.)
Demonstration (= in ELT, listening to or reading examples of English in use)
Use                (= the more controlled/restricted practice steps, including drills)
Check/correct (= self/peer/teacher correction; tasks to check understanding; CCQs, etc.)
Aide-memoire (= getting handouts, writing summaries of the lesson, etc.)
Review/recycle (= seeing and using the language again, and again, and again)
Evaluate          (= free/realistic/authentic use and consideration of the effectiveness of that use)
?                    (= a chance to ask questions)

The aim is to ensure that over a period of every few classes, with a good degree of flexibility in the exact order, learners should be provided with all of the above.