1.
Teacher monitoring student entrance into the classroom. An opening
exercise handed to students at the door. The teacher states expectations at the
start and at each major point of a lesson. Statement of CCLS standard(s) being
used.
2. Aim / Essential Question; Do Now,
Collect previous day's homework plus an
indication of the expectations and standards in the lesson/unit.
.
3. Motivation of 5 minutes in the form of a
visual, audio selection, journal entry, or connection to the lesson. The audio
selection should be music or clip aligned to the subject matter.
.
4. Mini Lesson in which the skill is modeled, and
the content is discussed
• Quick formative assessment of
student comprehension: fill in the blanks, multiple choice.
.
5. Explanation of the directions, and distribution of resources: textbooks,
handouts.
.
6. Differentiated instruction. Steps for the
activity should be pre-posted on the chart, on PowerPoint, and/or a
handout.
.
7. Assess
student learning at least twice a
period.
8. Monitoring the progress of the students by checking the status of
their Cornell Notes as to who is
exceeding expectations, meeting expectations and who is below expectations
9.
Students respond to and use questions from Habits of Mind and Blooms Taxonomy or Costa's
Levels of Questioning to share out core understandings that build
toward answering the aim / essential question. The teacher has students
"pass it on", repeat, comment or expand on the answers of other
students.
.
9. Summary provided by the students answering
the aim or essential question both verbally and in written form with a summary
in their Cornell Notes. An alternative for a quick formative assessment is
an EXIT PASS. Pupils can either repeat, or elaborate on the answer
to the aim. The students provide a complete indication of the answer to the
aim, the skills learned and the standard(s) that were linked to the lesson.
.
10. Homework assignment.
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