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Department of
Education
College
of Arts, Letters and Education
312
Williamson Hall
Cheney,
WA 99004
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TPA Lesson
Plan #___500____
Course:
ENGL 493
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1. Teacher
Candidate
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John
Smith
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Date
Taught
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March
9, 2015
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Cooperating
Teacher
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Sean
Agriss
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School/District
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Eastern
Washington
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2. Subject
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English
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Field
Supervisor
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Diane
Ball
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3. Lesson
Title/Focus
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Sherman
Alexie’s Cartoons
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5. Length of Lesson
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20
Minutes
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4. Grade Level
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9
- 10
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6. Academic &
Content Standards (Common Core/National)
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RI.9-10.3:
“Analyze how the author unfolds an analysis or series of ideas or events,
including the order in which the points are made, how they are introduced and
developed, and the connections that are drawn between them.”
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7. Learning
Objective(s)
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Having
been shown a copy of page 57 and 88 of Sherman Alexie’s “The Absolutely True
Diary of a Part-Time Indian,” and a page from Marvel Comics’ The Amazing Spider-Man #669, students
will show that they are able to understand how an author connects thoughts
and ideas pictorially by similarly drawing, and submitting, an event from
their own lives.
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8. Academic
Language
demands
(vocabulary, function, syntax, discourse)
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Analysis Pictorially
Introduction Thought
Development Idea
Connection
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9. Assessment
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Attached
is a rubric grading students on their participation in the exercise, their
contributions to the group, and desire to participate in the lesson as planned.
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10. Lesson Connections
Prior
to this lesson students have been taught the basics, and some advance
techniques, of composition. After this
lesson, students should have additional understanding of connecting scenes
and ideas to other scenes and ideas.
The
objective for this lesson is found at [http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/RI/9-10/]
Additional
research supporting using “comic books” to teach literature and understanding
can be found at [http://teach.com/comics-in-the-classroom/why-comics],
particularly in situation, where struggling and emergent readers are
involved.
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11. Instructional
Strategies/Learning Tasks to Support Learning
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Learning Tasks and
Strategies
Sequenced
Instruction
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Teacher’s
Role
1. Make sure the learning objective, from
box 7, is either written on the whiteboard, or projected via the document
camera.
2. Depending on time, show a representation
of either page 57 or 88 preferably page 88, from the Sherman Alexie text
(attached.) Hand out the attached “Storyboarding
Prompt,” a version of the student instructions for step 2. Once students are set to task, silently
roam from group-to-group, not only making sure that students are on task, but
resolving any concerns that may arise.
This is formative assessment.
3. Next show page 16 from the comic book by
Marvel, The Amazing Spider-Man #669,
and have them do the same steps from #2.
4. Have students select a moment from one
of the group member’s lives and sketch a six-panel page of this event.
5. While the group presenting is in the
front of the class, make sure all other students are participating. If needed, call on students who might need
additional motivation to participate.
6. Have one student restate the learning
objective on the board, then ask the class if they 1- feel like we
accomplished this, and 2 – for any additional questions they may have.
7. Once renderings are collected, use them
and information collected on the participation of students during
presentation time to gauge the summative effort of students. Use this knowledge to fill out the rubric
attached to this lesson.
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Students’
Role
1.
One student will read, out loud, the displayed learning objective.
2. In two, maximum three, person groups,
students will look at the portrayed pages 88 from Sherman Alexie’s “The
Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian,” and explain:
a – What the main idea is,
b – How the author connects an overall idea
amongst the panels, then
c – Come up with at least one verbal representation
of a “new” panel that they might add to the drawing. If your decision is that none should be
added, explain: why or why not?
This
should take 1 – 2 minutes.
3.
Perform the same tasks from step two with the image from The Amazing Spider-Man page.
(Page 16 from issue 669 of Amazing
Spider-Man)
4.
There may not be enough time for each student to draw a moment from each of
their own lives. Select one student in
the group who is, or claims to be, a “good” artist and one student who claims
to have a story in mind, that lends itself well to pictorial
representation. While the storyteller
tells, the artist renders, with assistance by the other classmates in the
group.
5. As soon as your group is finished, raise
your hand. The first group to do this
presents their drawing to the rest of the class, by using the document
camera. The author asks the rest of
the class what they think the story is, then either confirms, or clarifies,
the understanding of the class.
6.
Restate the learning objective.
7. Make sure every name from your group is
written at the top of your rendering and hand it in!
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Student Voice to Gather
-At
the beginning of the lesson ask one student to read the learning
objective. Ask for ideas how this
might be accomplished.
-At
the conclusion of the lesson, ask for another student to read the learning
objective, and ask them if they feel like it was accomplished. What other questions might they have?
-During
the lesson, are students referring back to the image projected on the
screen? It should be either one of the
Sherman Alexie image, or the Spider-Man pages. These artists have been trained to “tie
ideas together.” Do students refer
back to them for assistance? Ask them
to complete this sentence: “I am learning…”
-During
the composition exercise, teacher must not remain static, at the front of the
class watching. He must move between
groups and silently listen. If not to
make sure the groups are functioning as planned, then he must be ready to
guide the students back on task or answer any questions that might
arise. Make sure they know that they
will be graded on their participation and motivation.
-After
groups have presented, have them draw back to the learning objectives. Does this presentation relate to the
objective?
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12. Differentiated
Instruction
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Plan
This
lesson is planned for students who learn in different ways. There is no “boring” reading of pages, nor
is there just one text for all students to attempt to access. For students who learn best by utilizing
imagery, both the Alexie images, as well as The Amazing Spider-Man images should ease their concerns. While students who might otherwise find
problems participating in group sessions, the group sessions are designed to
utilize different skills and abilities of the students—not everyone is
required to draw, not everyone is required to write, not everyone is required
to present. Everyone can help in some
way.
Additionally,
a URL is shown in the lesson connections area that explains the benefits to
using comic books in the classroom, particularly for struggling and emergent
readers. If there are no ‘struggling
and emergent’ readers in this class, students will appreciate the change in
venue with showing images, rather than the typical just reading static lines
on a page.
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13. Resources and
Materials
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Plan
The
idea for this lesson came from page 106 of “Teaching & Assessing 21st
Century Skills,” by Robert Marzano and Tammy Heflebower, 2012, Marzano
Research Laboratory.
Teachers
will need Pages 57 and 88 of Sherman Alexie’s “The Absolutely True Diary of a
Part Time Indian” and page 16 from Marvel Comics’ The Amazing Spider-Man, Issue 669 (by Slott and Ramos.) All are attached.
Also,
teachers will need the student participation rubric and the storyboarding
prompt, though only the prompt needs to be handed out to students. Note, that there are two copies of the same
prompt on each page, to conserve copying costs.
Students
will need a willingness to try something new, to allow themselves to tap into
their previous experiences and personal stories. With this, they will be able to create
something they can share with anyone, especially individuals outside of
class.
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14. Management and
Safety Issues
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Plan
There
may be issues with making sure everyone is involved while students are
presenting at the front of the class.
It is important for the teacher to help designate students who will
ask questions while the students are presenting at the front of the class. If students refuse to participate, take
them aside and give them an assignment to draw their own event, which should
not disrupt the flow of student participations. If disruption occurs, invite the student to
step aside. Teacher sets the students back
on course, then talks quietly to the lone student.
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15. Parent &
Community Connections
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Plan
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For
extra credit, or for students who need extra help, assign students to go to
parents or someone in the community to ask them for a tale that students will
then render into a one-page collection of connected panels.
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Storyboarding Prompt
In
two, maximum three, person groups, students will look at the portrayed
pages 88 from Sherman Alexie’s “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time
Indian,” and explain:
a
– What the main idea is,
b
– How the author connects an overall idea amongst the panels, then
c – Come up with at least one verbal
representation of a “new” panel that they might add to the drawing. If your decision is that none should be
added, explain: why or why not?
This
should take 1 – 2 minutes.
Then,
when you will be shown page 16 of Marvel Comics’ The Amazing Spiderman #669.
Repeat the above steps in your group.
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Sherman Alexie’s “The
Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian,” Page 57
Sherman Alexie’s “The
Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” Page 88
Marvel Comics’ The Amazing Spider-Man Number 669, Page
16
(Written by Dan
Slott, Penciled by Humberto Ramos)
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CATEGORY
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4
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3
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2
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1
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Contributions
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Routinely provides
useful ideas when participating in the group and in classroom discussion. A
definite leader who contributes a lot of effort.
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Usually provides
useful ideas when participating in the group and in classroom discussion. A
strong group member who tries hard!
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Sometimes provides
useful ideas when participating in the group and in classroom discussion. A
satisfactory group member who does what is required.
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Rarely provides useful
ideas when participating in the group and in classroom discussion. May refuse
to participate.
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Time-management
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Routinely uses time
well throughout the project to ensure things get done on time. Group does not
have to adjust deadlines or work responsibilities because of this person\'s
procrastination.
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Usually uses time well
throughout the project, but may have procrastinated on one thing. Group does
not have to adjust deadlines or work responsibilities because of this
person\'s procrastination.
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Tends to
procrastinate, but always gets things done by the deadlines. Group does not
have to adjust deadlines or work responsibilities because of this person\'s
procrastination.
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Rarely gets things
done by the deadlines AND group has to adjust deadlines or work
responsibilities because of this person\'s inadequate time management.
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Attitude
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Never is publicly
critical of the project or the work of others. Always has a positive attitude
about the task(s).
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Rarely is publicly
critical of the project or the work of others. Often has a positive attitude
about the task(s).
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Occasionally is
publicly critical of the project or the work of other members of the group.
Usually has a positive attitude about the task(s).
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Often is publicly
critical of the project or the work of other members of the group. Often has
a negative attitude about the task(s).
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Pride
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Work reflects this
student\'s best efforts.
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Work reflects a strong
effort from this student.
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Work reflects some
effort from this student.
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Work reflects very
little effort on the part of this student.
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