1. Teacher Candidate: Michelle
Dexter
2. Subject: English Language Arts
3. Lesson Title/ Central Focus: Romeo & Juliet
4. Grade Level(s): 9
5. Length of Lesson: 20 Minutes
6. Academic and Content Standards (Common
Core/National): CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.2
Determine a theme or central idea of a text and
analyze in detail its development over the course of the text, including how it
emerges and is shaped and refined by specific details; provide an objective
summary of the text.
7. Learning
Objective(s):
· Working
individually and in groups, students should be able to reflect on the themes
and events in Romeo & Juliet to discuss the conclusion of the play. In addition to their initial thoughts and
reflections, students will be able to work in small groups to change part of
the story to write a new ending. This
will require a summative knowledge of the key points in the play to create a new
ending by interacting with the changes they outline.
·
We will be able to reflect on the
overall story of Romeo & Juliet.
·
We will be able to interact with the
details of the text by re-writing the details and re-summarizing the storyline.
8. Academic
Language:
·
This lesson is coming at the end of a
unit on Romeo & Juliet; therefore, the language of Shakespeare would have
already have been addressed in an earlier lesson.
·
Students will need to be familiar with
the vocabulary pertaining to summarizing and parts of a play such as: Summary,
plot, storyline, theme, act, and scene.
9. Assessment:
· Students
will work through the handout in class, turn in both the handout and group
activity as well as participate in class discussion.
· The
handout and group activity are formative as they will be used to check their
progress and receive feedback upon their return.
·
This assessment will measure students’
comprehension of the overall plot of Romeo & Juliet and how the details
determine the outcome. This connects back to the Common Core Standard,
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.2 Determine a theme
or central idea of a text and analyze in detail its development over the course
of the text, including how it emerges and is shaped and refined by specific
details; provide an objective summary of the text, as it allows students to
analyze the development of the text and interact with the details to create
their own outcome.
10. Lesson
Connections:
· I
considered some of the excerpts from Kelly Gallagher’s Readicide where he
references finding the sweet spot of education. His ideas include allowing
creative avenues for assessing understanding.
This activity is a way for the teacher to see if students have
understood what they read without taking a formal test, but allowing them to
interact with their peers and build something new that requires that knowledge.
· Students
will have completed introductory coursework on Shakespeare and a unit on Romeo
& Juliet. They will have read the
play in its entirety and will be building upon prior lessons.
11. Instructional Strategies and Learning
Tasks to Support Student Learning:
Introduction
· I
will have the objectives on the power point and will have students read the
Common Core Standard and our class objectives out loud at the beginning of
class.
· I
will introduce the lesson by going over the objective, reminding students what
we have done, and going over the day’s agenda.
Student Voice
·
Student voice will be measured by their
own reflections on their handout and by their contribution to the group
assignment. The group activity is based upon student voice and requires students
to come up with their own ideas and assessment of how the events of the text
determines the outcome of the play.
Learning Tasks
· The
students will be given the assignment with an example to guide their group
activity. The students will learn to analyze the outcome of a play/text based
upon the causality of the effects and characters.
· The
directions for all of the tasks will be available on the power point and the
handout.
· Students
will complete Section 1 of the handout based on their personal reflections on
the play and will complete Section 2 of the handout with their classmates. The students will learn to analyze a text
based on the details that build on each event.
They will also learn to collaborate creatively on a group project.
· I
will be checking in with each group to see what areas of the text they
understood, had questions on and where they will be changing the text for their
story. I will also be checking in with
them to make sure they understand where the activity should be heading.
· The
introduction of the agenda and the initial task: 2 minutes
Section 1 of the handout
and discussion with group: 5 minutes
Introduction of Section
2 and time for the activity: 8 minutes
Presentation of group
activity: 4 minutes
Conclusion of Lesson: 1
minute
· In
our class of eight students, I will divide them into two groups of three and
one group of two. Ideally I would like
to have groups of three or four for heightened group interaction and varied
perspectives and to allow for differentiation through group make-up.
Closure
· We
will be able to reflect on the overall story of Romeo & Juliet.
·
We will be able to interact with the
details of the text by re-writing the details and re-summarizing the storyline.
· I
would see this lesson as a small portion of a summative assessment at the end
of a unit; a fun way to interact with the text while analyzing the plot. I would do this lesson at the end of this
unit to give students more input into a bigger assignment or paper that they
would be working on.
12. Differentiated
Instruction:
·
I would use these activities to check
for student understanding. I would also form groups in order to allow for
scaffolding. This task is meant to assess
overall understanding of the text and breaks away from conventions to give
students who have difficulties with writing assignments a way to demonstrate
their achievement of the objectives.
13. Resources
and Materials:
· Outside
of the textbook and Readicide, I came
up with this idea with a high school student from Ferris.
14. Management
and Safety Issues:
· Students
will be prepared for a day of discussion and group work based off of our calendar. They will be supervised in their discussion
by the teacher and will be guided by previous rules for group work outlined previously
in the term.
15. Parent
and Community Connections:
· This
would be an assignment as part of a unit that would have been communicated with
parents due to incorporation of videos and segments of plays in the
classroom. Parents will be kept abreast
of their student’s progress especially if there are concerns with the student’s
understanding of the unit.