Candidate’s Name: Erika Garcia
Grade Level: 3rd Grade
Title of the lesson: My Book Club
Length of the lesson: 60 minutes
Central focus
Students will establish community
rules for group formation and interaction during their book club. They will
also get to choose a book of their liking from a choice of classroom books
and be able to establish their own schedule for reading and discussing book.
Taking responsibilities’ of their own literacy and learning how to value
their peers reading and learning.
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Knowledge of students
Students will have a prior
understanding of how to work in groups, respect their classmates opinion, and
ability to retell and speak about their story.
Key questions:
●
What do students know, what can they do, what are
they learning to do?
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What do you know about your students’ everyday
experiences, cultural backgrounds and practices, and interests?
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Common Core State Standards
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RI.4.1
Refer to details and
examples in a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when
drawing inferences from the text.
Determine the main idea
of a text and explain how it is supported by key details; summarize the text.
Explain
events, procedures, ideas, or concepts in a historical, scientific, or
technical text, including what happened and why, based on specific
information in the text.
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Support literacy development through language
·
This Lesson will allow students to analyze
their reading and understanding in small groups and interact with other
students.
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Students will also be able to explain,
summarize and predict their reading in the groups.
Vocabulary
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Using complete
sentences, reflection, subject matter, compound predictions, nouns, setting,
plot, characters.
Sentence Level
●
Using complete sentences
Discourse
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Discussion on how the book club help you
reading your book. Writing a reflection of their reading.
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Learning objectives
1.
Students will participate in group discussion about
their book
2.
Students will write down their reflection, listen to
one another’s opinion and clear any questions they have within the group.
3.
Students will also have to brainstorm an activity
that can be done for the book they are reading in the book club.
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Formal and informal assessment
An informal assessment would be
done watching students in their groups and looking at their reading
comprehension. A formal assessment will be done individually while checking
students writing journals and their reflection of what has been read.
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Instructional procedure:
1.
Students will take a vote of what they want to read
about and what type of books they want to read. As a class we will make a
tally of the votes and split into groups. There will be books chosen from the
library and access to internet books.
2.
Students will read the book during for 20 minutes
during independent reading and then break into groups to discuss the book and
reflect on it. Answering question on how they feel, what they predict will
happen next, how this book compares to other books they have read etc..
3.
Students will then brainstorm and write down on chart
paper rules to use in the book clubs and post them around the classroom.
4.
Students will then set roles, I will encourage
students to select a role that is a challenge ie. Selecting vocabulary,
writing the plot, writing about characters etc..
5.
After each role as been selected students will know
what to focus on and bring to the group when they meet.
6.
Students will then have to discuss and come up with
an “group-building activity” for their book, such as- group name, club
mascot, how to track their reading what strategies can be used and so forth.
7.
Students will have to also come up with an activity
for their book after they are done reading it. The activity can be done in
portions throughout the book as well.
8.
Once 60 minutes has passed we will group as a class
and discuss ideas for other groups who had a difficult time brainstorming or working
together. After each book club session students will bring new vocabulary for
the class to learn.
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Instructional resources and materials
used
·
Books/ internet
aces for online books
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Writing
journals
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Markers and
paper to write their activity
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Reflection
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Were students engaged throughout the lesson?
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Was the lesson affective and not distracting?
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Did this help students who struggle with
understanding comprehension reflecting with peers?
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This is a well thought out and comprehensive lesson plan.
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