First off I would like to take a moment to reflect on the the events that occurred on September 11, 2001. I hope we give pause to think about what those events really mean, how they impacted us as a nation and a world. Although we are not focusing on 9/11 specifically, the conversations I have had this past week have influenced tonight's topic. In my new role as a Tech Integrator I work with teachers in all subjects and levels. On Monday, another Tech Integrator who also teaches a class of English Language Learners at the local technical college asked me if I had a good lesson plan for 9/11. Later in the week I met a high school social studies teacher and after discussing various topics, I brought up the 9/11 lesson. I can't take credit for this lesson, it was the result of an idea by Melissa Seideman. She proposed that social studies teachers connect their classrooms by creating blog posts about 9/11. The idea was to have students interview adults who were around when it happened, record their stories, have students reflect on these experiences and create blog posts. The final step was to have students read other blog posts. Here is the blog from last year. What I noticed was the dramatic change in voice from those in the midwest and west like my students, compared to the east coast. You can check it out for yourself.
The other inspiration for the topic tonight comes from Kimbery Hurd who may be the most positive person I have ever met. She is not only a great educator, but has been so very supportive of me over the past year that I can't give her enough credit for how much influence she has had on me and my teaching practices. So I was honored the other day when she sent me a tweet telling me to check voxer. I am fairly new to voxer, but when I listened to her message, I jumped right in. Kimberly has just moved to teaching the 5th grade from another position and was looking to PIRATE up her social studies curriculum. So she gave me a topic of Native Americans and we took off from there. We went back and forth sending voxers back and forth and in the end she came up with this lesson. She shared it with me and wanted some feedback to make it better. This is what tonight's topic is all about. We are going to make lesson plans, share ideas, collaborate, and hopefully come away with a few lessons that we can use in our classrooms in the next few weeks or over the course of this year. Tonight is about putting our ideas down on paper, making a plan, and creating something that we can and will use. We talk about ideas, philosophy, and inspire each other. I hope tonight we walk away with something tangible, a physical product that you can apply to your classroom and rock your students' world! So here we go! Step 1- I have attached a Google Doc with a pretty basic lesson plan template - Please open the doc- Create a copy, and Fill in your ideas either before, during or after the chat. Step 2- Submit the document on the spreadsheet and share so anyone with the link can comment Step 3- Look at other people's plans, make comments to help others improve their plans Step 4- Connect with others, collaborate, tweak, create, learn, grow- Don't stop learning together! Build your unit tonight! Q1 what content topic or essential question are you going to focus on to build your ticket lesson? #sstlap Q2 what are the learning objectives common core standards etc you will use for this lesson? #sstlap Q3 how will you present information for Ss so they learn the content? What documents information will they access and how? #sstlap Q4 how will Ss engage in the content? How will you turn this into an experience? #sstlap Q5 how will you build excitement and anticipation for this lesson? #sstlap Q6 how will Ss demonstrate mastery if the content? How will you assess their knowledge? What would make this an memorable experience. step away from the scantron! (MC?) #sstlap Q7 can you make this experience authentic? Who can you invite to be the audience for Ss? #sstlap Q8 what hook(s) will you use throughout this lesson? #sstlap EC share your ticket lessons for other pirates- create GDoc and share on form. Allow others to comment to help you fine tune your lesson- it is about the Ss success so "stop collaborate and learn!" #sstlap Tonight's Archive
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