Pseudonym-Lesson 3 - Equal Sharing Equal Grouping
Pseudonym-Lesson 3 - Equal Sharing Equal Grouping
Teacher
Date
Ms. Williams
November 14, 2014
Grade ___3rd___
I. Objectives
How does this lesson connect to the unit plan?
Teaches students what each number in a multiplication fact stands for.
cognitiveR U Ap An E C*
physical
development
socioemotional
R
Ap
C
C
X
Common Core standards (or GLCEs if not available in Common Core) addressed:
3.OA.4 Determine the unknown whole number in a multiplication or division equation relating three whole numbers. For example, determine the unknown number
that makes the equation true in each of the equations 8 ? = 48, 5 = 3, 6 6 = ?.
(Note: Write as many as needed. Indicate taxonomy levels and connections to applicable national or state standards. If an objective applies to particular learners
write the name(s) of the learner(s) to whom it applies.)
*remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, create
Outline assessment
activities
(applicable to this lesson)
Observing students using their counters to do the multiplication problems. Having the students show
Mr. Teacher and I their worksheet before moving onto the game.
Formative (as learning):
Students creating their own word problem for their partners to solve.
Fist 4.
Summative (of learning):
Test
Provide Multiple Means of
Representation
Provide options for perceptionmaking information perceptible
Fist 4 is self-assessment.
Materials-what materials
(books, handouts, etc) do
you need for this lesson
and are they ready to
use?
Components
5 min.
Motivation
(opening/
introduction/
engagement)
45
min.
Development
(the largest
component or
main body of
the lesson)
5-10
min.
Closure
(conclusion,
culmination,
wrap-up)
Fist 4.
Doing worksheet.
Your reflection about the lesson, including evidence(s) of student learning and engagement, as well as ideas for improvement
for next time. (Write this after teaching the lesson, if you had a chance to teach it. If you did not teach this lesson, focus on the
process of preparing the lesson.)
1-19-13
My lesson went decently well. Seeing as I taught it on a Monday, which we dont usually aid on, I forgot to get counters
from the curriculum center. Thankfully I had those decks of cards and we used those instead, which worked well. When doing the
examples of using the cards together at the beginning of the class, some pairs of students understood very well and could do exactly
as was needed. Other pairs of students got confused because they were either not listening well enough or they got confused. I
repeated the instructions several times, so I believe that many of the pairs that didnt understand or they confused each other. In the
future, to clear this up, I would make sure I had a deck of cards for myself and then I would show them what they had to do.
Other than the little mix-ups with the cards, I would say that my lesson went well. Working with partners was definitely
hard for some people because their partner was slower and they didnt want to wait. But I would explain to them how they are
partners and need to work together; if one partner doesnt understand what to do, then the other partner should help them to
understand it.
For most partners, there was enough time to finish the worksheet and start the game. A few partners just finished the
worksheet or had one or two questions left before we had to conclude so they could go to their specials.
1-19-13