Exploring Letters and Letter Sounds: Lesson
Exploring Letters and Letter Sounds: Lesson
Lesson:
Part 1
Essential Question:
List the question students should be considering as they complete the project. This is a driving question that hooks the students
into lesson or unit and is what they can answer at the end of the lesson. You should have ONE.
Which exact letter is this from the alphabet?
Learning Objectives:
Write your learning objectives (see (LO) & identify the Depth of Knowledge (DOK) level (DOK is listed later in this document).
LOs start with a verb (NOT students will). Do not use the words
understand or learn
One objective per (dont use and).
Do NOT mention the task.
What are students able to do or know at the END of the lesson?
DOK is how much critical thinking the STUDENT is doing.
Learning Objectives
DOK level
Explore letters
Context:
Think about who your students are, you need to know the needs and levels of your students along with their personal interests
when you design your lessons. Create a fictional class in detail. Consider the diversity your class WILL have.
Who are your learners?
Students
Grade Level:
Kindergarten
Part 2
Materials:
List materials required
This lesson plan is required to integrate technology
Internet Access
Moby Alphabet
Cardstock
Glue
Anticipatory Set:
How will you introduce the lesson with a student-centered activity that captures their attention?
How will you activate prior knowledge? Can you build on a topic or skill they have already mastered?
Sing the alphabet song. Sing it again, slower only this time point to a visual of each letter as you sing and ask the class to follow
along and watch as you point to each letter.
Teaching Steps:
1.
Describe the scope and sequence of the activity; listing step by step what will be occurring both by the teacher and by the students.
2.
Do NOT mention the teacher. Your lesson should come from the student perspective.
3.
For each task, list the DOK level. How much critical thinking is the student involved in?
Task/Step
DOK level
Mix up the Moby Alphabet cards and hold them up one at a time for the class. Have
students say the name of the letter or the sound the letter makes. Set a timer and see how
fast the class can name the letters or sounds, and encourage them to beat their time! Or,
have students name, point to, write, or draw something that starts with each letter.
To meet the needs of kinesthetic learners, hold up different cards and challenge students to
position their bodies like Moby while they recite the letter name or sound.
Give each student a letter. Write a sight word on the board with a blank in place of one
letter. Ask students to come to the front of the room and stand in front of the blank where
their letter should be. Does more than one letter make sense? You may want to use the
Rhyming movie and features to supplement this activity.
Distribute one letter to each student, and divide the class into small groups. Set a timer for
five minutes and see how many words each group can make with the letters they have.
Have students change groups and repeat the activity. Which letters were the easiest to
make words with? The hardest? Why?
Put the cards in a literacy center for students to explore on their own or with a partner
throughout the school year. The corresponding activities can vary according to what you're
studying each month: students can put the cards in alphabetical order, use them to make
words, or sort them by self-selected or predetermined criteria. The possibilities are
endless!
Closure:
How will the lesson end?
End the lesson with some type of individual worksheet on letter matching with pictures that begin with that letter.
Critically think:
Students are asked to...
Name the letter of the alphabet and the sound each letter makes
Critical thinking is coming up with their own ideas and defending them or creating something new or applying to a new situation.
Collaborate:
Students are...
Working together to come up with words that start with a particular letter of the
alphabet
Collaboration is not just working together, but to be reliant on each other. There should be some level of task switching.
Communicate:
Students will...
Create:
Students will develop...
By creating groups of words that all begin with the same letter
Create is how students are being CREATIVE. This is NOT creating art. This is NOT creating a PowerPoint.
DOK Levels
What DOK levels are addressed in this activity?
Remember it is NOT how HARD the task is, but the complexity of thinking.
You may only address ONE DOK level in this lesson
or up to all 4. Describe how your lesson addresses the
DOK level.
DOK 1: Memorize/Follow steps
DOK 2: Think
Assessment:
How will you know students have learned?
RESOURCES:
What is the difference between formative and summative
assessment?
Formative assessment
The goal of formative assessment is to monitor student learning to provide ongoing feedback that can be
used by instructors to improve their teaching and by students to improve their learning. More specifically,
formative assessments:
help students identify their strengths and weaknesses and target areas that need work
help faculty recognize where students are struggling and address problems immediately
Formative assessments are generally low stakes, which means that they have low or no point value.
Examples of formative assessments include asking students to:
draw a concept map in class to represent their understanding of a topic
submit one or two sentences identifying the main point of a lecture
turn in a research proposal for early feedback
Summative assessment
The goal of summative assessment is to evaluate student learning at the end of an instructional unit by
comparing it against some standard or benchmark.
Summative assessments are often high stakes, which means that they have a high point value. Examples of
summative assessments include:
a midterm exam
a final project
a paper
a senior recital
Information from summative assessments can be used formatively when students or faculty use it to guide
their efforts and activities in subsequent courses.
Retrieved 10/2/16 from: https://www.cmu.edu/teaching/assessment/basics/formative-summative.html
Teaching Excellence & Educational Innovation Copyright 2008, 2015, Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence & Educational
Innovation, Carnegie Mellon University.
Lesson Plan Template retrieved 10/2/16 and adapted from:
http://alicekeeler.com/2016/02/21/my-lesson-plan-template
Teacher Tech blog by Alice Keeler