Here is my lesson, with my Jing screen capture describing how to make a Glogster.
http://screencast.com/t/hiIkTsOwemL
Lesson Plan for TCH 632
Marian University
Name Peter
Lindblad Date taught: May 15, 2013
Lesson Title:
Understanding North Korea Course Title/Grade level(s) Social Studies, 6th
grade
School Marian University
Type of Lesson:
__X_ introduction _ continues
development ___ completes instruction
Big Idea or Essential
Question
Why are we in conflict
with North Korea?
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Learning Target
/Objective(s)
Define and distinguish
between key vocabulary words related to North Korea.
Give examples of
similar standoffs between the U.S. and other nations’ leaders.
Understand the history
of North Korea and its relations with the U.S. and its ally, South Korea.
Locate on maps the
cities of North Korea.
Analyze primary source
documents related to North Korea.
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Standard(s)
B.8.4 Explain how and
why events may be interpreted differently depending on the perspectives of
participants, witnesses, reporters, and historians
B.8.10 Analyze
examples of conflict, cooperation, and interdependence among groups,
societies, or nations
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Academic
Language/Vocabulary for this lesson (define)
Demilitarized zone,
annex, sovereignty, armistice, cease-fire, Juche, Communism, Songun,
nuclear-weapons state, socialist republic, totalitarianism, cult of
personality, isolation.
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Lesson Rationale
Tensions between North
Korea and the United States have been on the rise lately. Little is known
about North Korea, however. It remains a mystery to most people in the U.S.
By demystifying it, students can gain a greater understanding of the issues
that have caused such friction between the U.S. and North Korea and why they
are coming to a head now.
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Student prior
knowledge and prior thinking (include student misconceptions about what will be taught):
- Students should be
aware of the current events regarding North Korea, its leader Kim Jong-un,
and the U.S.
- There is a
misconception that North Korea is a Communist state, but the government
operates under a different ideology and is considered a Socialist Republic.
Students will understand the differences.
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Instructional
Materials, Resources, and Technology
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Plan
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Rationale
Glogster offers
students the chance to organize their information in an easy-to-digest format.
Using the Internet,
students can find the information they need for their studies of North Korea.
This glogster link
shows an example of a finished piece.
These links help
students gain an understanding of North Korea and its politics.
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Classroom Management
Considerations
Students will pair up
after the video. Each pair will be assigned a topic related to North Korea
that they will research, using Internet sources, so a computer lab will be
needed. Access to Glogster will be needed, as each pairing will work together
to complete a Glogster on their particular topic. The pairings will then be
broken up, with each student pairing with a different student and presenting
their Glogster to their new partner. Students will be asked to assess the
work of their fellow students in an exit ticket.
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Learning Tasks
• aligned with
learning targets, state standards, big idea and/or essential question
• aligned with
students’ learning needs of individuals and whole class
• aligned with the
academic language demands of this lesson.
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Plan
1. A 12-minute
video will be shown from the CNN web site on Hyeonseo Lee, who fled North
Korea. Students will start class by writing their reactions to the video in
their journals.
2. Breaking into
pairs. Each will choose an aspect of North Korean life to research using web
resources and then create a Glogster on their respective topics.
3. Students will
then be paired with a different student from the class. Each one will present
the Glogster they worked on to their classmate. Each student will fill out an
exit ticket in which they assess their new partner’s Glogster and their own
work in a one-paragraph write-up.
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Rationale
1.
Students will understand how difficult life is in North Korea.
2. Students will research a particular topic related to North Korea and create a Glogster featuring the information. 3. Students will be able to assess the work of their fellow students. |
Questions to elicit higher thinking in students during
the lesson and provide opportunities for students to engage in dialogue about
their learning:
- What were some of
the causes of the recent conflict between North Korea and the U.S.?
- Compare and contrast
this nuclear showdown with others the U.S. has faced in the past. Are they
different? Are they similar in some ways?
- Describe the
difficulties North Koreans face in their everyday lives.
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Assessments
• assessing prior
knowledge and readiness for lesson
• assessing learning
during lesson and at end of lesson including student self-assessment of
learning as associated with the learning target.
• planning the next
steps of learning based on the data or information gained through the
lesson’s assessments.
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Plan
Students will have a
checklist of items related to their particular topic about North Korea that
they will have to address in their Glogster.
Exit ticket allows
students to assess the work of their classmates.
Teacher will observe
and listen to students’ explanations of their different Glogsters.
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Rationale
Creating a Glogster
will help them focus on important information and images they need to address
their topics
- Exit ticket will allow
students to self-assess their work and that of their colleagues.
- Listening and
observing students at work will give the teacher an idea of how well students
are collaborating.
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Accommodations /
Differentiation to support student learning
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Plan
The mix of students in
each pairing would be heterogeneous, with students of varying learning levels
put together.
Sight-impaired
students will be assigned to tasks involving audio for their Glogster.
Make sure each student
has access to Glogster and the Internet.
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Rationale This mix of students allows them to work with those on a
different learning level from their own, perhaps giving them the chance to
benefit from each other’s strengths while working on their own weaknesses.
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