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[L262]Lesson Plans About Me
by Mary Joyce, Mar

As homeschoolers one of the greatest benefits is that of having great flexibility with how you educate your child. But even with this great educational flexibility you shouldn't really be sailing without a compass.

When it comes to educating, that compass is your lesson plan.

Although homeschooling generally doesn't require exacting lesson plans to be turned in, however, not having one at all certainly isn't a good approach to your child's education.

Let's take a look at some general concepts and commonalities about lesson plans that may assist you in developing yours.

First of all, you have to start your thinking with what it is you are going to teach. From there, you'll need what your objectives for the lesson are. In other words, you'll want to be able to observe specific behaviors your child is going to be able to do or perform as a result of your teaching. You want the outcomes of your teaching to be measurable and quantifiable; so the more specific the better it will be.

With this in mind you'll want to be descriptive with your objectives. This not only provides feedback on how your child is progressing, but it also gives you as the educator great feedback on your effectiveness. You should also have some sort of description or statement of how you will determine whether your lesson plan objectives have been met.

Take some time to determine what your child already knows about the subject matter and what it is they need to know (prerequisites) in order to successfully complete the lessons.

As you are making your first pass at your lesson plan, be sure to include somewhere in it any materials you will need to accomplish the objectives that you have described. Materials not only necessary for the lessons themselves; but be sure to include any materials you may need for the evaluation process.

Of course your lesson plans will include much greater detail than is given here, but just to get you started here is a quick outline or review of the thought process that goes into putting a lesson plan together.

Determine what it is you are going to teach and what the priority outcomes of your teaching will be… what your child will be able to do as a result of completing the work and the activities contained in your lesson plan.

Determine what it is your child already knows about this subject matter or will need to know. Having a grasp on this will allow for a smooth transition into your current planning and into the next or related level of the subject.

Have a plan on how you are going to facilitate the learning of this subject matter. Be sure to think about any materials that you will need, such as manipulative objects for your child.

And finally, have a method of evaluation; both for the behavior of the child and the effectiveness of your lesson plan and your teaching techniques.

Once you make the loop a few times through the lesson planning process you'll soon develop a template that works best for you. Using a detailed lesson plan will greatly increase the efficiency of your teaching as well as the quality of the child's learning time.


I recently discovered a website that's been making my life easier. It's called Lessonwriter.com, and it creates lesson plans and student worksheets for teaching English language skills from any reading passage. I wanted to teach a news article about China during the olympics. After finding the article I wanted, I cut and pasted it into LessonWriter. That took about 5 seconds. The site analyzed the article and let me select the grammar and vocabulary that my ESL students need while being creative with content. LessonWriter writes a lesson plan and a lesson that teaches the skills to understand the passage I chose - automatically!

I used to make educated guesses about which vocabulary words or grammatical points to teach. I would have a rough idea of which words students may find difficult and a hunch about what grammar was essential to understand the reading I had chosen. Now, LessonWriter takes the guesswork out of lesson planning and automates that work by matching the vocabulary to its academic word lists and student dictionaries and identifying which grammar points are most important for comprehension.

LessonWriter has many other features, as well: graphic organizers that increase reading comprehension by helping students connect ideas in a passage, word roots and stems exercises for vocabulary building, pronunciation exercises, crossword puzzles for review, and lots more. You can mix and match the lesson parts, using some or all of them. For some lessons I have just used the vocabulary feature, for example, and skipped everything else. Just that saves me a half hour of circling vocabulary and typing a word list. And the differentiated instruction options are amazing for doing group work in mixed-level classes!

I have been saving time with LessonWriter for ESL lesson planning and am recommending it to my content-area colleagues as well. At my school content-area teachers are always being asked to include literacy instruction and i think it's going to be helpful for that. Now the science teacher can include literacy instruction for her English language learners, too!

LessonWriter also keeps records of everything, including what standards a lesson addressed, and recommends what I should teach next. It's making my report-writing and grading a lot easier. The site if free. I highly recommend it.
Article Source : Pg. 23

About Author
Both Mary Joyce & Stephen Mellter are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Mary Joyce has sinced written about articles on various topics from Cars, Parental Care and Education. Mary Joyce is a former educator & homeschooler who`s website offers resources and articles on. Mary Joyce's top article generates over 2900 views. to your Favourites.

Stephen Mellter has sinced written about articles on various topics from Education. . Stephen Mellter's top article generates over 2900 views. to your Favourites.
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