Lesson plan - Study Island
|Reading Lesson: Cause and Effect |Grade Level: 2 |
|Lesson Summary: The teacher will demonstrate an example of cause and effect for students and have them fill out a slip of paper with the cause and effect that the |
|he/she demonstrated. Then, the teacher will go over definitions, examples, and clue words for cause and effect. Students will record notes on a graphic organizer. |
|For guided practice, the teacher will read a story to students and give them each a card with a cause or an effect from the story. Students will need to find a |
|student who has a matching cause or effect. Students will then present their matches. For continued practice, on-level students will complete a worksheet, which |
|requires students to draw a cause picture for an effect picture and write down corresponding sentences. For a closing activity, students will take turns providing |
|causes and effects. Advanced learners will play a cause and effect board game. Struggling learners will review definitions and examples for cause and effect. |
|Then, they will look at picture examples of effects and give corresponding causes. Finally, they will look at picture examples of causes and give corresponding |
|effects. |
|Lesson Understandings: |
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|The students will know… |
|The definition of “cause” and the definition of “effect.” |
|The relationship between cause and effect. |
| |
|The students will be able to… |
|Identify causes. |
|Identify effects. |
|Generate some examples of causes and effects. |
|Learning Styles Targeted: |
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|Visual |
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|Auditory |
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|Kinesthetic/Tactile |
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|Pre-Assessment: Give each student a pre-cut Pre-assessment Slip*. Tell students that today, they are going to learn about cause and effect, but first, you are |
|going to demonstrate cause and effect. Turn the lights off in the classroom. Ask students what the room looks like now. Then, turn the lights back on, and have |
|each student write the cause and effect you just demonstrated on his/her slip. Collect the pre-assessment slips once students are finished and take note of |
|students who answered incorrectly. A possible answer for the cause includes “turning off the lights.” Possible answers for the effect include “the room getting |
|dark” and “it’s hard to see in the classroom.” |
|Whole-Class Instruction |
|Materials Needed: 1 copy of the Cause and Effect Graphic Organizer* per student, writing utensils, 1 copy of the Cause and Effect Graphic Organizer* to project, |
|document camera, 1 copy of the “Don’t Miss Your Bedtime!” Story* to project, 1 copy of the Find Your Match! Rules* to project, 1 set of pre-cut and shuffled Find |
|Your Match! Playing Cards*, 1 page of the Independent Practice* per student, 1 copy of the Independent Practice Example*, drawing and coloring supplies |
|Procedure: |
| |
|Give each student a copy of the Cause and Effect Graphic Organizer. Project a copy using a document camera. Ask students if they know what “cause and effect” |
|means. Students should say something along the lines of “when something happens and it makes something else happen.” Ask students if they know the difference |
|between cause and effect. Students should say something along the lines of cause being why something happens and effect being the result of the cause. Record |
|student definitions on the projected graphic organizer in the boxes titled, “What is it?”, and have students do the same. If students struggle, write the |
|definition of cause as “why something happens” and the definition of effect as “what happens because of a cause.” |
| |
|Ask students if they can think of examples of cause and effect in their everyday lives. Record their examples of cause and effect in the boxes titled, “Examples,” |
|and have students do the same. If students struggle, give them a few examples. Ask students what happens when students come to class late or are caught running in |
|the hallway at school. Students will probably say, “They get in trouble.” Explain to students that being late to class is the cause and getting in trouble is the |
|effect. Ask students what happens when students work hard and study for a test. Students will probably say, “They get a good grade.” Tell students that the cause |
|is working hard and studying for a test and the effect is earning a good grade. Ask students what happens when people eat too much junk food. Elicit responses from|
|students. Students should say, “They feel sick.” Ask students what the cause and effect is in this situation. Students should say the cause is eating too much junk|
|food and the effect is feeling sick. |
| |
|Tell students that there are some clue words for cause and effect. Explain that causes appear after the words “because” and “since” and that effects appear after |
|the words “therefore,” “so,” and “as a result.” Record these words in the boxes titled, “Clue Words,” and have students do the same. To prove what you just said, |
|use the examples that you and the class came up with to form sentences with these clue words. |
| |
|Tell students they are going to read a story together about cause and effect. Project the “Don’t Miss Your Bedtime!” story, and read it aloud to students. |
| |
|After you have read the story, tell students that they are going to play Find Your Match! to identify causes and effects in the story. Project the rules for the |
|game. Give each student a playing card. Explain that each card has an event from the story on it. Tell students, “Your job is to find another student with an event|
|that can be either the cause of your event or the effect of your event. Once you think you have a match, look at the story to double check your match. Even though |
|your match might make sense, that might not be what happened in the story.” Tell students that once students have found a match, they need to sit down with their |
|partner and make sure they know which event is the cause and which event is the effect. |
| |
|Have students begin on your command. |
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|Check for accuracy the cards of the students who have found a match. Keep in mind that there may be more than one possible match for an event. For example, the |
|card that says, “Finn slept through his alarm,” could match with any of the following events: |
| |
|Finn went to bed late (so Finn slept through his alarm). |
|(Since Finn slept through his alarm) Finn was thirty minutes late. |
|(Since Finn slept through his alarm) Finn missed the school bus. |
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|A match is correct as long as it makes sense and one event is the cause and the other event is the effect. |
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|There is a chance that some students will not be able to find a match from the remaining events left. If this is the case, have these students find a cause or an |
|effect for their event in the story and write it down on the back of their card. |
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|Once every student has found a match (with either an event on another student’s card or an event in the story), have each pair of students take a turn presenting |
|the pair’s cause and effect. Also, have each student who was unable to find a match with another student present his/her cause and effect. Students need to |
|identify which event is the cause and which event is the effect in their presentation. |
| |
|For continued practice, give each on-level student a page from the Independent Practice document. Explain to students that each of them has a page with an effect |
|picture on it. Their job is to identify the effect that the picture shows, write down the effect below the picture, and figure out what a good cause for that |
|effect would be. They need to write the cause in the space on the bottom left side of the worksheet and then draw a picture for the cause in the space provided. |
|Encourage students to color their pictures. Show students the Independent Practice Example for reference. |
| |
|For a closing activity, tell students they are going to practice making cause and effect sentences. Have students sit in a circle. Explain the rules of the |
|activity. You are going to give them a cause (e.g. “I didn’t do my homework.”) and then toss the ball to a student. That student needs to catch the ball and give |
|an effect for that cause (e.g., “I didn’t do my homework, so I got in trouble.”). After the student has given an effect, he/she needs to state a new cause (e.g., |
|“It is raining outside.”) and toss the ball to a different student. That student must then give an effect of the cause (e.g., “It is raining outside, so football |
|practice is cancelled.”) and state a new cause. Play the game until all students have given a cause and effect or until class time has run out. |
|Advanced Learner |
|Materials Needed: 1 Cause and Effect board game* per group of three, 1 die per group of three, 1 game piece per student (e.g., a penny, a small rock, a small toy, |
|etc.) |
|Procedure: |
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|Divide students up into groups of three. Give each group a board game and a die and each student a game piece. |
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|Tell students they are going to play a cause and effect board game. Explain the rules to the students. The oldest player goes first, and the game continues in a |
|clockwise motion. When it is the player’s turn, he/she needs to roll the die and move x number of spots. The player then needs to complete the activity determined |
|by the space landed on. If he/she lands on a picture, he/she must give a cause for the picture he/she landed on. If the player lands on a “Give an example of cause|
|and effect” space, he/she has to give an example of cause and effect. If the player’s answer makes sense, he/she can stay on the game space he/she landed on. If |
|the other players determine that the answer does not make sense, the player must return to his/her former space. Whoever finishes first, wins the game. |
|Struggling Learner |
|Materials Needed: chart paper, marker, writing utensils, students’ graphic organizers from the whole-group instruction, 1 set of pre-cut Effect Cards*, 1 set of |
|pre-cut Cause Cards* |
|Procedure: |
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|Have each student bring his/her graphic organizer from the whole-group instruction and a pen or pencil to the group. |
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|Review the definition of cause and the definition of effect with students. Have students come up with definitions of their own, and record these on chart paper. |
|Explain to students that cause is what happens before effect. |
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|Go over other examples of cause and effect. Ask students, “What happens if I say ‘thank you’ to someone?” Students should say, “The other person would say ‘you’re |
|welcome.’” Tell students that the “thank you” is the cause and the “you’re welcome” is the effect. Ask students what happens if they burn popcorn in the house. |
|Students should say, “The house smells bad,” or “The popcorn tastes gross.” Ask students what the cause and effect is in this situation. Students should say the |
|cause is “burning the popcorn” and the effect is “the house smelling bad” or “the popcorn tasting gross.” |
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|Ask students for other examples. Write their examples on chart paper and tell students to add these examples to their graphic organizers. |
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|Tell students that they are going to practice creating examples of causes and effects and that they are going to start with creating causes. |
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|Place the stack of Effect Cards face down in the center of the group. Draw a card and show it to students. Read the effect card aloud to students and nominate a |
|student to complete the sentence by giving you a cause for the effect. Accept possible answers. If a student struggles, ask him/her, “What kinds of things could |
|cause this particular picture to happen? What could have led up to this picture?” Lead students to a possible cause. Repeat this activity until all cards have been|
|used or until students demonstrate a strong grasp of the concept. |
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|Repeat the same procedure for the Cause Cards. Have students take turns completing a sentence on a card by giving you an effect for the cause. |
*see supplemental resources
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