TEACHER:
LEARNING FOCUSED SCHOOLS
LESSON PLAN GUIDE
|TEACHER: |LESSON TITLE: |
| |The Important Book Story Writing Project |
|Brumfield | |
|UNIT: Creating an informational piece using a web to brainstorm and |LESSON DATE: |
|4-Square Graph to organize | |
|SUBJECT: | |
| | |
|Process Writing | |
Standards:
Focus 1.4.5.A, B, 1.4.5.C, 1.5.5.A, E., Organization: 1.4.5.A, B, C, 1.5.5.C, E.
Style: 1.4.5.A, B, C, 1.5.5.D., E Content: 1.4.5.A, B, C, 1.5.5. B, E
Informational: 1.4.5.B, 1.5.5.A, B, C, D, E, G. Grammar: 1.5.5.F
|Key Learning: Effective writers use specific techniques to communicate or express their ideas and feelings in an organized and focused |
|way. |
| |
|Unit Essential Question: How can we write quality writing piece that conveys a clear message to our audience? |
| |
|Lesson Essential Question(s): |
| |
|How do I gather, select, and organize the most effective information appropriate for the topic, task, and audience? |
|How do effective writers develop substantial, specific, and illustrative content? |
|How do I engage and influence my audience in a compelling way? |
|How do we choose and arrange words and/or sentence structure to create tone and voice? |
|How can I identify correct grammar? How does correct punctuation and spelling impact one’s writing? |
|Activating Strategy: (see Appendix A for examples) |
| |
|Read aloud: The Important Book. Have students identify observed text patterns and discuss text format of the paragraphs. Discuss having a|
|topic sentence, supporting details, and conclusion sentence, and use the hamburger graphic organizer to show the parts of a nonfiction |
|paragraph. |
|Teaching Strategies: (See Appendix B) |
|Lesson 1 Essential Question: How do I select/choose a topic for my writing piece? (Use a brainstorming web). |
|1. Explain the task (students will write an informational piece with a hook, three supporting paragraphs of information, and a |
|conclusion that explains their most important characteristic. The three body paragraphs each contain a topic sentence, supporting |
|details, and conclusion sentence. |
|2. Conduct Think aloud and teacher demonstration of brainstorming and listing topic ideas using the Smart board, overhead, or board |
|(positive traits, strengths, or interests). (See example). Students will list 10 topic ideas of things they are good at doing, or |
|positive traits they possess. Conduct conferences of lists. |
|2. Conduct a Think aloud as the teacher demonstrates on the Smart Board using a web (after narrowing the topic to one choice) and |
|brainstorm the chosen final topic. Discuss that the topic needs to be meaningful to them and have substantial content to develop the |
|topic. Model how interesting words and ideas can also be added to their webs as they think about them. Students will create a web of the|
|chosen strong topic. Scaffold and conference with students while they are creating webs. |
| |
|Then read and discuss the teacher’s example story and discuss its components. |
| |
|Lesson 2 Essential Question: How do I engage and influence my audience in a compelling way? How do we choose and arrange words and/or |
|sentence structure to create tone and voice? |
|5. Review the Hooks Lesson Slideshow using the Smart Board (previously shown in a lesson). Then Demonstrate (overhead/board/Smart board)|
|how to create a hook for the writing piece teaching them not to give away all their information in the hook. Have students create a hook|
|for their introduction and write it in the middle of the 4-Square. Scaffold and conference with students while they are creating hooks. |
| |
| |
|Lesson 3 Essential Question: How do I select and organize the most effective information appropriate for the topic, task, and audience? |
|(Use a 4-Square graph) |
| |
|6. Conduct a Think aloud and demonstration of completion of a 4-Square graph using the Smart board. Stress the need for a topic |
|sentence, categories and supporting details, and a conclusion sentence. Compare to the building of a hamburger. Scaffold and conference |
|with student creations of the 4-Square graphic organizer. Encourage them to write categories which can then be turned into topic |
|sentences. |
|5. Discuss the genre of autobiography/nonfiction and ask pairs to Turn and Tell to discuss the audience. Demonstrate how this genre for |
|this task requires factual information but the use of humor, adjectives, and vivid verbs are acceptable. Give a non-example by explaining|
|a trait in strict factual form as opposed to using humor, adjectives, and vivid verbs. |
|. |
| |
|Lesson 4 Essential Question: How do I write a paragraph that has a topic sentence and supporting details? |
| |
|5. Show the hamburger visual and use the Smart Board to demonstrate how to convert notes on the 4-Square graph to rough draft paragraphs|
|containing a topic sentence, supporting details, and a conclusion sentence. |
|6. Scaffold and conference during student conversions of 4-Square graphs to paragraphs. |
| |
|Lesson 5 Essential Question: How can I make revisions so my word choice achieves my writing? How do we choose and arrange words and/or |
|sentence structure to create tone and voice? |
|7. Demonstrate how to improve the paragraph by adding descriptive adjectives and adverbs and changing verbs to vivid verbs. Read |
|examples of paragraphs in novels that are interesting and compelling. |
|8. Scaffold and conference student improvements to paragraphs. |
| |
|Lesson 6 Essential Question: How do effective writers develop substantial, specific, and illustrative content? How do we choose and |
|arrange words and/or sentence structure to create tone and voice? |
| |
|9. Using the Smart Board, the teacher will demonstrate how to create a conclusion paragraph that reflects the author’s voice and tone and|
|integrates the topic sentence and three main points of their story without being dull. |
|10. Have pairs find interesting story endings using novels and share whole class what interests them about the passage. |
|11. Students will create the final conclusion paragraph to the story which integrates the topic sentence and three main points of their |
|story. |
|12. Scaffold and conference with students about the final paragraph as they are written. |
| |
|Lesson 8 Essential Question: How does correct punctuation and spelling impact one’s writing? How do I edit my writing for correct |
|grammar? |
|12. Use poster on Smart Board to review editing symbols. |
|13. Use interactive site to make editing corrections. |
|14. Teacher model partner editing for punctuation and spelling errors. |
|15. Paired Heads edit each other’s work using a red pen. |
|16. Teacher conferences with students about editing. |
|17. Students rewrite the final draft of the story using the computer, have them spell-check and add a graphic. |
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|Graphic Organizer/Foldable being used: Web & 4-Square graphs |
|Distributed Guided Practice/Summarizing Questions for Pairs: |
| |
|See above. |
| |
| |
|Higher level question/s being used: Enrichment: How do you create a more exciting hook and topic sentence? |
|Summarize (culminating): (See Appendix C) |
|The Important Thing: |
| |
|Ask students to write one sentence that best summarizes what they consider to be the most important information from the lesson. |
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