The purpose of today’s planning session was to meet with
mentor teachers and discuss lesson plans for our upcoming teach. It was in a relatively relaxed environment,
which created a great setting for students and teachers to voice their ideas
and concerns regarding lesson drafts.
The actual event was set to occur from 6-8PM, but the room
(SZB 312) was opened early for groups to get a head start. It was required that every group bring some
form of rough draft of their legacy cycle.
Dr. Petrosino was relaxed in how we presented our rough draft; word
documents, Google docs, and notes on notebook paper were all acceptable forms
of a rough draft. We primarily needed to
have written evidence of an outline for our legacy cycle, proof that we had a
basic structure; simply explaining lesson ideas to your mentor teacher without
any documentation was not acceptable.
There was no required structure of the lesson draft, contrary to the
norm for 5E lesson plan drafts.
At approximately 6PM, when most students and teachers had
arrived, dinner was served. The provided
meal helped contribute to the relaxed atmosphere; there were several types of
pizza, salad, cookies and brownies, and various sodas. Some groups took their meals upstairs to a
vacant room on the fifth floor for a quieter working environment due to the
congestion of the room. After about 20
minutes, every group had finished dining and was hard at work.
As mentioned earlier, groups needed to create an outline of
their lesson prior to the evening planning session. Groups have had several collaboration periods
during class, and many made significant progress on their legacy cycles during
the field trip to McKinney Falls on the 26th. Meeting with mentor teachers during the
evening planning session served as a time to review the progress made between
the field trip and our most recent class period. A large portion of the discussion revolved
around smaller lesson details, such as supplies, trouble shooting, and the
order of activities.
Personally, my fellow group members discussed worst case
scenarios with our mentor teacher. We
predicted a maximum and minimum number of student attendees for each class to
allow us to better predict the amount of supplies we would need and how groups
would be formed for the lesson challenges.
We made an extensive list of all the needed supplies; it contained
approximately fifteen items. Within
those needed items we determined which would be easily accessible through the
UTeach supply room and which our mentor teacher could supply (such as scissors
and sidewalk chalk). We plan to use
Labquests in our challenge, so we planned how many we would potentially need
and what we would do if we didn’t have access to them and/or they ran out of
batteries. The solution to this issue
was to collect GPS coordinates beforehand (we are using the Labquests for GPS
purposes) or use a simple GPS app on a smart phone.
Another significant issue we discussed with our mentor
teacher was how weather conditions would affect our activities. One of our activities involves measuring the
height of an object by looking at its shadow.
We visited McKinney Falls in the morning on our field trip, and we came
to realize that shadows would likely be in a different location in the
afternoon, when we are planning to teach.
We thought of an alternative was to present the activity so it was not
reliant on shadows; after all, even if we were teaching in the morning, there
is always a chance it will be a cloudy day.
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