- I can generate norms for effective collaboration with my expert animal group. (SL.4.1)
- I can write what I know and questions about things I would like to know about my expert group animal. (W.4.8)
These are the CCS Standards addressed in this lesson:
- W.4.7: Conduct short research projects that build knowledge through investigation of different aspects of a topic.
- W.4.8: Recall relevant information from experiences or gather relevant information from print and digital sources; take notes and categorize information, and provide a list of sources.
- SL.4.1: Engage effectively in a range of collaborative discussions (one-on-one, in groups, and teacher-led) with diverse partners on grade 4 topics and texts, building on others' ideas and expressing their own clearly.
- SL.4.1b: Follow agreed-upon rules for discussions and carry out assigned roles.
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Expert Group Norms (SL.4.1)
- KWEL charts in Expert Group Animal research notebooks (W.4.8)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
---|---|
1. Opening A. Poster Walk Review (15 minutes) B. Reviewing Performance Task and Learning Targets (10 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Revealing Expert Group Animals and Setting Purpose (10 minutes) B. Generating Group Norms (15 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Engaging the Reader: Expert Group Animal Defense Mechanisms KWEL Charts (10 minutes) 4. Homework A. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. |
Purpose of lesson and alignment to standards:
"Why do you think that?" "Because _____." "What, in the _____ (sentence/text), makes you think so?" "If you look at _____, it says _____, which means _____."
"What if _____ (that word were removed/the main character had done something different/we didn't write an introduction)? I'll give you time to think and discuss with a partner." "If we did that, then _____." "Can you figure out why _____ (the author used this phrase/we used that strategy/there's an -ly added to that word)? I'll give you time to think and discuss with a partner." "I think it's because _____."
"What strategies/habits helped you succeed? I'll give you time to think and discuss with a partner." "_____ helped me a lot." "How does our discussion add to your understanding of _____ (previously discussed topic/text/language)? I'll give you time to think and discuss with a partner." "I used to think that _____, and now I think that _____.
How it builds on previous work:
Areas where students may need additional support:
Assessment Guidance:
Down the road:
|
In Advance
- Revisit Poster Walk groupings from Unit 1, Lesson 1 and prepare posters.
- Choose expert groups, keeping in mind students' rankings on the Unit 1, Lesson 10 exit slip. Note that animals should be assigned intentionally for scaffolding purposes. The springbok gazelle works well for students who generally need extra support in reading and research tasks; the ostrich and the armadillo are appropriate for most students at this grade level; and the monarch butterfly works well for students who need a challenge.
- Prepare the Expert Group Animal research notebooks.
- Post: Performance Task anchor chart, What Do Scientists Do? anchor chart, learning targets.
Tech and Multimedia
- Opening A: Set up Poster Walk on Google Docs in a folder. Students type their thinking into the Google Doc.
- Opening A: Each of the web pages for the animals that students study in their expert groups in the rest of this unit has a slideshow option. As in Unit 1, Lesson 1, set up slideshows for each of the animals on technology around the classroom with an option for note-taking, or embed the links in a Google Doc.
- Opening A: Set up these videos with a note-taking option as part of the poster walk:
- Three-banded armadillo: 'Part 1: Three-Banded Armadillo Keeper Chat at the Houston Zoo.' Video. Houston Zoo. YouTube. 3 March, 2009. Web. 9 Apr, 2015.
- Pufferfish: 'World's Weirdest - Poisonous Pufferfish vs. Eel. Video. NatGeoWild. YouTube. 7 Nov, 2012. Web. 9 Apr, 2015.
- Work Time B: Students create group norms on a group Google Doc. They each type in their individual norms and then discuss in expert groups and revise.
- Closing and Assessment A: Expert Group Animal Defense Mechanisms KWEL chart is set up as a collaborative team document that all students in the team add to--for example, a Google Doc.
- Consider that YouTube, social media video sites, and other website links may incorporate inappropriate content via comment banks and ads. Although some lessons include these links as the most efficient means to view content in preparation for the lesson, be sure to preview links and/or use a filter service, such as Safe Share TV, for actually viewing these links in the classroom.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standards 4.I.A.1, 4.I.A.3, 4.I.A.4, 4.I.B.5
Important points in the lesson itself
- The basic design of this lesson supports ELLs with opportunities to generate group norms, thereby making explicit cultural similarities and differences that will help them succeed.
- ELLs may find the language of the group norms challenging. Ask them about the language structures in these norms through Mini Language Dives. ELLs may also need to express some norms specific to their needs--for example, norms that allow for sufficient time to think and speak.
Levels of support
For lighter support:
- Invite students to identify Conversation Cues that encourage active listening. Ask how they might routinely embed these practices into their conversations.
- Encourage students to brainstorm language that will help them elaborate on an idea in order to persuade classmates. Example: If a student wants to persuade the group to resolve conflict or disagreement first by having a few moments of silence, he or she might use phrases such as: "The benefit to being silent for a few moments is _____." "I hope you'll consider _____."
For heavier support:
- Ask ELLs to return to the first poster and restate particular sentences about what was learned. Example: "Some animals live in burrows. Some animals live in nests."
- As students continue to work in groups, remind them how to speak about general and ELL-specific group norms. Examples:
"I should listen carefully to my group mates."
"It is challenging for me to express my ideas in English. I need extra time to think of the words."
Universal Design for Learning
- Multiple Means of Representation (MMR): In this lesson, support learners with auditory processing needs by writing keywords that students use during class discussions on the board as visual cues. Re-teach affixes and roots by providing students who may need additional support with a "cheat sheet" they can use to analyze words they see in today's learning targets and in the performance task.
- Multiple Means of Action & Expression (MMAE): Recall the importance of supporting self-monitoring and executive function skills. In this lesson, facilitate student management of information and resources by allowing students to identify unknown words and record them in their vocabulary log. Also, Modify Expert Group Animal research notebooks for students who need extra support organizing written work or need directions simplified. Give students who may need additional support with writing sentence frames and/or the option to draw their ideas about group norms.
- Multiple Means of Engagement (MME): Throughout this unit, sustained engagement and effort is essential for student achievement. Some students may need support to remember the goal for the work they are doing during the unit. Recall that students who may struggle with sustained effort and concentration are supported when these reminders are built into the learning environment.
Vocabulary
Key: (L): Lesson-Specific Vocabulary; (T): Text-Specific Vocabulary; (W): Vocabulary used in writing
- collaboration, effective, norms, inform, information, informational, using my strengths, physical, habitat, defense mechanisms, predators, norms (L)
Materials
- Poster Walk posters (from Unit 1, Lesson 1)
- Directions for Poster Walk Review (one for display)
- Markers (a different color for each group)
- Equity sticks
- Performance Task anchor chart (see Unit 1, Lesson 1)
- Researchers Do These Things anchor chart (from Unit 1, Lesson 2)
- Working to Contribute to a Better World anchor chart (from Unit 1, Lesson 1; teacher-created and added to in Work Time B; see supporting materials)
- Working to Contribute to a Better World anchor chart (example, for teacher reference)
- Piece of paper (one per student and one per expert group)
- Expert Group Animal research notebooks (one per student and one to display; see Teaching Notes)
- KWEL chart (page 1 of Expert Group Animal research notebook)
- Discussion Norms anchor chart (begun in Module 1; added to with students during Closing and Assessment A)
- Discussion Norms anchor chart (example, for teacher reference)
Assessment
Each unit in the 3-5 Language Arts Curriculum has two standards-based assessments built in, one mid-unit assessment and one end of unit assessment. The module concludes with a performance task at the end of Unit 3 to synthesize their understanding of what they accomplished through supported, standards-based writing.
Opening
Opening | Meeting Students' Needs |
---|---|
A. Poster Walk Review (15 minutes)
"How did our work in Unit 1--research notebooks, informational texts, discussions about diagrams, and Science Talk--add to your understanding of animal defense mechanisms? I'll give you time to think and discuss with a partner." (Responses will vary.)
|
|
B. Reviewing Performance Task and Learning Targets (10 minutes)
"What is collaboration?" (Collaboration is working with others.)
"What does effective mean? So what is effective collaboration?" (Effective means successful in achieving the desired outcome, and effective collaboration is successful collaboration that results in achieving the desired outcome.)
"So knowing what the rest of the learning target means now, what do you think norms might be?" (Norms are a list of rules that will guide them in how to interact with one another as they work in their expert animal groups.)
"An informational page with a physical description of your animal, its habitat, its defense mechanisms, and predators"
"What word(s) do you recognize in the word informational that may help you understand what this word means?" (Identify the words inform and information and what they mean: Inform means to give facts or information; information means facts provided or learned about something).
"So you know what inform and information mean, but what do you think informational writing might be?" (Informational writing is writing that provides information or an explanation.)
"So, based on the anchor chart, what kind of information will we be looking for during our research?" (We need to find information about what the animal looks like, where it lives, and how it defends itself.) |
"What does collaboration mean when you work in your expert animal group?"
|
Work Time
Work Time | Meeting Students' Needs |
---|---|
A. Revealing Expert Group Animals and Setting Purpose (10 minutes)
"What things did we do on this list when researching general animal defense mechanisms and the defense mechanisms of the millipede in Unit 1?" (We researched the question "How do animals' bodies and behaviors help them survive?" or We researched by reading different informational texts about animal defense mechanisms and gathered notes in our research notebooks, or We participated in Science Talks.)
"How did engaging in these activities help us learn more about animal defense mechanisms?" (When we researched, we were able to learn about different examples of defense mechanisms that animals use, or Science Talks helped us to talk about what we learned with others and helped us understand things that might have been confusing to us.)
|
|
B. Generating Group Norms (15 minutes)
"What does using your strengths look like? What might you see when someone is using his or her strengths?" (see Working to Contribute to a Better World anchor chart (example, for teacher reference)).
|
|
Closing & Assessments
Closing | Meeting Students' Needs |
---|---|
A. Engaging the Reader: Expert Group Animal Defense Mechanisms KWEL Charts (10 minutes)
"What does your expert group animal look like?" "Where is its habitat?" "What are its predators?" "How does it use its body and behaviors to help it survive?"
"What if _____?" "I wonder why _____."
|
|
Homework
Homework | Meeting Students' Needs |
---|---|
A. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. |
|
Copyright © 2013-2024 by EL Education, New York, NY.