Technologylessonplan
Technologylessonplan
Learner Analysis
General Characteristics:
Fixed Characteristics:
Gender: The gender population in my class is about equal as I have nine boys and
seven girls.
Race: My urban school has a very diverse student body which is represented in the
range of races present in my class.
Caucasian: 30% (5 students)
African American: 31% (5 students)
Hispanic: 21% (3 students)
Asian: 5% (1 student)
Multiracial: 13% (2 students)
Ethnicity: Some of my students have recently immigrated to the U.S. thus three of
them are from Mexico, one is from the Dominican Republic, one is from Ethiopia, one
Variable Characteristics:
Age: My students are primarily 10 and 11 years old, but two students are 12 years old.
Attitudes:
Motivation to consistently work hard in the classroom is low for many of the
students as success in school isnt seen as a priority at home.
Some of the immigrant students are more motivated than their peers as they
place a higher value on education and the possibilities it will give them in the
future.
Some of the African American children are particularly unwelcoming to the two
students from Rwanda and Ethiopia and view them as dirty Africans.
Interests:
Most of the students are particularly interested in sports. Many of the boys love
soccer, football, and basketball. The girls also enjoy soccer and basketball.
A few students are very avid readers and thus are frequently asking for more
books to read.
Students enjoy being outdoors as many of them meet at a local park to hang out.
Many of the students are very intrigued by technology in the classroom and
love using computers and handheld devices, particularly students who dont
have much technology at home and students who have recently moved to the
U.S.
List populations that may need special attention:
When Acquired
response to a poll.
Learning Traits:
Often students at this age want to socialize with their peers, thus by working in groups
learners will be more motivated to conduct the experiment, discuss experiment
findings, and then share their EduCreation video with others.
Fifth graders often learn best through experience, thus they will be conducting their
own experiment first and reflecting upon it through the creation of their graph in order
to discover the fact that an object weighs the same even when it changes states.
Students at this age are also capable of considering multiple possibilities when thinking
through a problem which will allow them to formulate a hypothesis about what they
think will happen to the weight of the object before conducting the experiment.
Students will also be able to use deductive reasoning to think through their results and
draw a conclusion based on the data from their experiment.
5-PS1-2. Measure and graph quantities to provide evidence that regardless of the type of
change that occurs when heating, cooling, or mixing substances, the total weight of matter is
conserved. - Next Generation Science Standards
Technology Standard:
Computational Thinker: Students collect data or identify relevant data sets, use digital tools
to analyze them, and represent data in various ways to facilitate problem-solving and
decision-making. - ISTE Standards 2016
Behavioral Objectives:
Objective
1. Given a scale and an item in a plastic cup,
Standard(s) Addressed
Assessment Plan
Objective
For my students with auditory and language processing disorders, I will have Natural
Reader pulled up on their computers when they go to the computer lab. Students will
be able to copy and paste text from the online graphing program or from Kidblog into
Natural Reader so that the information can be read to them. Students can slow down
the pace at which Natural Reader reads the information and replay it as often as need
be.
These students not only struggle to understand language, but they also struggle with
verbally expressing themselves. In order to support them when making their
Educreation videos, I will encourage them to upload additional pictures to the video to
help them express what the graphs show. They can also draw on their pictures and
graphs to portray meaning and lessen the amount of talking they need to do during the
video.
I also have a student who struggles with dysgraphia and has a hard time writing. I
intentionally accommodated for this disability by having students create a graph online
and verbally express their experiment findings in a video. These assessments will
allow this student to demonstrate his learning without having to do any writing.
As I have students from various different backgrounds who speak various different
languages, I also intentionally used visuals and graphs as the method of assessment as
numbers and pictures can transcend language barriers. I will challenge students to
record their Educreation video in English, but if they feel unable to express themselves
in English I will allow them to record in their native language. I would then find a
means to translate the video.
Strategies
How are you/media presenting content to the student?
Description
Obj.
Technology
Used
iPads,
Padlet,
Wordle,
computer,
projector
computer,
projector,
Interactivate
graphing
website
2, 3
Kidblog,
computer,
iPads
At the beginning of the experiment, each group will receive a plastic cup to put the item
they will be experimenting with in. Before students are given their item to weigh, they will
first have to correctly weigh the plastic cup by itself. This will assess whether students
understand how to correctly weigh an item on the scale provided. In order to come to a
class conclusion of an accurate weight for the cup, each group will weigh the cup and then
submit the weight via a survey on Poll Everywhere using an iPad. The poll will be
projected for the class to see. Based on the results each group gets, students will determine
if a weight can be agreed upon or if the cups need to be weighed again. If every group is
within one gram of the agreed upon weight, the class can continue on with the experiment.
Before conducting the experiment, students will be able to hypothesize what they think will
happen in the experiment by responding to the science question of the day on Padlet. I
will then put all the responses on Padlet into a Wordle for the students to view. By
projecting the Wordle for the class to see, the students and I will be able to quickly see the
concepts and words that stood out as most prevalent in students thinking. At the end of the
lesson, students will be prompted to respond to the same question and their answers will be
pasted into another Wordle. I will project both Wordles side by side so that the students
and I can easily witness the growth of their learning. These two Wordles will prompt a
class discussion about what students learned during the experiment.
Obj.
Technology
Used
iPads,
projector,
computer,
Padlet
Poll
Everywhere,
iPads,
projector,
computer
Interactivate
graphing
website,
computer
Kidblog,
computer
Students will be
discussing the final
graphs posted by their
peers on Kidblog. They
will be in new groups of
four; with one student
from each of the four
different experiments.
Each student will
explain the results their
2, 3
iPad, Kidblog
I will be able to check students understanding prior to starting the experiment by quickly
assessing the responses students send to the science question of the day on Padlet. By
viewing these responses I will be able to get a clearer idea of students existing knowledge
on the subject matter. This information will help me know what concepts I will be able to
explain using students prior knowledge and what concepts I will need to scaffold
foundational information before jumping into. By asking the same question at the end of
the lesson I will also be able to formatively assess students growth and what they learned
during the lesson.
I will send constructive and formative feedback to students about their graphs via Kidblog.
Kidblog allows me to send feedback privately so students can take my feedback to modify
their graph if necessary and then repost their graph publicly for the rest of the class to see.
This formative assessment allows me to ensure that students are sharing accurate graphs
with peers. It also gives students a feeling of confidence in their work prior to posting
their graphs for their classmates to see.
Obj.
Technology
Used
Interactivate
graphing
website,
computer,
Kidblog
will be graded as a
summative assessment.
iPad,
Educreations,
Kidblog
Accommodations/Modifications:
I have some students that have documented disabilities. In order to accommodate for
these learners, I will implement the modifications below throughout the lesson.
For my students with auditory and language processing disorders, I will have Natural
Reader pulled up on their computers when they got to the computer lab. Students will
be able to copy and paste text from the online graphing program or from Kidblog into
Natural Reader so that the information can be read to them. Students can slow down
the pace at which Natural Reader reads the information and replay it as often as need
be.
These students not only struggle to understand language, but they also struggle with
verbally expressing themselves. In order to support them when making their
Educreations videos, I will encourage them to upload additional pictures to the video to
help them express what the graphs show. They can also draw on their pictures and
graphs to portray meaning and lessen the amount of talking they need to do during the
video.
I also have a student who struggles with dysgraphia and has a hard time writing. I
intentionally accommodated for this disability by having students create a graph online
and verbally express their experiment findings in a video. These assessments will
allow this student to demonstrate his learning without having to do any writing.
As I have students from various different backgrounds who speak various different
languages, I also intentionally used visuals and graphs as the method of assessment as
numbers and pictures can transcend language barriers. I will challenge students to
record their Educreations video in English, but if they feel unable to express themselves
in English, I will allow them to record in their native language. I would then find a
means to translate the video.
Timeline
Day 1
The teacher introduces the science question of the day on Padlet. The
question is What do you think happens to an objects weight when it changes
to a different state of matter?
Students individually respond to the Padlet on iPads.
The teacher uses the Padlet responses to create a Wordle to present to the class.
The teacher and the students note the most prevalent thoughts.
The teacher explains the experiment to the students, divides them into groups,
and assigns each group an object to experiment with (water, butter, ice cream,
or chocolate).
The teacher passes out scales, science notebooks, and plastic cups to each
Day 2
group.
Students weigh the plastic cup as a formative assessment to make sure they can
accurately use the scale. One member from each group enters the weight of cup
into a Poll Everywhere survey using an iPad. The survey is projected for the
class to see. The class needs to come to a consensus on the cups weight.
Every group needs to be within 1 gram of the agreed upon weight. If this does
not happen, groups need to reweigh the cup until a consensus weight is reached.
The teacher then passes out objects to each group to begin the experiment.
Each group weighs their object in its solid form in the plastic cup, subtracting
the weight of the plastic cup from the total weight on the scale to get the weight
of the object itself. One member from each group then enters their
measurement and the object name into the starting solid weight Poll
Everywhere survey using the iPad. The teacher watches the poll on the
projector wall and when a group submits a weight the teacher either gives them
a thumbs up to move on or a thumbs down to reweigh their object because their
measurement is too far off. Each group member must also write down the state
of the object and its weight in their science notebook for their own reference.
The teacher then allows students to take turns microwaving their objects.
Students reweigh their object and enter the new measurement into the liquid
weight Poll Everywhere survey and wait for the teachers thumbs up or thumbs
down. Group members also write down this new state and weight in their
science notebooks for reference.
Each group then ends the day by putting their object in the freezer.
Groups take out their objects in the freezer to weigh them. After weighing,
each group needs to enter their last weight and object name into the frozen
solid weight Poll Everywhere survey, get the teachers approval, and then write
it down in their science notebook.
After students have collected their experiment data in their science notebooks,
the experiment is over and the teacher will move into helping students
synthesize their results. To do this, the teacher will introduce how to graph the
data using an online graphing program.
The teacher will pull up the Interactivate graphing website on the computer and
project it for the class to see. She will go through each feature of the website,
demonstrating how each feature affects the graph and modeling how to properly
operate the program and create a graph.
The teacher will then lead students down to the computer lab so that students
can get on the Interactivate graphing website and create their own graphs using
the data from their experiment.
When students are finished creating their graphs, they can post them privately
to the class science journal in Kidblog so that only the teacher can see them.
The teacher will send feedback privately to each student via Kidblog about how
they can improve their first graph.
Day 3
The teacher will allow students time to modify their graphs based on the
feedback provided to them. When students are finished changing their graphs,
they will post their final graphs publicly in the class science journal on Kidblog
for everyone to see.
As students post their final graphs to Kidblog, they can look over their peers
graphs to see how other experiments turned out.
When everyone has posted their final graph to Kidblog, students will return to
the classroom to form new groups for discussion. The teacher will put students
into groups of four and every group will have one person from each experiment
group.
Each group will receive an iPad that they will use to pull up the graphs on
Kidblog. Each member will then present their graph and experiment findings to
the rest of the group. Each group will then work to draw conclusions from all
the data that was presented to decide what happens to an objects weight when
it undergoes a change in matter.
Day 4
After group discussion, each student will get an iPad to create an Educreations
video. The video will be an explanation of how the graphs support their
experiment findings. Students will save at least two graphs from Kidblog to
upload and use in their Educreations video as evidence for their findings.
These videos will be shared on Kidblog and with students parents during
conferences.
To wrap up the lesson, the teacher will have students once again respond to the
science question of the day on Padlet using iPads. She will copy and paste
the responses into Wordle and then display the Wordle made at the beginning of
the lesson next to the one just made. Students will be able to see the growth of
their understanding and have a discussion about what they learned from the
lesson.
Resources
Links to Online Resources Used in Lesson:
Padlet: https://padlet.com/gipek/7lo4vbvitti8
Wordle: http://www.wordle.net/create
Poll Everywhere: https://www.polleverywhere.com/
Science Journal Kidblog: http://kidblog.org/home/
Online Graphing Tool: http://www.shodor.org/interactivate/activities/BarGraph/
Educreations Video: https://www.educreations.com/
Links to other Google Docs for Grading Rubrics:
Summative Assessments
Bar Graph Rubric: http://tinyurl.com/hplvy8w
Educreations Video Rubric: http://tinyurl.com/honwqfu