Adapted Lesson
Adapted Lesson
Adapted Lesson
Adapted Lesson
Teresa Mature
Adapted Lesson
Creating lesson plans for a regular classroom is a tough task. The teacher needs to ensure
that the lesson is appropriate for the students learning styles and for the topic being taught. To
complicate things, lesson plans have to be adapted to meet the needs of special needs students. It
is just like the saying goes, “A teacher’s job is never done!” The following lesson plan is an
adapted lesson plan I created. I adapted the lesson to teach special needs students in sixth
least a 90 minute activity). Students will gather on • The class will work together
the floor and be read a story about Thanksgiving by with the teachers help, to
their teacher. The teacher will use this reading time create a paragraph about
as her direct instruction. Once the teacher is done what they learned. The
reading, the students will return to their seats and teacher will write the
write a paragraph (a few sentences) about what they paragraph on the board.
learned and why they plan on doing for Students will then copy the
The next day (or later in the afternoon, whatever the • Students will not present,
schedule allows), students will read their story to the since they will all be writing
Objectives:
book is
Hallinnan.
b. Ask them
questions throughout
1. Organize students
classroom.
4. Explain assignment
again
a. Students need to
- By asking them
help them
others ideas
interested.
desk.
a. While students
writing. Assist
done.
6. Assist students
INITIAL REFLECTION PAPER 7
to the
class. Students
all to hear.
paragraphs.
Assessment
The lesson I taught ran as smooth as can be expected in a special education room. The
children loved the lesson. One child was having a bad day though and acting out, so the lesson
ran much longer than expected. The lesson was definitely adapted enough to suit these students
well. Writing the paragraph as a group was the only way the paragraph would have gotten
written. The weakness was that I did not account for the distractions that occur in a special
education room, and we ran out of time for them to copy the paragraph down themselves.
The students I taught were actually in middle school. The students were between sixth
and eighth grade, but are special needs students who read at a first grade level. I worked with the
four autistic students who stay in the special education room all day. When making the
adaptations to my lesson, I had the way they learn in mind. None of them are able to write by
themselves, which is why I changed the individual writing assignment to a group writing
assignment. They create a paragraph as a group every day, so this is something they are familiar
with.
The only other adaption that the teacher recommended to me was to plan smaller lessons
and to allow more time for completion of assignments. I tried to fit a lot of things into two
periods.
INITIAL REFLECTION PAPER 9
Conclusions
To conclude, lesson plans are always works in progress. What may work for one class,
will not always work for others. In this case, what may have worked one day, did not work
another day. There is a lot to account for when planning lessons and I learned that I need to
account for possible behavioral problems. The most important part to remember when implement
lessons is that we as teachers need to be flexible and patient when things change.