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Lesson Plan Name Grades
Creating Authors With Technology! 2 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
With this lesson, students should be able to look at a classmates projected writing (via a HoverCam Document Camera) and give aapropriate feedback. The student author will get a notated printout with suggestions for improving writing.
"A Picture Is Worth A Million Words" 7 to 8
(0 stars, 4 ratings)
This project is a photography, poetry, and bookmaking unit utilizing three artists-in-residence who teach photography, poetry, and bookmaking.
"I Have a Dream" Podcasts K to 12
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students will watch Martin Luther King Jr's, "I Have a Dream" speech, then write their own speech about their own dreams. The speeches will recorded and turned into podcasts.
21st Century Book Club 1 to 5
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students will create their own Podcast book reports to get others excited about reading.
All About Books 1 to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
In our Non-fiction Writing Workshop unit, students research and study an animal using technology in order to write an "All About" book. They must find out where the animal lives (type of environment), what it eats, what it looks like, and other additional interesting facts about their animal.
Animal Research Paragraph 2 to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Animal Research Paragraph-Students will need to research animals and gather facts from various sources.
At the Top of Mississippi: Southaven 6 to 8
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Project – At the Top of Mississippi: Southaven Students will report and record personal events, people and places that are important to them in their daily lives. They will then, with their classmates, combine their efforts and produce a DVD that will be presented to the City of Southaven and the Southaven Chamber of Commerce to give to families that are interested in relocating to our city. This will promote Southaven in a positive manner through the eyes of our youth.
Collaborative Wriitng and Debating 4 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Through discussion, students will formulate opinions and defend their own positions in writing
Collaborative Writing in 4th Grade 4 to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This lesson incorporates writing, listening and speaking skills in order to have each group of studnets produce a piece of publishable narrative writing.
Creating a Realistic Fiction Story Using Google Classroom 7 to 8
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students create a Realistic Fiction Story on Google Classroom. As they are live typing I can give instant feedback to assist in the paper being the best that it can be.
Digital Biography Project for African American History 3 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will answer questions on an important person during African American History month. They will type, voice record, and upload photographs/drawings to create a biographical digital story about their person.
Digital Dreams 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This lesson connects students' experiences with short stories, poems, speeches and newspaper articles in a thematic unit on "Dreams." Students take images that best reflect the pieces read as well as take photos for pieces of writing students create.
Digital Literacy 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Plan designed to improve reading comprehension and writing skills for high school english students through script writing and film adaptation.
Fairytale tale rewrite video presentations 6 to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
The students have rewritten fairytales and made them more modern. They will be video taped and students will also create a power point presentation involoving the video and pictures taken during the project.
FlipVideo Poetry: Teaching Narrative Poems Through Community Service Learning 7 to 8
(0 stars, 3 ratings)
In order to promote literacy as part of our district improvement plan, 7th grade students will work in pairs to draft, write and illustrate a narrative poem to be presented on National Read Across America Day to primary school students as part of a 'Seussical". Performances will be videotaped so that teachers can show the presentations over and over to varied classes for instructional purposes.
If Hornets Could Talk... 5 to 5
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
As a teacher, I find myself constantly challenged to integrate the state and parish standards, grade level expectations, ILEAP test preparation, and multi-disciplinary lessons, at the same time keeping my students engaged, excited, and learning. At times I find the students either bored or discouraged with basic assignments, in particular reading, writing, and researching. I find that no matter how important the components being taught, without a “catch” or “hook,” the students view the assignments as redundant and see no connection with real life. I’ve found a “hook!”
Introducing Each Other 7 to 7
This is a 7th grade English project. My students will conduct interviews, take photos, and do research on the internet.
Meeting a Real World Need: Textbooks 2 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This lesson focuses on students using technology to solve a need in the classroom. Students will seek to gain funding for a classroom library.
Penguin Pals 1 to 3
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Utilizing a cross curricular theme based lesson, this multi-sensory approach will allow my second grade struggling readers to experience activities in reading,writing,speaking,listening,science,technology, and integrated art.
Perspectives on a Shoe 4 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will photograph a shoe in various locations and then take the photo(s) to create a short story or poem from the perspective of their shoe
Picture Books: A School-Wide Genre Exploration K to 6
English Language Students from a low-income neighborhood will have the opportunity to access technology by learning how to use digital cameras in a self-directed genre study. Students will synthesize the knowledge they gained from their project, and then proceed to teach other students how to create their own picture book focusing on a genre of their choice. The books will then be available for check out at the school library.
Pod Review 3 to 3
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students from the gifted and talented class will create pod casts to review science concepts and vocabulary. These pod casts will be shared with ELL students and other science learners.
Restoring Memories and Planning Autobiography 4 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This plan utilizes Google Maps for autobiography writing in response to the mentor text Knots in my Yo-Yo String” by Jerry Spinelli.
Save Trees, Use the Mini to Complete Our Assignment! 2 to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will learn that by using technology in the classroom, they will be saving trees from destruction to create our textbooks and workbooks and how we can stop filling our landfills with mounds of paper. With our reading program online, students will have access to the program and will be able to complete assignments directed by the teacher and have immediate feedback on their performance.
Song Creation: Of Mice and Men vs. The Greatest Game Ever Played 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
After reading Of Mice and Men and watching The Greatest Game Ever Played, compare and contrast George Milton and Francis Ouimet and Lennie Small and Eddie Lowery in a song to be written and recorded.
Speaking Our Truths: Podcasts as Relevant Research 10 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students are creating informational podcasts as an alternative to a traditional research project. Students will be able to show mastery of the skills required to do a traditional research paper but in a way that is relevant to their lives.
Stop Motion Animation with Photographs 5 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Have students move objects in a scene and take a series of photographs that create the illusion of movement of said objects. The students will then put the photos in a video editing program to make a short video of their characters in action.
Student Published Books 5 to 5
Over a period of 4 weeks, students will organize, write, revise, edit and publish 4 chapters of a fictional story.
Studio Photography 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This project involves shooting long exposure photography in the school portrait lighting studio.
Techno Lit 3 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This lessons includes a variety of technology to publish expository texts so they can be viewed on iPod touches and iPads.
The Effects of Chemical and Physical Weathering on Gravestones 5 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will visit the historical Magnolia Cemetery located in Augusta, Georgia to record digital pictures of the effects of weathering and erosion on gravestones.Students will take pictures and, using previously learned chemical and physical weathering concepts learning in class and recorded in their science journals, create a Prezi or a Glogster media presentation.
Use of technology to write and edit a composition in Literacy. K to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
The student will demonstrate the skill to use to technology to write properly compositions using good grammar.
Webquest - Westward Ho! 3 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Work as a group to investigate life on the trail using various resources and Internet links. As a result of the research, students will write an article.
Wishing for Wells 2 to 2
Students of all ability levels will learn about the water crisis in Africa. They will use iPads to conduct research, make PSAs to broadcast on the morning announcements, and complete other technology-infused projects to raise awareness (such as an interactive QR code exhibit about a region in Africa). The unit will culminate in a fundraiser to try to fund the construction of a well in Africa.
Writing Classroom Agreements using Inspiration & Word to Go 3 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
At the beginning of the year, the class will create a "Classroom Constitution" using Inspiration software and, as an option for classrooms w/ Palm Pilots, Word to Go. Students will brainstorm as a class a list of behaviors that they think will help the classroom environment be conducive to learning & to show how they can become better citizens in their class.
Written in Bones 6 to 8
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students will read literary and informational texts about the stories of our past to understand how different texts offer unique historical perspectives and how authors sometimes alter details of history to serve a purpose. Students will express their understanding by corroborating details of the past, deciphering an author’s purpose, and writing their own fictionalized version of a historical account.
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