Step 1: Creating a title for your lesson
Name your lesson. What is the overall goal of your lesson? Make your lesson
title describe the purpose of the lesson.
Be obvious and use words such as How to, or Learning, Understanding, or visualizing.
Your learner should understand the overall goal of your lesson from reading its title.
Step 2: Target what the learner should visualize, draw or sketch
Identify the outcome of the lesson. Ask yourself, what should a learner know or visualize
after they experience the lesson? Write one to four “TLW” statements.
Altogether these statements work towards accomplishing the goal of the lesson,
which you have identified in its title.
Step 3: Chunk, sequence, and scaffold critical information
Organize the sequence of the lesson elements.
This is the step where you structure information to make sense to the learner.
You use sequencing strategies (from easy to complex or known to unknown)to
communicate as logically as possible with the learner. Scaffold the information
by considering selection, organization and integration strategies.
Step 4: Select the interaction strategies and intervention formats
Identify the type of interaction(s) you want to take place while the learner participates
in the lesson. Think of presentation-practice pairings.
Step 5: Identify assessment criteria to evaluate the learner (and your work)
write at least one way to assess its achievement. Identify criteria for achievement and make
sure it fits with the behavior desired and the condition/catalyst used.
Matching B, C, and D elements of the objective may take some writing, deleting, and rewriting.
Go back and forth until you have workable criteria.
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