This year I am at Cedar Ridge
Elementary School/Brigham Early Learning Center. I am placed in a lively
kindergarten classroom of 27, which I love very much, with a cooperating
teacher who is very similar to me in teaching style and personality. I have
taken over a few aspects of the classroom, one of these being a guided reading
group every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. When I did my science guided reading
lesson, I was working with the higher reading group, which consists of six
students.
I gave my science guided reading
lesson over two days, I had about fifteen minutes to a half hour each, on
October 27 and 29. My teacher thought this would be the best time for me to
give my lesson. She also thought it would be a good idea for me to incorporate
this science information into my guided reading group. For this lesson, I did not use a lesson plan
template that I would normally use for class, instead I used a weekly guided
reading lesson plan template that my cooperating teacher uses. I thought this
template would be the best template for the lesson that I was giving. Even
looking back on the lesson now, I think this template was the best for me to
use and it helped me stay on track for the week. This lesson also included
other things I would be doing with the students, such as working on sight
words. It is very important that the students, even though they are the higher
reading group, continue to practice their sight words. We did this in a fun,
engaging way for them. These words, among others, of course, helped them read
this book.
During my lesson, the students read
the book “How Plants Grow” and we talked about some of the vocabulary words
that were in the book, such as seeds, soil, and sunlight. Before they read the
book we went on a picture walk, and looked at all of the pictures in the book.
We looked at the words that might be hard for them to read, and went over them
together. After they read the book, the students filled out a 3-2-1 worksheet,
where they wrote down three things they learned while reading, two interesting
facts, and one question they still had. Some of the students were able to
finish the worksheet in the allotted time, but there were a few who struggled
with the book a little bit and did not have time to finish the worksheet. There
was one girl especially who struggled with the book, so I had to give her more
attention to her than I did to the other students. The other students did
pretty well with the book though, and I think the pictures definitely helped
them get through it. She also used different reading strategies to help her
decode the words she did not understand.
Throughout the lesson, the students
were engaged with the book, as well as the worksheet. They all seemed to enjoy
the book and were really getting into the lesson. I think there were some
aspects of the lesson that went very well, but there are definitely some things
that I could have done better, that I could improve upon. At the beginning of
the lesson, I could have given clearer instructions to the students. I think some
of the students were a little confused with the worksheet, and so I was
attending to the different students as they finished reading their story. It
was difficult to attend to each student who was confused with the worksheet,
because I was still helping the one girl finish reading the story. There was
quite a bit going on, so it got a little overwhelming for a few minutes in the
middle of the lesson. If I would have given better instructions at the
beginning of the lesson this would have cleared up their confusion. If you look
at the worksheets that I handed in, you can see that on one of my students started
to draw on the back because he was unsure of what he was supposed to do in each
section of the worksheet. If I would have explained this better beforehand, this
would not have happened, and he would have had more time to work on this
activity. This was only a little bump in the lesson though, and the rest went
smoothly.
I’m glad that the students enjoyed
reading the book. They all seemed to find the information presented to them
very interesting. In the book, they talked about the different places where
plants can grow. These places included the ocean, the dessert, in sand, on
rocks, and other various places. The students thought it was so cool that
plants can live in such unique and harsh environments. One student even asked a
very insightful question on her 3-2-1 worksheet. She asked “Why do plants need
sunlight to grow?” I wish I had seen this question before I finished the lesson
so I could tell her the answer and clear up and confusion for her. I also wish
that I had provided more opportunities for the students in my group to ask
questions about plants, so that I could answer them for them.
Because we only did this lesson
during station time, it ran over two days. It was kind of nice that we did it
this way, so that I had more time to teach this idea to the students. I think
if I had more time though, I would have made a diagram of the plant where they
could label the different parts of the plant, like they did in the book. This
would have given them a very nice visual for the students. Overall, I think the
lesson went over well, and the students all seemed to enjoy the lesson and the
science behind it all. I would like to incorporate science into the classroom
more, because of the way the students all reacted to it.
EXCEEDS: I turned in the students’
worksheets that they filled out.
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