Focus: Lesson
Planning
Because of the
upcoming holidays, my latest day was a bit...different. The day started out the
same; Mr. Barry called the role and announced the special day (it was W's
turn) while the students finished work they had started the day before or continued
with more challenging maths. At about 9:20, however, however, the class had to
grab their coats and line up. Aside from the foundation stage students, the
whole school (about 150 students total) walked to the church a few blocks away,
where they held a two-hour rehearsal of the Easter service happening on that
Thursday afternoon.
Two hours is a long
time for kids to sit without a break, so we anticipated at least a few
disciplinary problems over the course of the rehearsal. For the first hour or
so, they were ok. They sat quietly and paid attention, listening to their head
teacher. However, as the rehearsal progressed, the students slowly lost focus.
I was in charge of the class by this point (Mr. Barry had returned to the
school to get R, who had arrived late), so it was up to me to keep them
quiet. I had to separate a few of the chattier students after warnings, but for
the most part, they listened to me when I asked for quiet. Though I had been
particularly concerned about some of the more energetic boys, many of them
really surprised us with their good behavior. X in particular sat quietly
through the whole rehearsal, for which he earned an extra house point when Mr.
Barry was informed.
When the rehearsal
finally ended, we walked back to the school just in time for lunch. I took the
time to put together my first co-curricular lesson, supplementing their current
science unit on food chains and predator-prey relationships. The class changed
for PE quickly after they returned from lunch, and off we went to the hall.
Because it had been
so successful previously, I started with the brain dance once again in order to
establish a regular routine for them. Once they had warmed up, I narrated a
prey story followed by a predator story in order to help them embody each one.
They then paired off to create interactive predator and prey poses. To cool
down, we moved from the biggest predator down to the smallest prey, working our
way down the food chain.
After my dance
lesson, the class returned to our classroom for a brief maths lesson,
continuing what they were learning about number lines. Because they had already
started the unit, Mr. Barry assigned additional questions so that he could
assess which students fully understood the concepts and which ones needed
further explanation or additional practice.
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