Scool Counseling Lesson Plan
Scool Counseling Lesson Plan
Scool Counseling Lesson Plan
Lesson Activities:
Learning Objective(s): (include Audience, expected Behavior, Conditions, and Degree of
expected performance)
Students will understanding self as an individual and as a member of a diverse local and
global communities. Identify individual strengths and areas for personal growth and good
citizenship. Make decisions and act as responsible members of society while identifying and
applying practices that preserve and enhance the safety and health of self and others.
Anticipatory Set: Hook the class on your topic with a brief activity or demonstration that
illustrates the concept you are teaching, and activates prior knowledge by helping students
relate the topic to things they already know. Examples might include summarizing the main
points of the previous lesson in the unit, a picture, a cartoon, a story, an analogy, modeling,
visualization, a role-play, a fun quiz, a statement to focus on motivation and purpose for
learning and transfer of learning, etc. It should be very brief, just long enough to pique
students interest.
Counselor brings in items of value to him or her, such as pictures of children, wedding ring,
or a $100 bill. Then the counselor asks, Why do you suppose these items are important to
me?
Instructional Process: Include both counselor procedures and student involvement. This
should be the longest part of the plan and should be a step by step instruction manual for
how to teach the lesson. The instructional process should include modeling and methods to
engage students in higher order critical thinking skills. Be sure also to check for
understanding.
1. Counselor asks, If there were a fire in your house, what three things would you pick up in
15 seconds to take with you? How do did you decide what to take? Why was that valuable to
you?
Student Responds
2. Counselor continues with the following information: Everything has some sort of value. In
our country, we often think of money as a way of measuring worth. Something may be worth
fifty cents, one hundred dollars, or one hundred thousand dollars. Worth may be measured
differently in another culture.
We also place importance on things because they fill a need. For example, we place a
priority on food, clothing, and a roof over our heads. These things are essential. A friend who
comes to see us in the hospital is important to us because of the concern shown by that
friend. Many of the things of value cannot be seen or measured. Honesty is one of those. If
you are honest, if you want others around you to be honest, and you choose to be honest
over and over then honesty is something you value. Things of value may change as we grow
and learn more about ourselves. Most things of value are learned from family, friends, and
school. Things of value to us are often different from that of our friends. This difference may
cause conflict, and you may have to make choices about your friendship or what you value.
Student will actively listen and ask questions or add comments. They will check their
own measures of
value with those the counselor identifies.
4. Counselor provides students with What Is Important to Me? activity sheet. Review the
directions with students. (Before continuing, the counselor may wish to read each item to
the students, explaining the terminology.)
Students complete the What Is Important to Me? activity sheet, making sure to
following the directions carefully.
5. The counselor pairs the students, instructs them to discuss their responses, then invites
the student-pairs to share the results of the discussion with the class.
Students explain the results of their paired discussions.
6. As a follow-up activity with the parents/guardians, the counselor may wish to attach a
note explaining the activity and inviting parents/guardians to discuss the worksheet with
their child.
Students will take the activity home for discussion with family.
Guided Practice: How will students begin to demonstrate the knowledge and/or skills
taught in the lesson, with support from the counselor?
The student will compare with a partner five values that he/she considers important. The
student will share what he/she has learned about the partners values with the class.
Essential Questions: How do you identify what is most important to you? How do you
measure value or worth? Why is it important to understand that other people may have
values that differ from your own?
Independent Practice: This can be suggested methods for school staff, classroom
teacher, or parents to reinforce what was learned, visual charts or reminders, or suggested
application of skills outside the lesson through a formal or informal assignment. The goal is
to extend and reinforce the learning beyond the lesson and into real world settings.
Discuss the counselor activity with the social studies teacher, so that whenever discussion of
cultures occurs, the class can discuss the values that different cultures hold. It is important
to emphasize that there are cultural differences, but that no one culture should be held in
higher esteem than any another.
Closure: Summarize and pull the major concepts together into a coherent whole
In closure, students must be assessed on what they accomplished, and what they learned,
demonstrated in group discussion.
Assessment/Evaluation (of learning objectives; ask, How are students different as a
result of the lesson? and specify data to be collected and method of evaluation). Examples
may include student-created artifacts, performance activities, checklists or other
assessments.
Assessment should relate to the performance outcome for goals, objectives and GLE.
Assessment can be question answer, performance activity, etc. Instructor will review activity
sheet responses from What Is Important to Me? worksheet to identify and assess
indicators of personal awareness. Students participate in question/answer/discussion during
classroom activity.
Date: _________
What is most important to you? There is no right or wrong answer. Knowing more
about what is important to you will help you know yourself better.
Directions: With a partner, read the following list of words. Be sure that each of
you understands each word. Look up the words with which you are unfamiliar. It is
not necessary to write the definitions, just understand them.
Select the five important items that you think would make the world a better place
if everyone on earth had these five important items. Mark them with an M for
me, then tell your partner why you chose these. Listen very closely as your
partner tells you his/her choices. Mark his/her choices with a P for partner. When
you have both discussed your choices, introduce your partner to the class and
explain his/her choices and why they are important to him/her.
___ religion
education
___ safety
___ a home
admiration
___ honesty
___ health
___ tradition
___ justice
___ change
___ love
___ loyalty
___ fitting in
___ money
___ maturity
___ nature
___ freedom
___ dignity/worth
friends
___ wisdom
___ true
___ children
___
___ rules/laws
___ initiative
skill/talent
___ clubs
___ clothing
___
___ career
___ responsibility
___ power
___ knowledge
___ attitude
___ achievement
Take this activity sheet home and ask have one of your parents or guardians mark
an X next to those he or she thinks are important. Discuss how your lists are alike
and how they are different. Discuss which factors account for these similarities and
differences.