Evaluation Lesson Plan
Evaluation Lesson Plan
Evaluation Lesson Plan
Grade: 1
I. Objectives
How does this lesson connect to the unit plan?
This is the fifth lesson in the unit plan. Students have learned the first four steps in the QPOE2 Model (question, prediction, observation, explanation) and will learn
the final step of evaluation.
cognitiveR U Ap An E C*
physical
development
socioemotional
R
E
E
R
X
Common Core standards (or GLCEs if not available in Common Core) addressed:
(Note: Write as many as needed. Indicate taxonomy levels and connections to applicable national or state standards. If an objective applies to particular learners
write the name(s) of the learner(s) to whom it applies.)
*remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, create
Students are able to recognize and recall the previous steps of the model and their meanings. They are
familiar with how to use clipboards and know how to practice hallway manners.
Pre-assessment (for learning):
Discuss the previous steps of the model, inquire about any previous
knowledge/experiences/assumptions about the meaning of evaluation.
Formative (for learning):
Outline assessment
activities
(applicable to this lesson)
Students participate in a scientific investigation road trip and complete their self-drawn maps as we
progress through the trip.
Summative (of learning):
Later in the day, the teacher will have the students complete the packet checklist (rubric) so they can
make sure they completed the packet fully and well.
Provide Multiple Means of
Representation
Provide options for perceptionmaking information perceptible
Review the steps of the QPOE2
model both in written form by
drawing a map, and by physically
walking through the steps
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Materials-what materials
(books, handouts, etc) do
you need for this lesson
and are they ready to
use?
Students will be at three different stations because its Terrific Tuesday. 1/3 of the class will be at the
cooking station, 1/3 will be at the art station, and 1/3 will be at the science station, which I am
teaching. The stop signs for the scientific investigation road trip will be set up around the school.
Components
Motivation
(opening/
introduction/
engagement)
9:33
9:35
9:42
Development
(the largest
component or
main body of
the lesson)
9:42
9:50
Closure
(conclusion,
culmination,
wrap-up)
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Your reflection about the lesson, including evidence(s) of student learning and engagement, as well as ideas for improvement
for next time. (Write this after teaching the lesson, if you had a chance to teach it. If you did not teach this lesson, focus on the
process of preparing the lesson.)
Before this lesson even began, I had the feeling I would run out of time once again. Because Mrs. Sayre asked me to teach the
students how to write their explanation statements in small group instead of to the whole class, I ran out of time and just over 1/3 of
the students didnt get to writing their explanations. It took us a few minutes to figure out which students were in the final group who
hadnt finished. I had been using their math groups, so I knew that the all the people in the doubles group still needed to finish.
Mrs. Sayre didnt tell me that she had planned on switching the groups for this week, so I hadnt been keeping a list of who had and
hadnt finished. Thankfully Mrs. Sayre allowed 15 minutes for me to take these students in the hallway and help them finish before
we moved on to this final lesson.
Because it was Terrific Tuesday, I had planned on teaching this in small groups. While two other groups worked on an art project
and a cooking project in the classroom, I took one group out in the hallway and we did our evaluation worksheets. The students did
really well with this! At first, many students wrote that nothing surprised them. I made a comment, Oh! I didnt know you were
already professional hydrologists! They laughed and said that they werent, so then I re-worded the question. I asked them if
anything happened that they didnt expect to happen. This instantly cleared up things for all of the students in the first group that had
initially wrote nothing.
The road trip was a lot of funit was nice to get the students moving around rather than sitting at our usual spot in the hallway. They
really liked that they got to make their own map and show that they knew what all these big words mean (question, prediction,
observation, explanation, evaluation). Before they understood that these were all things that scientists do when they learn new things,
but I think going on our little road trip helped them understand that they need to do these things in order.
When we returned from the road trip, I had hoped to give the students a scientist certificate. I imagined it as a way to help them
feel proud of their accomplishments and proud for finishing everything in this unit, but unfortunately the printer was acting up and I
never got them printed.
As they were filling out their evaluation sheets, I noticed that nearly all, if not all of the students circled the thumbs up emoticon
when ranking their learning, which meant they learned a lot of new things and thought that learning to be hydrologists was fun. This
was very encouraging to me, because Id been feeling as if all these problems with timing and some kids getting behind and missing
my lessons had been leading this unit to failure. Its encouraging to know that even when Mrs. Sayre and I can both pick out several
areas for improvement, its possible that the first graders didnt even notice; they still learned the material either way.
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