Classroom Lesson Planning: Conception Objectives Procedures Standards Performance
Classroom Lesson Planning: Conception Objectives Procedures Standards Performance
Education is not an easy task as some people think. It is a complicated process that needs
great efforts and patience from the behalf of the teacher. It is nearer to innovation than just filling,
copying and piling knowledge.
When we teach, we do not only copy from mind to mind as pumping liquids through tubes
from a vessel to another, we do not just fill pupils’ minds with information but we aim at making
them able to possess the ability to discover facts. They interact with these and ideas and
simultaneously develop their cognitive growth, ability to discover, creativity and adaptation. Such a
difficult process can not be extemporized; it should be planned for carefully and accurately.
Lesson planning is one of the most important and basic conditions in organizing learning,
being one of the main duties of the teacher as a regulator of his pupils’ learning.
First: Conception:
Classroom lesson planning is known as the process that leads to having a comprehensive
outlook of the educational situations that the teacher prepares in order to achieve his aims. It is also
the process that leads to putting a teaching plan including educational situations containing any
other processes depending on aims specification, selecting the methods and procedures that help in
achieving, evaluating and executing the plan..
Second: Objectives:
a. Helping the teacher to face the different educational situations aided by a high degree of
self-confidence.
b. Helping the teacher to avoid the awkward situations in front of his pupils or whenever
classroom problems may rise.
d. Helping the teacher in organizing pupils’ learning via organizing the sides of the
educational situation that are (the teacher, the student, educational experience and the
class environment).
e. Helping the teacher in achieving the educational objectives easily on behalf of his
pupils.
Third: Procedures:
The teacher:
● benefits from the special references to equip himself with the accurate knowledge.
● be aware of the objectives of the subject matter to know how to function them in
favour of his pupils’ general growth.
● specifies objectives.
● chooses the best aids, methods and activities for each aim necessary to achieve
it.
Fourth: Standards:
Planning has two standards: (long-term planning) represented in year-plan, the other is
(short-term planning) represented in lesson plan. Here we are going to know the parts of the year
plan and the lesson plan separately.
► Content includes the educational experiences that lead to achieve the previous
objectives.
► Time: It includes the amount of timing like saying “the first week of a certain
month” or from a specific date to another.
► Remarks: They mean the difficulties that may hinder the educational process
like: (time is not enough for executing the objectives that were not achieved, or
partially achieved).
► Basic information includes the period, subject matter, day and the date.
be behaviorally composed.
be specific.
► Methods, Techniques and activities: They should be specific, suitable for the
short-term objectives and chosen in a certain way to help the teacher in
achieving the general objectives.
► Evaluation: contains:
The questions that the teacher asks to be sure of the amount of pupils’
achievement of the objectives.
Short tests that help the teacher in knowing the extent of objectives
achievement.
► Time: The teacher should divide the time of the period properly to suit the
specific objectives.
The objectives that have been achieved, partially achieved or have not
been achieved at all.
Fifth: Procedures before the plan:
After the teacher forms an idea about the details of the lesson from the book or any other
resources and before he starts planning the lesson he should ask himself the following questions:
4. What is the suitable plan I should follow to make my pupils more interested in such
information and how to guide them to discover them?
6. What are the aids and activities that should be used and practised?
7. What exactly are the difficult concepts and important information I should clarify?
8. Which are the best questions to be asked? What are the expected questions that the
pupils may ask?
9. What are the proper evaluation techniques (according to this specific lesson and the
pupils’ standard)?
10. What should a teacher do to urge the pupils to use the information they have
already got?
11. What are the possible difficulties and how to deal with them?
Behavioural Objectives
Conception / Components / Conditions / Fields
Introduction:
(The objectives are not achieved by themselves, they change – from mere ideas
and words on our papers and preparation notebooks – into real facts and virtues implemented in
learners through our efforts and what we create and apply of different methods, activities according
to the proper evaluation techniques that we select).
First: Conception:
The instructional objective is usually known as the behavioural change that a teacher tries to
achieve at the end of the educational process ( for a course, unit or a classroom period ). Any
change that occurs in the pupil’s behaviour as a result of classroom learning is considered as
educational output which forms the expected behaviour of the pupil. Therefore, the educational aim
is composed of a group of educational outputs which are achieved during a classroom period.
Consequently, we can define the behavioural outputs as: specific behavioural changes that we
expect after exposing the pupil to a classroom instructional situation including new educational
experiences. The behavioural outputs may look as ( all the new information, knowledge, methods of
thinking, customs and skills noticed in the pupil’s behaviour).
Second: Components:
e. The criterion ( the degree of accuracy through which a teacher evaluates the learners’
performance ).
Example:
- 80 % (percentage criterion).
Third: Conditions:
The goal sentence contains the behavioural objective. Some of the most important
conditions that should be put in consideration when composing the objective sentence are:
The sentence should include one behavioural verb that can be measured and
proved.
Fourth: Fields:
The human being is: Thought: is known as the cognitive, perceptive or mental dimension.
These fields ( thought – emotions – skills ) are interrelated in a way that makes it hard to separate, if
this separation occurs ( optional or obligatory ), the result would be mental or psychological
disturbances. It is normal if one of these fields exceeds the others according to the individual
differences.
a. The cognitive field: It includes all what the pupil should know like facts,
concepts and principles. Learner’s knowledge has the following levels (
remembrance – understanding – application – analysis – formation and
evaluation ).
b. The sentimental field: Objectives in this field are generally concerned with the
emotional and passional sides which have a certain kind of relation with the
individual’s acceptance or denial of specific affairs. The content of these
objectives includes educational results which are related to the attitudes, values,
customs, feelings, estimation and savoring.
2- The teacher plans his year or term plan before the school year begins by specifying the main
features of the subject (distribution – objectives – methods – techniques – suggested time and
methods of evaluation).
3- The teacher should write his daily plan regularly by stating the behavioural objectives for each
period and what techniques, aids, activities and timing does each objective need in addition to the
various suitable evaluation techniques.
4- Each teacher should be aware of the difference between the year plan and the lesson plan (daily
plan) that lies in the level of execution i.e. the daily plan is prepared for one period while the year
plan covers a complete school year or term. As for objectives, the year plan is characterized by
generalization and the daily plan is characterized by specification.
5- Teacher’s mental preparation (understanding his subject matter), psychological (getting his
pupils ready to receive the new experiences) and materially (audio-visual aids, class findings etc.)
in addition to his written preparation.
6- Each period should have it’s own preparation, in case of teaching the same preparation in more
than one class in different days, the teacher should denote to that by writing the date. If classes are
different in the scientific standard or individual differences, the teacher must prepare the lesson for
each class according to the different standards because lesson planning is related to the learner
himself.
7- Organizing the course and arranging it’s different elements logically in order to make the lesson
well-linked and clear.
8- Preparation should be free from grammatical or spelling mistakes. Handwriting should be good
and clear.
9- The teacher should take his preparation notebook with him in each classroom to make use of it.
He shouldn’t read from it in a noticeable way, instead, he can have a look whenever he needs
that.
10- Processing difficulties during the lesson daily planning leads to logical scientific and proper
preparation.
11- Revision lesson preparation should include the objectives and topics of the revision in addition
to the aids and the questions that should be discussed.
12- The test lesson preparation must contain objectives, questions and instructions of the test.
13- The teacher should organize the school library or any other learning resources visits and he
should prepare for that in the special field according to the directives concerning this matter.
14- The teacher should write the remarks and recommendations - written by the educational
supervisor in the visits record - to be aware of what he is asked to execute in order to improve and
develop his performance to facilitate the follow up process done by the school headmaster and the
educational supervisor.
15- Free reading and benefiting from the scientific and educational references can help in the
teacher’s continuous self cultivation and professional growth to enrich his experiences.
16- For more information you can go to (The Teacher’s Guide issued by the General Directorate of
Educational Supervision in the Ministry of Education – Samples of writing weekly and daily lesson
plans) from page 286 to page 304.
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Prepared By:
1. Mohammed Bin Abdul Aziz Al-Fahad “ Director of Educational Supervision and Training in Al-Majma’ah
Directorate of Education”.
2. Talib Bin Suliman Abu Dheeb. “ English Language Supervisor in Al-Majma’ah Directorate of Education”.