Deped Order 42 S 2016 FIN
Deped Order 42 S 2016 FIN
Deped Order 42 S 2016 FIN
42,
s. 2016
Policy Guidelines on Daily Lesson
Preparation for the
K to 12 Basic Education Program
Presentation Prepared by:
JONATHAN D. BOLANO
Rationale
Instructional planning is essential to
teaching and learning.
Research shows that effective teachers
organize and plan their instruction.
Planning is fundamental to ensuring the
delivery of teaching and learning in
schools.
Policy Statement
• To institutionalize instructional planning as a
critical part of teaching and learning process.
Assessment of Learning
Delivery of Instruction
Planning Instruction
Lesson
Planning
• Lesson planning is a
way of visualizing a
lesson before it is
taught.
• The objective of lesson
planning is learning.
• Lesson planning is a
hallmark of effective
teaching.
Elements of Effective
Teaching
Identifying clear lesson and
clear objectives while
carefully linking activities to
them which is essential for
effectiveness.
Creating quality
assignments, which is
positively associated with
quality instruction and
quality student work.
Elements of Effective Teaching
• Planning lessons that have clear goals, are
logically structured and progress through
the content step-by-step.
• Planning the instructional strategies to be
deployed in the classroom and the timing
of these strategies.
Elements of Effective Teaching
• Using advance organizers, graphic organizers,
and outlines to plan for effective
instructional delivery.
• Considering students’ attention spans and
learning styles when designing lessons.
• Systematically developing objectives,
questions, and activities that reflect higher
level and lower level cognitive skills as
appropriate for the content and the learners.
Lesson Planning
• Planning lessons increases a teacher’s chances
of carrying out a lesson successfully.
• What should be
taught?
• How should it be
taught?
Cognitivism
Constructivism
Social Interactionism
Instructional Strategies
Direct Indirect
Instruction Instruction
Interactive Experiential
Interaction Instruction
Independent
Study
Instructional Models, Strategies and
Methods
a. Direct instruction - to teach facts, rules and action sequences
b. Indirect Instruction - for concept learning and problem-centered learning
c. Interactive instruction - brainstorming, debates, cooperative learning, interviewing,
small group or whole class discussion
d. Experiential instruction - games, experiments, field trips, model building, field
observations, role play, simulations.
e. Independent study -Students interact more with the content through questions,
correspondence lessons, computer assisted instruction, essays, homework, learning
contracts, reports, research projects
Features of the K to 12
Curriculum
Spiral Progression
Constructivism
Differentiated Instruction
Contextualization
Features of the K to 12 Curriculum
1. Spiral Progression - Previously encountered topics with an increasing level of
complexity
2. Constructivism - allow collaboration among learners.
3. Differentiated instruction - multiple learning options in the classroom
4. Contextualization - relate the curriculum to a particular setting, situation or area of
application to make the competencies relevant, meaningful and useful to learners
ICT Integration
• integrate
technology in
the planning,
delivery and
assessment of
instruction.
Daily Lesson Log (DLL)
Teachers who have been
in the service for at least
one year, handling learning
areas with available LMs
and TGs provided by DepEd
Teachers are allowed to
work together, seasoned
teachers shall mentor
new/novice teachers
Detailed Lesson Plan (DLP)
Newly hired teachers with out professional
teaching experience shall be required to
prepare a daily DLP for a year.
Teacher applicants as well as the teachers in
the service including Master Teachers who
will conduct demonstration teaching shall be
required to prepare DLP.
Detailed Lesson Plan (DLP)
Newly-hired teachers who earned a rating of
“Very Satisfactory” or “Outstanding” in RPMS
in a year shall no longer be required to
prepare DLPs, while newly-hired teachers
who earned a rating of “Satisfactory” shall be
required to prepare DLPs until such time that
their RPMS assessment has improved.
Parts of DLP
A. Objectives
B. Content
C. Learning Resources
D. Procedures
E. Remarks
F. Reflection
Objectives
Lesson plan objectives shall:
• describe learners’ behavior that should result
from instruction;
• state the behavior in terms that can be
observed and assessed; and
• indicate the content on which the behavior
will be performed.
Content
*Subject Matter or specific content that
the lesson aims to teach.
Learning Resources
*List of resources that a teacher uses to
deliver the lesson.
Procedures
Before the Lesson