Chapter 5: Beginning Lesson Delivery and Basic Models

Janine Davis

Surprised pigeon” by Andreas Jalsøe is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Dr. Lakshmi loved literature and writing so much that she earned her Ph.D. in English by the age of 30. While she was not yet certified by the state to teach, she found a job in a local school division teaching AP and Dual Enrollment English. The beginning of the year had been very rocky. Dr. Lakshmi realized that while she had spent hundreds of hours in classes as a student and she was an expert in her content area, no one had ever explicitly taught her how or why to plan and deliver lessons in certain ways. Often she defaulted to long lectures, and was surprised when students became distracted and disinterested. She began her own investigation of teaching methods and resolved to teach herself what she needed to know–and also decided to find some local courses in teaching to be the best possible teacher she could be.

In previous chapters we discussed many critical components to planning instruction, including using backward design, considering what content we will teach and why, developing assessments, and constructing objectives. This chapter will delve into the main portion of your lessons: what you and the students will do during instruction. It can be tempting to start your lesson planning here, but remember that following backward design means that you will have to consider objectives and assessments before you get to this point. The content of this chapter as well as the next (Chapter 6) is designed to help complete the highlighted part of the lesson template; this section has to do with the main portion of the lesson.

Lesson Plan Template

Lesson Components Description
Context: Who are the students in the room? (grade, content area, demographics, interests)
Rationale: Why are you teaching this lesson at this time to these students?
Virginia Standards of Learning (VSOL): Include SOL numbers and language
Objective (“KUD”)
Students will know:
Students will understand that:
Students will be able to:
Assessment: What formative assessment will you use during the lesson? Attach it. What will/could be on the end-of-unit summative assessment that links back to this lesson (questions, prompts, portfolio artifacts, etc.)?
Procedures: Provide detailed, numbered steps with simple language/short sentences for easy-to-follow instructions.
Use a planning model that fits your purpose.
Consider how your lesson approaches varying levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy (remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, create)
Make sure your procedures include when/how you would assess students.
Materials: What materials will be integrated during the lesson: books, articles, worksheets, maps, globes, technologies, etc.?
Differentiation/UDL/Technology: What structures/supports will you proactively plan for to meet students’ needs before they arise?
How is technology being used to create, facilitate, enhance, or personalize student learning?
How does differentiated instruction supported by technology accommodate learner differences and needs in order to promote critical and creative thinking?
Reflection: What went well in this lesson?
What changes would you make to this lesson in the future?
What did you learn about your students?
What will you need to do in subsequent instruction?(Make sure you reference data collected in this lesson throughout the reflection.)

Basic Models of Instruction

In Chapter 2 we discussed that a model of instruction is like a blueprint or a set of steps that the teacher and students follow during the course of one or more lessons. This chapter will introduce some of the foundational models of instruction that can serve all teachers and students well.

Direct Instruction

Direct Instruction is a deductive model: the teacher shares the rules, and the students follow the rules to perform the skill. Think of all of the things you know how to do–riding a bike, solving equations, addressing a letter, crafting an email, conducting a simple science investigation–these skills would be best taught through direct instruction. In one sample demonstration lesson, we teach students how to construct an origami model.

Steps of the Direct Instruction Model

Step 1: Review previously learned material.

Step 2: State objectives for the lesson.

Step 3: Present new material.

Step 4: Guide practice, assess performance, and provide corrective feedback.

Step 5: Assign independent practice, assess performance, and provide corrective feedback.

Step 6: Review periodically, offering corrective feedback if necessary.

(Estes & Mintz, 2016)

It is crucial to understand that the Direct Instruction model is not the same as a lecture. Consider the difference between these two scenarios:

  • Teacher A follows the same structure nearly every day in their middle school history classroom. Students listen to a 30-40 minute lecture on a topic and complete fill-in-the-blank notes on a packet. For the remaining class time they read the textbook and answer questions or watch clips of historical films. On Fridays, the teacher gives a quiz on the content from the week.
  • Teacher B uses the Direct Instruction model about once per week to teach students how to follow procedures that will lead to success on the benchmark Document-Based Question essay that students will take at the end of the quarter. Some of these skills include writing a thesis, understanding the arguments in primary sources, and analyzing sources. Because these skills build on one another, each time the teacher uses the model, they review the lessons that came before, and check students’ progress on those skills over time.

The main difference between these two teachers is that one is focused on content and the other is focused on process and skills. It is challenging for students to recall hundreds of discrete dates, people, and events for history (or similar, loosely connected details for any other content area) unless there is a reason to know them later. The reason should be more than simply preparing for a test. And while Teacher B is still preparing students for a test, the assessment involves a transferable skill that will be useful for other courses and general writing skills for the future. Direct Instruction can be very effective, but is best for teaching a skill that can be practiced. If you do want students to learn more about a simple concept, the Concept Attainment model is a better fit.

Concept Attainment

Concepts are everywhere in education. Learning new skills requires us to be aware of concepts; to learn about how to create an origami butterfly, one must have at least a basic understanding of the following concepts: origami, butterflies, symmetry, and models (such as building a model of something by following certain steps). They may use the same words for these things, but imagine teaching origami to someone who had never folded a sheet of paper along a symmetrical line–maybe a very young child. That student first needs to learn that foundational concept before they can move on to more complex concepts and skills.

Steps of the Concept Attainment Model

Step 1: Select and define a concept.

Step 2: Develop positive and negative examples

Step 3: Review the process.

Step 4: Present examples.

Step 5: Generate hypotheses and continue the example/hypothesis cycle.

Step 6: Develop a concept label and definition.

Step 7: Provide test examples to solidify the definition.

Step 8: Discuss the process.

(Estes & Mintz, 2016)

As with most models, it can provide clarity to watch Concept Attainment model in action. In Appendix A, you will find a video of Jennifer Gonzalez from Cult of Pedagogy demonstrating a Concept Attainment lesson. To extend our above example of symmetrical folding, a teacher could prepare and show to students a set of positive examples of papers or objects that have been folded or divided along different lines of symmetry. A set of non-examples would be folded in other ways. Together the students could generate a hypothesis and definition of lines of symmetry. Other kinds of concepts that work well for this model are present in every content area, from prime numbers to primary sources to primary colors and beyond. Concepts that work for the Concept Attainment model have clear criteria that enable a teacher to select good positive and negative examples.

This kind of teaching takes time, and often teachers feel as if they don’t have the time to devote to a single concept when they have so much else they need to convey to students; however, this kind of time is well worth it. When students learn to ask questions about what they see, develop hypotheses, and work in a group, they are not just learning the concept, but also the skills of critical thinking and collaboration that will serve them well in the future. If you would like students to think more deeply about a concept they already know about, the Concept Development model is a good option.

Concept Development

The Concept Development model (Taba, 1971) is useful for students to work together with others in a small or large group to identify similarities and differences of a certain concept. For the first step, the teacher can provide a list of words or images related to the concept, or the students can generate this list. The following are the steps of the Concept Development model:

Steps of the Concept Development Model

Step 1: List or review a provided set of items.

Step 2: Group items according to similarities and differences.

Step 3: Label groups.

Step 4: Form a generalization statement about the concept based on the above process.

(Taba, 1971)

Concept Development is a model that serves a wide variety of purposes–the teacher can use it to see what students already know before beginning a unit of instruction, or they can use it to see whether students developed accurate and deep knowledge about the content of the lesson from previous instruction. The last step involves writing a generalization: What is a generalization? It is a simple statement that encompasses all of the ideas observed about a topic; for example, in a Concept Development lesson on state geography, students might state that most states have borders that are very different from the others, that some states are easily recognizable by their shape, and that other geographic features like rivers and mountains seem to affect the shape and size of states–especially the early ones. The kinds of concepts that work well for this model are ones that will lead to many words or phrases that students can think about, discuss, and categorize in different ways.

A Model Comparison

Table 5.1 compares the use of different models to teach about the same topic: writing complete sentences. All of the following lessons have the same Understand objective, but the Know and Do objectives vary slightly based on the goals and objectives of the lesson, the kind of knowledge, and the nature of the instructional model.

Table 5.1: Models Applied to Writing Complete Sentences

Model Understand Objective Know Objectives Do Objectives Basic Lesson Steps
Concept Attainment Students will understand that complete sentences have certain required and optional components. Students will know examples and non-examples of complete sentences. Students will be able to identify complete sentences.
  1. Teacher explains the process and then shares examples and non-examples of complete sentences.
  2. Students develop hypotheses to define the concept (complete sentences).
  3. Teacher confirms when students are correct, and then students develop a definition for the concept.
  4. Teacher shares additional test examples and students.
  5. Students discuss the process of this method of learning.
Direct Instruction Students will understand that complete sentences have certain required and optional components. Students will know the definitions of these terms and how they function in sentences:
Subject, object, verb, end marks, rules of basic punctuation (capitalization, periods)
Students will be able to write a complete sentence.
  1. Teacher reviews previous lesson on parts of a sentence.
  2. Teacher shares objectives with students.
  3. Teacher shares several examples of complete sentences and explains them.
  4. Students practice writing complete sentences with teacher support.
  5. Students practice writing sentences independently.
  6. Teacher reviews complete sentences in later lessons.
Concept Development Students will understand that complete sentences have certain required and optional components. Students will know various characteristics of complete sentences. Students will be able to group complete sentences according to similarities.
  1. The teacher provides each group an envelope with 20 sentences, clauses, and phrases.
  2. The student groups will sort the sentences in various categories that they develop.
  3. Students label the groups and then create new groups.
  4. Students will create and share a generalization statement about what they learned from the process.

Key Chapter Takeaways

  • Instructional models should be selected based on the kinds of content and knowledge that you are teaching.
  • The lesson procedures will be usually made up of steps that form a model of instruction.
  • Some basic models that can serve nearly all teachers’ needs include Direct Instruction, Concept Attainment, and Concept Development.

Application Questions

  1. Recall a lesson from your previous educational experiences.What model or set of steps was the teacher using?
  2. Consider the kinds of lessons that you will teach in your content area or grade level. Which of the models from this chapter would be the best fit for those lessons?
  3. Your colleague prefers to teach using the Direct Instruction model and considers other models to be a waste of time. Develop at least two arguments for why the teacher should explore other models of instruction.

References

Estes T. H. & Mintz S. L. (2016). Instruction: A models approach (7th ed.). Pearson Education.

Taba, H., Durkin, M. C., Fraenkel, J. R., & NcNaughton, A. H. (1971). A teacher’s handbook to elementary social studies: An inductive approach (2nd ed.). Addison-Wesley.