TPA Lesson Plan
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1. Teacher Candidate
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Elijah
Mikheyev
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Date
Taught
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3-8-15
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Cooperating
Teacher
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Dr.
Agriss
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School/District
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Eastern
Washington University
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2. Subject
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English
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Field
Supervisor
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3. Lesson Title/Focus
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Japanese and American Relations
before Pearl Harbor
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5. Length of Lesson
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20 minutes
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4. Grade Level
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10
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6. Academic & Content
Standards (Common Core/National)
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CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RI.9-10.1
Cite
strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text
says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
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7. Learning Objective(s)
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Given the
article about Japan’s and the United States relations before the bombing of
Pearl Harbor, students will read the article together and be able to analyze
what they read, by writing three reasons why Japan became angry with the
US.
I can analyze a text
by using thorough textual evidence to support my analysis about why Japan became
angry with the US.
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8. Academic Language
demands
(vocabulary, function, syntax, discourse)
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Great
White Walls, Fascism, Great Depression,
and Social Darwinism
This
vocabulary will be clearly addressed during this lesson. The students will
write down what they think these words mean. Then students will be given a paper
with the definitions of these words with the reading,
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9. Assessment
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Students
will be asked to write three reasons why they believe Japan attacked Pearl
Harbor. This will be a form of formative assessment. Then students will share
their responses with their classmates.
In
addition, I will asks students to start reading out loud—to the class—the
article. After the reading, they will be asked to write down three reasons
what made Japan angry with the US. The assessment connects to the standards
by helping me understand that the students can read and analyze what they
have read.
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10. Lesson Connections
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This lesson is part of
a two week unit on the novel Under the
Blood-Red Sun by Graham Salisbury.
This lesson is drawn
from research and theory from the book Readicide,
Gallagher (2009). Gallagher mentioned the book In the Middle and he discussed how the author advised teachers to
“come out from behind their desks to write with, listen to, and learn” from
young readers and writers (Gallagher 2009, 90). Writing the three reasons why
Japan became angry with the US, after reading the article, will be a form of
formative assessment during this lesson. This connects to previous lessons and builds on to
the foundation for the rest of the unit.
Students will have to have had some basic knowledge of WW2 history. Teaching
this lesson will allow students to understand the importance of why Japan
attacked the US in 1941. The learning of this lesson will build on to
previous knowledge of what was taught yesterday.
I am teaching this
lesson because this lesson will help students better understand the book Under the Blood-Red Sun. Learning about why the Japanese attacked the
US will help broaden the students’ understanding about this tragic event in
human history. At the start of this lesson, students will write down three
reasons on the whiteboard why they believe Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. This
lesson will further be built upon in future lessons by having the students
continue reading Under the Blood-Red
Sun in our next lesson. Also,
students will be given a quiz in the following lessons.
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11. Instructional
Strategies/Learning Tasks to Support Learning
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Learning Tasks and Strategies
Introduction
In order
to communicate the learning objective to my students, I will have the
objective in my PowerPoint. I will introduce the lesson by asking a question
about why Japan bombed Pearl Harbor.–What made the Japanese do it? Was the US
partially to blame for this attack?
Learning Tasks
Students
will be learning to cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support
analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from
the text. Students will take turns reading the article during the in class
reading. I will ask students to write down three reasons why Japan became
angry with the US.
Conclusion
After
finishing reading the article and writing three reasons for Japan’s anger
toward the US, students will finish viewing the PowerPoint and respond to the
prompt: “Was Japan’s anger toward the US justifiable? If no, why not? If yes,
why?”
Sequenced Instruction
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Teacher’s
Role
Teacher
will orally state the learning objective of the lesson to the students and
have it written posted on the PowerPoint.
Teacher
will make sure every student has the article and is ready to read.
Teacher
will introduce why Japan bombed the US and define the vocabulary words.
Teacher asks
student to respond to the article in writing.
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Students’
Role
Students
will write three reasons why they believe Japan attacked the US and students
will write what they think the definitions of the vocabulary words are. Also,
students will listen to the teacher explain why Japan became angry with the
US. Then students will receive an article and will begin to read the article,
the article will have the definitions of the vocabulary words. (10 min)
Students
will write down three reasons why the Japan became angry with the US after
reading the article. (5min)
Students
will answer PowerPoint prompt: “Was Japan’s anger toward the US justifiable? If
no, why not? If yes, why?” (4min)
Students
turn in prompt and the writing assignment. (1min)
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Student
Voice:
Students
engage in explaining the Learning Target and the definitions by having the
instruction call out on different students during the class period. Students
show their understanding of the reading of the article by writing down three
reasons why Japan became angry with the US. Students will be able to ask
questions about the article and any other questions pertaining to the topic.
Students will be able to express the importance of the learning targets during
the reading of the article. The PowerPoint prompt and short writing
assignment should help students see the importance of the learning targets.
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12. Differentiated Instruction
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Plan
Students with a disability such a low vision or bad hearing will be seated in the front rows of the class. In addition, any other student with a disability will be given proper accommodation in the class to meet his or her needs. All of these learning styles will be incorporated in this lesson: auditory, visual, kinesthetic, and tactile. Students will be given the article, which is visual. Students will be given oral instruction, which is auditory. Also, students will be use tactile and kinesthetic learning when they use their pencil to fill out the writing assignment and prompt questions. In addition, students who need more time, during their time filling completing the prompt, will be given it. And students who cannot read fluently or have a hard time reading orally will be exempted from reading, during the open class reading. |
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13. Resources and Materials
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Plan
Gallagher, K., & Allington,
R. L. (2009). Readicide: How schools are killing reading and what you can do
about it. Portland, Me.: Stenhouse.
Rise of Fascist Japan. (n.d.).
Retrieved from
http://thejapaneseexperience.weebly.com/rise-of-fascist-japan.html
Salisbury, G.
(1994). Under the blood-red sun. New York: Delacorte Press.
I will need a whiteboard and a black marker and
Internet access. Students will need an article and writing utensil.
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14. Management and Safety Issues
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Plan
When the
students writing, I will walk around the room to answer any questions the
students may have and monitor them. If a student is acting up, I will make
sure the student isn’t disrupting other students’ learning. He or she may
have to be excused from the class if they do not listen to my warnings. I
will do my best to make this lesson educational, yet exciting at the same
time. I will do this by allowing the students to ask questions during our
reading. Hopefully this will help keep students from falling asleep during
this lesson. Before we have a class discussion, I will make it clear to the
students that they need to respect each other and not fool around. I will
award good student behavior by giving them bonus points.
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15. Parent & Community
Connections
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Plan
Students
will be encouraged to ask their grandparents if they were alive during the
bombing of Pearl Harbor. What kind of emotion did they feel? Did they know
any Japanese people? In addition, students will be asked to have their grandparents
write down the answer to these questions. Students will bring in the writings
of their grandparents. The next day, students will be encouraged to present
their information to the class; this will be optional.
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Worsening relations between Japan
and the West from 1919 to 1939. There's were incidents like:
American expansion in the
Asia-Pacific region threatened Japanese plans to control the region.
Ever since
1853, when Commodore Matthew Perry opened Japan to American trade, American
businessmen had taken an increasing interest in doing business in the
Asia-Pacific region. The United States took control of many tiny islands that
were rich in guano, a natural fertilizer.
It also took control of other islands and used them as bases for
American trading ships. By the 1930s, the area under American control had
expanded to include islands such as Hawaii and the Philippines. Japanese
militarists believed that Japanese and American economic and military interest
would bring them into conflict over who would control the Asia-Pacific region.
Washington Naval Conference,
1921-1922.
The
Washington Naval Conference aimed to reduce the naval forces of the major naval
powers. Many Japanese felt that this was an unfair treaty. They felt that is
was an attempt to restrict Japanese power. Tension grew between them as they
felt being treated unfairly.
Immigration laws
in the USA in the mid-1920s.
In 1924,
the government in the USA tried to prevent Asian immigration as part of its
isolationist and protectionist policy. The USA forbade the entry of all Asian
immigrants (expect Filipinos), including Chinese, Japanese, Koreans and
Indians. Immigrants could not become
citizens of the USA even if they had been there for a long time. Asians also
could not marry Caucasians or own their own land. Some state enforced laws to
segregate the Asians who were living in American. California for example,
enforced the California Alien Law in 1913 ruling that all Asian children,
including those born in America, had to attend separate schools. There was also
a widespread fear that Asians would take jobs away.
Before the
strict immigration laws were passed, many Japanese migrated overseas. The new
America immigration policies of 1924 angered the Japanese. They saw the
policies as a sign that the Americans considered the Japanese to be inferior to
Americans.
These
events combined with the protectionist policies of the West during the Great
Depression, caused many Japanese to turn away from Democracy and support an
expansion of Japan's empire.
Great White Walls: From the 1880s onwards, the white settler countries of
the Pacific Rim all implemented restrictive immigration policies designed to
keep their populations white.
Fascism: a way of
organizing a society in which a government ruled by a dictator controls the
lives of the people
Great Depression: the economic
crisis and period of low business activity in the U.S. and other countries,
roughly beginning with the stock-market crash in October, 1929
Social Darwinism: Now largely
discredited, social Darwinism was advocated by Herbert Spencer and others in
the late 19th and early 20th centuries and was used to justify political
conservatism, imperialism, and racism and to discourage intervention and
reform.
3 Question Assignment
Rubric
This
checklist-rubric is designed to give the instructor some form of objective
feedback when formatively assessing students’ completed questions.
1-5
Rating 5 being meet standard
1)
Wrote
in complete sentences
2)
Has
three answers
3) Answers reflect student
using article to justify answers
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