Rationale
Students need to be able to tell time for a variety of reasons. We expect people to be on time to things which means they need to be able to know how to read a clock.
Overview
Grade Level: first grade
Subject: math
Topic of Study: telling time
Time Allotment: an hour
Standards: 1.MD.B.3 Tell and write time in hours and half-hours using analog and digital clocks.
Objectives: By the end of the lesson students will be able to accurately tell time in hours, half-hours and quarter-hours on an analog clock.
Implementation
Procedure: I will begin the lesson by asking students why it is important to be able to tell time.
We will then have a discussion of different reason why we need to be able to tell time (school, recess, lunch, dinner, bedtime, etc.)
Then I would show the students a clock manipulative, either a physical one or one on the computer.
I would show them that the small hand is what tells the hour and the big hand tells the minutes. I would also tell them that the red hand tells the seconds but that we won’t be using that.
I would set up different times on the clock and show the students how to read the time. The thing that I really want to stress is that the little hand is not always directly on the number. This can be confusing for many students so I would want to introduce it early.
Then they would practice telling time on their own, I will put a time on the clock and they have to tell me what it is.
Then we will practice backwards, I will tell them a time and they will move the hands on their clock to show me.
Then they will go on to the website and play the games and at the end of each level they will send me a screenshot of their progress.
Technology
Assessment
The screenshot of their progress on the website that they send me. We also will go to the whiteboard where I have drawn clocks and I will first draw times and ask each student to tell me the time, then we will discuss the answer as a group. Then I will just have the blank clocks and tell the student a time and have them draw it and then we will discuss the answer as a group. I will assess them on how well they are able to answer the questions on the board. Phase 1 Reflection
What do the students need
to know prior to the lesson? The main prior knowledge that the
students need are what a clock looks like.
How will prior knowledge
and experience be assessed? Asking them to identify a clock and ask
them where they have seen them before.
How will you use this
information in the planning process? I will use it to see how much we need to
focus on what the clock looks like and what the numbers mean before actually
going into telling time.
Why should the content of
this lesson be taught at this grade level? The content should be taught at this
grade level because the students need to start learning to tell time and at
this point in their education and this gives them lots of practice.
How do the objectives
that you have for the lesson align with the standards? The objective align
perfectly with the standards for this grade level.
When will the lesson be
taught in the course of the school year? Why? I would teach this near
the beginning of the year so there is lots of time to practice throughout the
school year.
Why are you using the
instructional methods you have described? The online games help the students learn because
they are interesting and hands-on. With a topic like telling time students
really need to learn through doing and not just being told.
How do the instructional
methods align with what you know about best practices (think about your methods
classes)? The
teaching is all hands on and they get lots of time to practice telling time.
Why are you using the
instructional methods you have described? I am using these methods because students
respond well to these methods because they are engaged throughout the lesson.
Again with the assessment, don't just tell me what the students will do, describe how you will define their success in the process. No phase 1...
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