Jigsaw 1
Jigsaw 1
Jigsaw 1
Instructional Objective(s):
The learner will describe, compare, and contrast human rights violations in three
specific setting: The West Indies c. 1530, a slave market in 1846, and the
Maidenak concentration camp in 1944.
State Content Standard / Benchmark / Grade Level Expectation:
History Content Standard: All students will evaluate key decisions made at
critical turning points in history by assessing their implications and long-term
consequences.
Long-Term Unit Objective:
The learner will evaluate the responses of individuals to historic violations of
human dignity involving discrimination, persecution, and crimes against
humanity.
Yesterdays Lesson: The class reviewed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as
well as passages from the Helsinki Accord.
Tomorrows Lesson: The class will watch and examine a video of a network
correspondents report from Kosovo in June 1999. They will also review efforts of global
organizations.
Prerequisite Knowledge or Behaviors Needed:
Skills:
- Prior experience analyzing historical documents
- Uses contextual clues to answer questions and gather information
Concepts:
- Human rights
Behaviors:
- Can work collaboratively as a team
- Can communicate effectively with each other
- Can follow written and verbal directions
Expert Group Students who read the same text will get into a group and discuss
what they found.
They will take notes as they analyze the text.
Students are in charge of the discussion.
Home Group The students move into groups with one person from each expert
group.
They explain their document analysis and ask questions of the
other group members.
Do not interfere with the discussions.
Walk around the room listening to what each group has to say.
Debriefing The class comes together to discuss/compare and contrast the
similarities and differences between the events in the different
texts.
Students have the opportunity to share stories of their own
experience and relate them to the readings.
Teacher facilitates the conversation.
What are some similarities that you noticed between the
different texts?
What surprised you most about what you read?
How can these accounts be relevant to our lives today?
Group Processing The students talk in groups or as a whole class about the
structure of the groups and the Jigsaw process.
Teacher provides structured questions to help with group/student
processing.
They work together to set goals to improve group work and social
skills.
What behavior did your group members used that you
appreciated?
What did you like/dislike about the Jigsaw process? What
would you change/not change?
What are some goals we should strive for the next time we use
Jigsaw?
Individual Accountability The students were responsible for reading the texts
before class.
The students will show what they are learning by filling out the worksheets they
were given. They also will be taking notes while they discuss and the teacher can
collect those notes at the end of class.
What will be considered quality work?
The writing should be written with detail and be proven with evidence from the
reading.
Do you need a rubric to structure your assessment?
The assessment of this lesson is in two parts. One part is based on their
participation in their groups and then during whole class discussion. The other
part is based on the answers they gave on the worksheets. For the written
assessment the teacher would use a rubric. This way the students know exactly
how thorough and they need to be in their answers.
Will students also self-assess using this rubric?
The students should already have a copy of the rubric because the have
completed document analyses before. They assessment rules apply to any type of
document analysis.
Gender or cultural concerns may affect your instructional or assessment choices in
this lesson. If appropriate, identify these and describe how you will address them.
Culture and gender roles could affect the discussions in both the expert and home
groups. Heterogeneous groups will be formed with reference to gender, culture,
and immigrant status. The classroom environment needs to be accepting and
inviting to those students who wish to tell their experiences during whole group
discussion.
Instructional Modifications Describe a student in your class who has special needs.
Consider how you might modify your instruction and / or assessment for this
student. Traditional print, Internet and NETS resources can assist you.
There is a student in this class who is mildly cognitively impaired. He reads at the
6th grade level, and he has difficulty expressing himself in words. He will be
working with his resource room teacher for several days on his text to understand
the basic concepts that will be addressed in class. The teacher will provide all
work ahead of time and will closely monitor his group in the event he needs
assistance. If possible, his resource room teacher will attend class for this
session.
Technology What technology might enhance this lesson or this unit at some point?
Traditional print, Internet and NETS resources can assist you.