Long Lesson Plan Format
Long Lesson Plan Format
Long Lesson Plan Format
Title of Lesson
Grade Level
Integrated Subjects All lessons should try to include at least three subjects somewhere within the same
lesson (for example: math, language arts, and music; science, art, and social studies, etc.). This will help
create a more interesting plan and push the teacher to show how knowledge in one subject does not exist
Overall Goal(s) In general, what is it that I really want for children to learn/accomplish by my teaching this
lesson? How will this lesson fit into the bigger picture of the unit/six-weeks/ semester/year?
TEKS/TAKS Objectives Which of the TEKS requirements is being taught or strengthened in this lesson?
Are these at the age-appropriate level/zone of proximal development for the child(ren)? Are they in the
Objectives A statement of everything that students will do in the particular lesson. Formula = who is the
learner + what is the task/behavior + what is/are the condition(s) + what is the degree of
accomplishment? Should be stated in Bloom’s terms and should be observable and measurable. State
“The student or learner will . . .” (do not state that the learner understands, appreciates, etc. These can’t
—Check to see that each activity that children will do has a corresponding objective—almost all lessons
—Put all objectives in the order in which the teacher anticipates they will happen in the lesson.
—All four parts of a good objective given in the formula for a good objective should be included.
Readiness Skills or Prior Knowledge Needed Are there any skills or knowledge that students
Possible Sponge Activity When children enter a room and the lesson will not begin for a moment (all
children are not there yet, the teacher needs to take lunch count or attendance, the room must be set up
again between classes, etc.), the teacher should plan for an individual or group warm-up that can be done
independently to help children begin to focus and remain in their seats until the lesson formally begins. A
sponge “soaks up” a few minutes of time so the teacher can complete executive tasks.
Environmental Concerns
1. Relating to an event/season/etc. Sometimes lessons are better and more meaningful when
taught at a certain time of year, in conjunction with certain events, during certain weather conditions,
2. Any Anticipated Problem(s) Is any special seating needed or special attention to management in
any part of this lesson? Will there be possible problems getting materials to students or in grouping,
Rationale What good reason should a student have for learning this lesson? (The mother of
“Teacher, why do I have to learn this stuff?” Provide reasoning at the students’ level (not by saying that
it’s going to be on the TAKS test, using educational jargon , or telling them that they will need it someday.
Relating the information to the real world is an excellent rationale, when possible.
Focus (Anticipatory Set, “Hook”) This is an event that creates interest and ties into the lesson to be
presented. It should entice students into the lesson. Thus, using only questions for discussion is not
usually acceptable, because these types of questions are often not as motivating and enticing for children
as the teacher believes. A focus can be used to enhance the relevance of new knowledge to interest
children.
Making Connections
1. Connections to Prior or Future Learning How will you find and relate what children may know
already to what they will learn here? Or how could this knowledge apply to future knowledge?
2. Connections to the Community Where would you find and tie in this learning to children’s known
world? Begin with things nearest to children’s lives first (i.e., home, neighborhood, city, and so forth).
3. Cultural Connections Is there any way to relate this lesson or knowledge to the cultures near the
4. Connections to Student Interests and Experiences How can you relate this concept or
information to something that is interesting to children in their worlds? What does the child do in
his/her spare time? What are currently the favorite movies, toys, television shows, hobbies, sports,
Materials List everything you need to teach this lesson, plus all that students will need (students’
needs/supplies and teacher’s list of things needed for this lesson). List where less-frequently used
teacher and student materials are located (if applicable) in order to find them easily for the lesson (or for a
substitute teacher). Check this list the last thing before leaving school in the afternoon and the first thing
Activities/Instructional Input What will you do to get students through the objectives above? What
seating arrangements are necessary? List steps you will follow and the activities and strategies you will
use. Identify how you will model content and/or tasks. Tell why you are choosing the methods you are
using.
1. Guided Practice What will students do, activity-wise, as you “hold them by the hand” to get them
started through the materials to be learned? List steps: (The teacher will…. The student will….)
2. Independent Practice What activity will students perform all by themselves to exhibit that they
What Will Students Do If They Finish Early? Decide and tell students exactly what you expect them to
do if they finish early. This should be used as a reinforcer and/or a management tool to keep them
working rather than disrupting others. It should not seem to be a punishment (i.e., just more of the same
work).
Assessment List not only the main activity you will evaluate (it is usually but not always the independent
practice), but also select one or more of the following questions to answer: How will you be able to tell
whether a student “got it” and how well they got it? Tell what a child must do on an activity (criteria) to get
an A, B, C, D, F (or an S/U). What are the teacher’s expectations for the achievement of these grades?
What is a passing grade? How will the activity be graded? Provide a rubric, if appropriate (see
Competency 10). Give the rubric or expectations to children in advance (for objectivity and student
success).
Closure How will you reinforce what children have learned one last time? (For miniclosures, tell how and
when you will close on information given throughout the lesson.)
Transition Think about moving to the next lesson or the next setting. Decide in advance how to do that
(singing a song, changing seating arrangements, referencing the past lesson, etc.).
Accommodations for Students with Special Needs Any accommodations for special needs students
Reflection Write down what went wrong AND right with the lesson so that the next time it is taught, it will
be more effective.
Remember that every part of the lesson should tie together in a “neat package”—all parts work