Teacher: Sarah Mchugh Date: 4/11/18 School: Werner Elementary School Grade Level: 2 Title: Line Plots Lesson #: 6 of 8
Teacher: Sarah Mchugh Date: 4/11/18 School: Werner Elementary School Grade Level: 2 Title: Line Plots Lesson #: 6 of 8
Teacher: Sarah Mchugh Date: 4/11/18 School: Werner Elementary School Grade Level: 2 Title: Line Plots Lesson #: 6 of 8
Understandings:
Data can be organized in different ways. One way can be to visually represent data in the form
of graphs such as line plots.
Inquiry Questions:
1. What are the ways data can be displayed?
2. What can data tell you about the people (or objects) you survey?
Evidence Outcomes:
Every student will be able to:
Given various objects, students will be able to accurately measure different lengths and will
organize at least three pieces of data successfully in the form of a line plot.
List of Assessments:
Each of these assessments will be shown based on data collected from the students’
workbook pages, their extension activities, and from their exit ticket. The assessment
data will be documented on a checklist sheet with student’s names and their
understanding displayed from the three main content problems and the summarizing
exit slip problem.
According to the data collected from the assessment checklist and based on the observations
of student work, the lesson objectives were achieved for each student. For the three
assessment problems from the independent practice workbook and from the exit ticket, each
student successfully demonstrated their ability to measure objects, plot the data on both charts
and line plots, and to summarize the data displayed on the line plots (ex. which one is longest,
which one is shortest), therefore accomplishing the lesson’s objectives.
2. What changes, omissions, or additions to the lesson would you make if you were to
teach again?
If I were to change anything about the lesson, it would be to count the rulers before getting
them out for the class to use for their independent practice. I incorrectly assumed that there
was a class set of rulers, but unfortunately, there were not enough rulers for each student to
use one. Since there is a class set of small tape measures in the classroom, I allowed some
students to use the tape measures for their independent practice problems. However, this
complicated the guided practice portion of the lesson because I needed to model both the use
of a ruler and the use of a tape measure. The tape measures showed to be increasingly difficult
for students to get accurate measurements from and proved to be a tool that provided many
opportunities for distraction. If I were to teach this lesson again, I would want to ensure that I
had enough rulers for each student so that every student could be on the same page with their
measurements and that the modelling would translate smoothly into independent practice.
3. What do you envision for the next lesson?
For the next lesson, the assessment data showed that re-teaching will not be necessary for this
lesson’s content. However, students clearly need continued practice with measuring different
objects, especially since so many showed such an interest in using these tools. In the next
lesson, we will continue to practice measuring and organizing more data into line plots, but
students will begin to be encouraged to think about other formats that data can be displayed
(ex. Bar graphs).
4. If you used co-teaching, would you use the same co-teaching strategy for this lesson if
you were to teach it again? Were there additional co-teaching strategies used during
the lesson not planned for initially? Please explain.
In this lesson, I listed one teach, one assist and differentiated instruction for my co-teaching
strategies. However, most students showed an understanding of the content right away, so it
was not necessary to have a smaller, alternative instruction group to reteach the lesson.
However, the one teach, one assist was immensely successful because it gave both teachers
the opportunity to observe students more closely. When some students began using tape
measures, the two teachers assisting after the whole group instruction helped to identify
students that were measuring incorrectly, whether that was not aligning the front of the tape
measure correctly with the front of the object or using the centimeters side instead of the
inches side. This co-teaching strategy assisted the teachers with redirecting student behavior,
correcting misconceptions, and supporting students who were making errors by giving more
one-on-one modelling.