Concept Mastery Routine (FI)

3. Co-Construct and Instruct

Only editable by group admins

  • Last updated July 28, 2020 at 9:48 AM by kucrl
  • Evidence visible to public
Co-construct and instruct with the Concept Diagram using the Cue-Do-Review steps with a group or class. Follow the Get Set section to introduce the Concept Diagram to students.
Co-construct and instruct with the Concept Diagram using the Cue-Do-Review steps with a group or class.  Follow the Get Set section (pp. 20 - 26) to introduce the Concept Diagram to students.
  • Cue: p. 22
  • Do: pp. 22 - 25
  • Review: pp. 25-26

All posted evidence

Video links below

amyhodges Over 7 years ago

Concept Diagram: Essay Writing_Hodges/Hall_HVMS

Attached are both YouTube links to where we co-constructed the concept diagram process for essay writing.






behall Almost 8 years ago

Co-Construct and Instruct

Student Example

Co-Construct and Instruct

Teaching Gothic tone in literature as a sub-set of Romantic literature in the 1800s.

Cue—Do—Review for Gothic tone elements with “The Black Cat”  
1. When introducing a new unit in literature, I typically ask students what they already know about a particular genre or time frame. For Gothic literature, they have plenty to say about horror and suspense movies.  
For extra work with tone, I show video clips of movie trailers set in different tones (Harry Potter as a teen comedy, etc.)
2. To introduce “The Black Cat,” we focused on vocabulary words with strong connotations of mystery, psychological imbalance, and shocking behavior/reactions. Students were then able to build a word bank to assist with understanding of Poe’s complex language.  
They work with context clues to suggest definitions for some of the words on the list.
3. After reading the story, we listed the events to analyze Poe’s structure of suspense and ironic outcome for the narrator. We matched the vocabulary words as evidence of his tone.
Tone is then the link I focus on for the Concept Diagram.
lkessler Almost 8 years ago

Gothic Literature Lesson Plan

Lesson Plan     
 
Subject:  English 11 Date: 10/10/16   Standard(s):    11.4 The student will read, comprehend, and analyze relationships among American  literature, history, and culture. b) Compare and contrast the development of American literature in its historical  context. c) Discuss American literature as it reflects traditional and contemporary themes,  motifs, universal characters, and genres. d) Analyze the social or cultural function of American literature. e) Analyze how context and language structures convey an author’s intent and  viewpoint.e. g) Explain how imagery and figures of speech appeal to the reader’s senses and  experience. h) Explain how an author’s specific word choices, syntax, tone, and voice support  the author’s purpose  
Lesson Outcomes: Students will compare and contrast the basic elements of Romanticism as a literary movement and Gothic literature as a specific literary style.
 
Materials Needed: handout of Concept Mastery Diagram, textbook
Vocabulary: American Romanticism, gothic style     
Anticipatory Set:
1.
Review the basic elements of Romanticism as presented in the previous lesson using “The Devil and Tom Walker” and “The Black Cat” as examples
 

2.
Introduce the Concept Mastery Diagram on the projector as students label their own copies at their tables
 
 
Lesson: Activities/ Procedures:
1. Type in the terms and examples suggested by the class discussion. Also, assist with suggesting examples and adding to the evaluating of the examples  
 2. Upon completion of the examples and non-examples, use suggestions from the students to type the Definition statement at the end of the diagram.
3. Teacher directs the discussion and explanation of the chart elements      
4
. Teacher calls students’ attention to their Concept Mastery Diagram in order to suggest elements needed in the definition.
 
 
Guided/Independent Practice    
1. Independent Practice: As teacher reads the poem “The Raven” aloud, students discuss, analyze, and record in their notes specific details that demonstrate how the poem qualifies as gothic literature.
 
2. Circulate and assist students with note-taking          
 
Closure  
1
. Students are required to highlight examples of specific details and to answer open response questions to explain how the details demonstrate the author’s intent to create a gothic atmosphere and his purpose of influencing the mood of the reader. **Both teachers team to guide students in determining which details from the poem are illustrate the gothic elements    

 
   
    
Specially Designed Instruction and Accommodations, Modifications for Specific Students Provide partially completed diagram for students who need additional guidance. Provide sentence starter for the “so what” statement portion of the diagram and for the free response questions.              





     


tammie29 Almost 8 years ago

We introduced this Concept Diagram to our students while learning about Percents on December 13th as evidenced in the video attached.

jtabor Almost 8 years ago

We introduced this Concept Diagram to our students while learning about Percents on December 13 as evidenced in video attached.

lyoung Almost 8 years ago

Lesson using cue-do-review Concept Mastery routine for English 11

Student final copy

Co-constructed Concept Mastery Diagram for Personification during instruction with 2 5th grade inclusion classes at Marion Elementary School