Friday, August 13, 2010

Download Standards-based lesson plans

1. STANDARDS

The followings are the standards for English Language Learning.

English-Language Development Standards for California Public Schools K-12
http://www.cde.ca.gov/be/st/ss/documents/englangdevstnd.pdf

English-Language Arts Contents Standards for California Public Schools K-12
http://www.cde.ca.gov/be/st/ss/documents/elacontentstnds.pdf

TESOL Standards
http://www.tesol.org/s_tesol/sec_document.asp?CID=281&DID=13323#levels


2. LESSON PLAN

This lesson plan used TESOL SLP standards.

A is for Apple

by Judie Haynes

Combine science, language arts, and math with an apple theme for Fall. This is an excellent unit for mixed level ESL classes and can be taught to students of a wide variety of ages and abilities.

In many parts of the United States apples are a sign of Fall. We go apple picking and drink fresh apple cider. We eat apple pie and apple dumplings. Apples provide a means to combine English language learning with content area instruction. Even your newcomers can participate in the "hands-on" parts of this lesson.

Lesson Topic

Apple Theme Unit

Grade/Proficiency Level

Grades 1-3 beginning to intermediate ESL; Grades 3-8 beginning-advanced beginning ESL

TESOL Goal and Standard

Goal 2, Standard 2 - To use English to achieve academically in all content areas: Students will be able to use English to obtain, process, contruct, and provide subject matter information in spoken and written form.

Goal 3, Standard 1 - To use English in socially and culturally appropriate ways: Students will use the appropriate language variety, register, and genre according to audience, purpose, and setting.

Content Concepts/Skills

Changes in nature; how apples grow; observing and keeping a science journal; experiments with apples

Materials

Library books about apples; five or six different kinds of apples; plastic knives; PDF downloads

Vocabulary

round, sweet, tart,juicy, hard, crisp, crunchy ripe, shiny, delicious, skin, core, seeds, Jonathan, Rome Beauty, Mc Intosh, Golden Delicious, Granny Smith, Red Delicious

Instructional Sequence

  • Download PDF files from the New York Apple Association This site contains background information, games, puzzles and other activities for children.
  • Make a KWL Chart with your students. Ask them to tell you what they know about apples. Elicit responses from students by asking questions. Write their responses on the chart paper. You may want older students to copy the responses on a smaller chart.
  • Read a short book about apple growing that is appropriate for your students. If your library does not carry a book which is easy, find one with good pictures and tell the story in your own words. Try Apple Picking Time by Michele Benoit Slawson or The Season of Arnold's Apples, by Gail Gibbons.
  • Have students review the steps in the process of apples growing trees by using sentence strips. Students should be able to sequence the steps.
  • Divide your students into pairs. Give each pair a different type of apple. Have students draw their apples in their science journals and color them. Help students to write words to describe how their apples look. Use the pictures of apples on the web to determine what kinds of apples they have.
  • Help students to cut their apples in halves so that they can see the core. Have them look at their apples and draw a picture of the cross-section in their notebooks. Ask students to remove and count the number of seeds. Whose apple had the most seeds? the least amount? This is a good time to introduce fractions to your students if this type of lesson is grade appropriate. Remember many students will not know fractions from their native countries because most of the world uses the metric system.
  • Allow students to cut off pieces of their apples to taste. Help them write words to describe how the apples taste. Next they should give a piece of their apples to each of the other students in the class so that the tastes of different kinds of apples can be compared.
  • Develop vocabulary for describing apples. Download PDF file Apple Wheel. Have students write a descriptive sentence on each part of the wheel using vocabulary for describing apples: round, sweet, tart,juicy, hard, crisp, crunchy, ripe, shiny, delicious, round, red, yellow, green, hard.
  • Have students write about their apple. Use the PDF fileApple Shape as a background to the writing. Have students tell what apple they liked best and what apple they didn't like.

Activities for ESL Students in Grades 3-8

  • Brainstorm a list of apple dishes your students enjoy. If necessary, bring in various apple treats that your students are not familar with so that they can taste them. Cooking magazines can also be a source for pictures of different types of apple dishes. You want to teach the vocabulary "applesauce, apple pie, apple juice, baked apple, and candy apple."
  • Have your English language learners survey other students about their favorite apple treat. Download PDF files for the Apple Treat Survey. and make copies. Review the vocabulary and teach students how to conduct a survey. This lesson can be found under Content-based Surveys and Interviews.
  • Have student in grades 4-8 become "apple detectives." Have them make a list of products made from apples that they find in the grocery store. Download our pdf fileApple Detective.
  • Use the lesson plans at Healthy Choices for Kids Online.

  • Activity Downloads

    Note: To view the classroom activities, you must have Acrobat Reader intalled. Acrobat is a free application available from Adobe Systems.

    PDF fileApple Wheel (69k .PDF)

    PDF fileApple Detective (5k .PDF)

    PDF fileApple Treat Survey (2k .PDF)

    PDF fileApple Word Puzzle (63k .PDF)

    PDF fileApple Shape Book (64k .PDF)

    Related Links

    Johnny Appleseed, an American Folk Hero
    Teach your ELLs about American Folktales through a unit on Johnny Appleseed. This is a perfect accompaniment to a thematic unit on Apples or on other Fall topics.

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