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Exploring Family Structures

Other • 40 • 23 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Other
40
23 students
27 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

This 40-minute lesson for a class of 22 students (age 13-14) focuses on understanding different family structures—blended, extended, families in home economics in secondary school iincorpating the UDL concept cultural mediation and explain why

Exploring Family Structures

Overview

This 40-minute lesson introduces first-year students (age 13-14) to diverse family structures, focusing on blended and extended families within the context of Home Economics. The lesson embeds Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and cultural mediation principles to accommodate diverse learners and explore cultural perspectives on family life. It aligns with the Junior Cycle Home Economics Specification (NCCA, Ireland) and reflects cross-curricular links with SPHE (Social, Personal and Health Education).


Learning Outcomes

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  • Identify and describe different family structures: blended, extended, and nuclear.
  • Recognise the cultural and social variations in family life in Ireland and internationally.
  • Explain the role of family structures in home economics contexts (e.g., meal planning, budgeting).
  • Demonstrate understanding of UDL principles by expressing ideas in varied formats.

Curriculum Links

  • Junior Cycle Home Economics (NCCA): Understand family structures, food and nutrition planning within diverse households.
  • SPHE Strand Unit 1: Myself and the Wider World (appreciating diversity and intercultural understanding).
  • UDL Principles: Provide multiple means of representation (visual, auditory, kinaesthetic), engagement, and expression.

Materials Needed

  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Projector or large screen
  • Printed family structure diagrams (blended, extended, nuclear)
  • Colourful sticky notes
  • A short video clip showing different family types in Ireland (2 minutes)
  • Family structure scenario cards
  • Worksheets for reflection
  • Tablets or laptops (optional) for digital storytelling

Lesson Timing & Activities

TimeActivityDetails
0-5 minIntroduction & HookWarm-Up: Quick brainstorm - "What is a family?" Write keywords on the board; encourage different definitions highlighting cultural diversity.
5-12 minExploration: Family TypesPresent visuals and definitions for nuclear, blended, and extended families. Show 2-minute video clip showing different family structures in Ireland. Discuss cultural mediation by highlighting how family forms vary across communities in Ireland and why understanding this is important in home economics contexts.
12-20 minGroup Task: Family ScenariosSplit class into 5 groups (approx. 4-5 per group). Each group receives a scenario card describing a family structure and a home economics challenge (e.g., budgeting weekly groceries, meal planning for dietary needs). Groups discuss and plan a simple solution, considering their family structure.
20-30 minUDL Reflection & SharingGroups express their solution using different modes: spoken presentation, drawing on board, or acting the scenario. Encourage cultural mediation by prompting students to consider how family and culture influence home economics tasks. Teacher prompts with questions to deepen reflection.
30-38 minIndividual Worksheet: Personal ConnectionsStudents complete a worksheet reflecting on their family structure, cultural background, and home economics experiences. They identify which family type fits theirs and note one thing they learned about other family forms. Use sentence starters and visuals for accessibility.
38-40 minClosureSummarise key learnings aloud. Reinforce respect for diverse family structures and their impact on daily life (culturally and economically). Homework suggestion: Interview a family member about their family structure and one home economics challenge they manage.

Differentiation and UDL Considerations

  • Multiple means of representation: Use video, diagrams, discussion, and written materials.
  • Multiple means of engagement: Small groups encourage peer collaboration; choice in how to express group work supports autonomy.
  • Multiple means of expression: Options to present ideas verbally, visually, or kinaesthetically; reflection worksheet includes scaffolds and visuals.
  • Cultural mediation involved by explicitly exploring family structure diversity and connection to home economics tasks, promoting intercultural awareness.

Assessment & Feedback

  • Formative assessment via group presentations and worksheet reflections to check understanding of family structures and their relevance.
  • Teacher observation of engagement and respectful dialogue on cultural diversity.
  • Provide positive, constructive oral feedback during group sharing.

Extensions & Cross-curricular Links

  • Link to SPHE (wellbeing and identity) through family diversity topics.
  • Extend to Home Economics topics such as budgeting, meal planning, or health and nutrition for different family needs.
  • Encourage creative digital storytelling about "A Day in My Family" using tablets for further expression of family diversity.

This lesson plan uses engaging, inclusive methods to ensure all students can access and relate to the topic of family structures, while meeting Irish education standards with a fresh, culturally aware approach grounded in UDL.

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