
Social Studies • Year Kindergarten • 15 • 18 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
Create a Special Education, Social Studies Lesson Plan for kindergarten students on the topic "Rules" emphasizing "formulate rules for their class".
Big Idea: the concepts or principles to this lesson that anchor or connect the smaller ideas.
Prior Knowledge from Trinidad and Tobago Ministry of Education Curriculum
Outcomes or objectives of what the learning experience: students will gain at the end of this lesson. The objectives should be tiered according to 3 tiers of Response to Intervention. Format objectives in Majors ABCD Model. Include two objectives in ABCD model for tier 1 & 2 and one objective in ABCD Model for tier 3. List three objectives for this lesson.
Essential Questions: list questions that help students probe for deeper meaning related to major issues, problems, concerns, interest or themes relevant to students lives and set the stage for further questions.
Introduction/set induction: Describe fully the opening activity. It should establish a purpose, engage the audience, and activate prior knowledge.
Resources for this lesson: including resources, including technology used.
Activities: based on the order of delivery. Teachers activities, describe how you plan deliver the content to help students develop a mastery of the objectives. Be sure to provide explicit learning strategies, multiple representations of information provided, direct instruction to address new vocabulary, frequent opportunities for response and practice, content summary, variety of student-centered learning activities (whole group, small group guided instruction, centers). Student activities, describe activities that will enable students to make discoveries related to the big idea and that promote student inquiry (multiple means of engagement). Create a table for a lesson plan with 2 columns, one for teacher activities and one for student activities. This Social Studies lesson on "formulate rules for their class". This table lists all the activities and teaching points the teacher will use and all the student activities to correlate with the teacher. Included one guided practice and one independent practice.
Assessment: describe the final assessment to provide evidence that students have met the learning objective. Be sure to provide choice related to interest, multiple, flexible means for completion that support learning preferences. Multiple means of expression. Include an explicit description of the criteria for quality work. Included different assessments for all learners classed in Tier 1 & Tier 2 together and Tier 3 to match the outcome of these lessons.
Accommodations: list the accommodations specific students may need to access learning (Presentation, Response, Timing/Scheduling, Setting)
Management Strategies: Describe strategies that will be used to manage disruptive behaviors and to get students' attention in this lesson.
Extended practice: describe extended practice activities that will help to deepen understanding and provide for greater fluency and accuracy with the new skill. Practice should include both supervised, and unsupervised opportunities and have a clear purpose that shared with the learner. When possible, activities should be authentic and include multiple ways to practice new material. This should be homework.
Closure: describe the review of big ideas to tie ideas together, transition to next lesson or continuing practice. Include a strategy to end this lesson.
Reflection on the lesson: what went well? What could you have done differently? What did you enjoy? What would you have to leave out next time? What do you need help with? How do you intend to get that help?
Include 4 integrated subjects found in this lesson except Social Studies.
Rules are essential for creating a safe, fair, and productive environment. By formulating and following rules, we demonstrate respect for ourselves, others, and our shared spaces. Understanding classroom rules allows students to actively take part in shaping their community and practicing good citizenship from a young age.
Tier 1 (General Education Students):
Tier 2 (Students Needing Additional Support):
3. (A) Audience: With guided teacher support, (B) Behavior: students will identify a personal rule they want to follow, (C) Condition: using picture cues and verbal prompts, (D) Degree: with 80% success.
| Teacher Activities | Student Activities |
|---|---|
| 1. Direct Instruction (5 mins): - The teacher will explain what rules are, why they matter, and how they help us work together in harmony. - Show visual aids (e.g., pictures of good vs. unsafe behavior). | 1. Listening and Observation: - Students will watch and interact with the visual aids and contribute thoughts on examples of good and bad behaviors. |
| 2. Guided Practice (7 mins): - Prompt students to brainstorm class rules through open-ended questions, such as: "What rules would keep us safe?" and "How can we be kind?" - Teacher will guide students in writing 3-5 chosen student suggestions on chart paper, ensuring these rules are clear and simple. | 2. Group Collaboration: - Students will take turns sharing rule ideas while practicing listening skills. - As rules are listed, students will raise their hands to signal agreement. |
| 3. Independent Practice (3 mins): - Teacher distributes a simple worksheet where children draw pictures of themselves practicing one agreed-upon rule (e.g., "taking turns"). | 3. Rule Illustration Activity: - Students independently illustrate themselves following one classroom rule. Those in need of assistance can use premade picture cards. |
Tier 1 & Tier 2:
Tier 3:
Students will work with their parents at home to develop two simple family rules. They will draw a picture of each rule and bring it to school for show-and-tell. This connects the classroom and home communities, reinforcing the importance of rules in all areas of life.
Bring students back to the gathered group area and review the finalized classroom rules posted on the chart paper. Use the phrase, "We made these classroom rules together, so we will follow them together!" Play a short "rule-following" song, like a fingerplay or chant, to end the lesson on an engaging note. Transition to the next activity by asking, “Where else do we follow rules?” to build curiosity for future lessons about rules in the community.
What went well? The introductory "No Rules" activity immediately engaged students in the topic and sparked curiosity. Students actively participated in brainstorming.
What could have been better? Some students were hesitant to share ideas; using a "turn-and-talk" strategy beforehand may help.
What did I enjoy? Hearing the students’ creative and practical rule ideas.
What should I adjust? Provide clearer scaffolds for Tier 3 learners during the brainstorming phase.
What do I need help with? Introducing interactive videos about rules. I’ll collaborate with tech-savvy colleagues to find appropriate resources.
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