New Teacher Academy: Delivery of Instruction

Lisa M. Dabbs M.Ed. (@teachingwthsoul on Twitter) is the facilitator of Edutopia's New Teacher Connections group. She is also the founder of the weekly #ntchat for new teachers on Twitter, and blogs about supporting new teachers at Teaching With Soul.
Welcome to week three of Edutopia's New Teacher Academy! I'm excited to be here with you sharing my passion to support and mentor new teachers. I hope that you will come back each week and join us as we look at five key topics and provide resources for New Teachers in five key areas.
- 1/ 17 Classroom Management
- 1/24 Lesson Planning
- 1/31 (today!) Delivery of Instruction
- 2/7 Working with Parents
- 2/14 Building Relationships
- Adding Zip and Zest to Instruction: Delivery of Instruction (pdf)
- Marzano's Best Practice Instruction Strategies (pdf)
- Learning Domains and Delivery of Instruction (link)
- Effective Lesson Planning, Delivery Techniques and Classroom Management Suggestions (link)
- Teaching Techniques Videos (video)
- New Teacher Academy: Classroom Management by Lisa Dabbs
- New Teacher Academy: Lesson Planning by Lisa Dabbs
- Merging the old with the new in teaching styles! Edutopia Group Discussion
- Classroom Guide: Top Ten Tips for Teaching with New Media Edutopia Guide
We also continue to collaborate on these five topics in more detail on New Teacher Chat, my weekly chat on Twitter.
Please view this video as I share a few words on our focus for this week.
Today's guest contributor is Paula Naugle, a fourth grade teacher in New Orleans, Louisiana. Paula is an experienced teacher with 30 years in the field. She is always eager to collaborate and offer support to new teachers.
Paula Naugle teaches math and social studies to fourth-graders at a suburban public school near New Orleans. She loves using Web 2.0 tools such as Skype, Glogster, Edmodo, kidblog.org and Google docs. Paula has taught for over 30 years and loves it more each day. You can find her blog at http://plnaugle.blogspot.com/.
Delivery of Instruction with Paula Naugle
Assessment created. Check. Lessons back plan from assessment.* Check. Materials gathered. Check. Now comes the really fun part -- delivery of instruction. Here are some things I keep in mind as I deliver my lessons.
1) Decide on Your Delivery Method
This is the critical first step! Will you be doing a whole group, teacher-led lesson? Will you use cooperative learning? Is this lesson best suited for small group instruction? Will the students be doing an inquiry lesson? Have a game plan in mind for how you will launch the lesson, but remember to always be flexible as needs or schedule changes arise.
2) Hook the Students into the Lesson
This is the perfect place to have some technology integration happening. Show a great video clip to set the stage. Check background knowledge by having the students add sticky notes to an online corkboard (e.g. Linoit, Wallwisher) telling what they already know about the topic of your lesson. Have them use student response systems to take a pretest.
3) Give Clear Directions
Make sure all ears are tuned in as you deliver instruction. Have a verbal or visual signal. Once you have everyone's attention, state your expectations for the lesson. Ask the students to paraphrase the instructions you just gave them. Have one or two students model what you are expecting them to do.
4) Question, Allow Wait Time, Use Random Selection
As you proceed through your lesson, you will want to check for understanding. Have a system in place to randomly call on students. This could be in the form of popsicle sticks with the students' names on them, or an online random name generator. I like to pose the question, provide appropriate wait time (five seconds or more) for students to formulate an answer, and then randomly select a student to respond. When your students know that any one of them could be selected, they will all tend to think of an answer.
5) Be Aware of Your Pacing, Variety and Enthusiasm
Keep the tempo of your instruction at the pace that best meets the needs of your students. Are they confused? Slow down. Are they getting restless? Speed things up a bit. Remember that variety is the spice to life. Add a lot of variety to your delivery of instruction. This can be accomplished through flexible grouping, rotating through learning centers or using various web tools. Most importantly, be very enthusiastic about your instruction. Read stories with voices, allow yourself to be silly, and always add humor. If you are bored delivering your instruction, imagine how the students are feeling!
6) Use Formative Assessments for Evaluation and Reflection
Every lesson we deliver has something we want our students to "get." How will you find out it they "got" it? One way is to ask questions that all students must respond to with a hand signal such as thumbs up or down. Another way is to have the students complete an exit slip before transitioning to the next class or lesson.
And most importantly you need to reflect on the effectiveness of the delivery of your instruction. What worked? What didn't? If you were to re-teach this lesson, what would you keep and what would you change? Self-reflection is a vital step in helping you become the best teacher you can be!
Useful Links for Lesson Delivery
As you look at ways to deliver lessons that are vibrant and engaging, here are a few additional links that you may want to check out.
*If you haven't heard of backwards planning or mapping, you will want to check out Understanding by Design (link).
We'd love to hear how you prepare to deliver instruction. Got ideas? Tell us about what works for you and what strategies you use. If you have questions along the way, share them in our New Teacher Connection group or Tweet them using the hashtag #ntchat , and we will get back to you. Be sure to also join us tomorrow for New Teacher Chat at 5pt/8et. Our topic will be...Delivery of Instruction. Hope to see you there!
Comments (4)
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I am currently taking a
I am currently taking a technology course and I think that delivery of instruction is directly related to the amount of technology you have available in your classroom. You can deliver instruction in a variety of ways without technology, but with technology the possibilities seem endless!
Very interesting and
Very interesting and informative blog. Hope we get some updates
hot rolled steel
Hi. I love the idea of a hook
Hi. I love the idea of a hook for the beginning of a lesson. Do you have advice on closing the lesson? (Ex. new ways to do exit tickets)
Thank you.
#ntchat
We had a great New Teacher chat last night on Lesson Delivery with many new teachers and experienced teachers participating. Here is a link to the Archive: http://newteacherchat.wikispaces.com/Archives+June+2011-2012
Many Thanks to Paula who participated on the chat with us!!!
Hope that you will share any other idea for how you are delivering and facilitating instruction in your classrooms!
Cheers,
~L