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Designing a Discussion
Lesson Plan:--An Overview
Introduction
Part I: Section Planning Made Simple
Part II: The Holistic Lesson Plan
A) Teaching Goals
B) Personal Goals
Part III: Day by Day Lesson Planning
Introduction:
There are many resources available to Teaching Assistants
regarding the planning of a successful discussion section.
For example, the UCSB
Teaching Assistant Handbook provides valuable suggestions
for section activities. The following guide is meant to assist
teaching assistants in creating individual section lesson
plans and in the development of a “holistic” discussion
lesson plan to be used throughout the quarter.
Part I: Section Planning Made Simple—The
Broad (Holistic) and the Specific (Day by Day)
When I first started work as a teaching assistant I was unsure
of what my responsibilities were as a discussion section leader
and I worried quite a bit about the following questions which
I have heard reiterated in one form or another by almost every
teaching assistant I’ve talked to: Was it my job to
recapitulate material addressed in lecture? How much authority
did I have to discuss my own ideas, thoughts, worries, or
criticisms of texts we were reading? How much time in section
should be spent preparing for exams and paper writing?
There are no hard and fast answers to these very serious questions.
However, by developing lesson plan ideas early on or before
the start of the quarter, you are in the position to begin
to address these issues in a way that makes you feel comfortable,
meets the goals of the professor, and most importantly, helps
your students. I’m not advocating that you write up
detailed lesson plans for ten weeks worth of sections before
the quarter begins—that would be impractical and inflexible
to a fault. Instead I propose that you spend about an hour
designing some broad and specific goals for yourself and your
students that you can then translate into more specific lesson
plans during the quarter.
Part II: The Holistic Lesson Plan
The idea of a holistic lesson plan is predicated on the assumption
that the teaching of literature should be holistic or, as
the American Heritage Dictionary states “emphasize the
importance of the whole and the interdependence of its parts.”
It is useful to approach the teaching of discussion sections
in a strategic and thoughtful manner. The best way to do this
is to develop a set of goals for section that will help to
emphasize the themes of the course you are TAing for. Most
importantly, developing a holistic lesson plan will gives
you as a TA valuable anchors with which to ground the section
and your own sense of yourself as an educator.
A) Teaching Goals
It's in your best interest to start the quarter with a clear
sense of several issues that you’d like you students
to have learned and discussed by the last week of section.
Although section should always be a space which allows students
to test out their own ideas and gain a better understanding
of the material covered in lecture, teaching assistants have
a great deal of flexibility within the discussion section
space to influence the tone and topic(s) covered in discussion.
There are several important reasons why it is useful to begin
TAing a class with a set of clear topics you want to cover
in mind.
It allows you to teach and discuss ideas and issues that you
feel are relevant to the subject of the course.
It allows you to teach and discuss ideas and issues that you
plan to deal with as a professor in the classroom or in your
scholarly research. I don’t mean at all to imply that
you should make the discussion section a space in which to
“teach” students a paper you’ve written,
or pitch them a potential dissertation topic. However, if
you’ve done a lot of research on a topic that seems
relevant to the class you’re TAing I don’t see
why you shouldn’t attempt to judiciously apply it to
your discussion sections.
It allows you the satisfaction of knowing that your students
will leave the class and your section with a set of clear
ideas about a type of literature or a literary period that
they can use to enrich their own thought about literary works.
At one point or another you will TA for a professor who spends
most of his/her time on close readings of texts rather than
broader thematic issues. Developing a set of themes will help
you to guide your students beyond literary exegesis and towards
the ability to analyze and synthesize thematic issues inherent
in the text(s).
It’s good practice for when you are the teacher rather
than the teaching assistant.
Example:
Let’s say you’re TAing English 101 (English Literature
from the Medieval Period to 1650). Even if this isn’t
you’re field, you can get a sense of some of the issues
that might be section salient by taking a look at the following
syllabus designed by Professor Richard Helgerson:
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MEDIEVAL/RENAISSANCE
Sept 22 Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales, General
Prologue, lines 1-42
Sept 29 Chaucer, General Prologue, lines 43-860
Oct 6 Chaucer, The Miller's Prologue and Tale and the Wife
of Bath's Tale
13 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
20 Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, Letter to
Raleigh and Book 1, proem and cantos 1 and 2
27 Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus
Nov 3 William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet
10 Sonnets: Francesco Petrarca, Garcilaso de la Vega, and
Joachim du Bellay (handout); Sir Philip Sidney, Astrophil
and Stella 1, 6, 71 Spenser, Amoretti 1, 68, 75 Samuel Daniel,
Delia 33, 45, 46 Michael Drayton, Idea To the Reader of These
Sonnets, 6, 61 Mary Wroth, Urania and Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
17 Shakespeare, Sonnets
24 John Webster, The Duchess of Malfi
Dec 1 John Donne, Songs and Sonnets and Holy Sonnets, "Good
Friday," "A Hymn to Christ," "Hymn to
God My God," "A Hymn to God the Father"
Final Examination (noon to 3 pm)
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When I saw this syllabus for English 101 my first instinct—based
on a undergraduate knowledge of some of the texts and my own
sense of what’s interesting to talk about—was
to think that GENDER, RELIGION, and NATURE/THE LAND might
be three key themes that would recur through the course. I
also thought that TRAVELING or the QUEST might be important
and recurring tropes that might be useful to discuss in section.
This constellation of issues could certainly help to anchor
a series of discussions about texts from English 101, the
issues are broad enough to be included in most of the texts
and, more importantly, approached in a variety of ways. For
example, in a discussion of John Donne’s poetry, you
might have students do an analysis Donne’s discussion
of gender and religion in “Hymn to God My God”.
Having already read The Canterbury Tales, you might ask students
to measure Donne’s discussion of religion and gender
against that of Chaucer. To really flesh out the discussion,
you could even add something new to the mix by having someone
read aloud “Batter My Heart” and then ask the
class to discuss the similarities and differences between
the speaker’s relationship to God in terms of religion
and gender in each of the works.
Once I have a set of themes in mind, I try to use them to
help me structure questions for individual section lesson
plans. I also use the themes to help me think about what sorts
of media aids might be useful to bring into section (movies,
music, art). Usually, by middle of the quarter, the students
will be aware that in section we’ll be covering the
material in a way that enhances their understanding of the
texts by focusing the discussion through a set of issues which
are both topical and useful for helping them to organize their
thoughts for papers and exams.
B) Personal Goals
During my first quarter as a teaching assistant I had nightmares
(and daymares) that I would somehow mislead or confuse my
students so much that they would all fail the class and it
would be my fault. Consequently, I worked really hard to make
sure that I was a good teaching assistant, but I ended up
feeling a bit martyred at the end of the quarter. Although
none of my students were confused, misled or failed out of
the class, I couldn’t help feel a bit cheated. They
had all done well, but I couldn’t help wondering what
had I gotten out of the experience. I wasn’t even sure
if I was supposed to be getting something out of the experience
besides the satisfaction that comes when you know that you
haven’t totally bewildered and/or alienated your students.
A quick consultation with the ever-useful English Department
Graduate Student Handbook informed me that the position of
a TA “is crucial to the English Department, representing
as it does that place where graduate training, the undergraduate
curriculum, and faculty teaching responsibilities intersect.”
I read the passage as implying the following: the position
of a TA is one in which you can apply your graduate and undergraduate
training in literature to the practice of teaching literature
as an apprentice faculty member. In other words, this is your
shot to learn to be a teacher of college level literature
so learn as much as you can! The more you learn now, the more
teaching strategies you’ll have when you get your first
“real” teaching assignment.
There are an endless number of ways to become a better teacher
and a better discussion leader and I think it’s important
to keep in mind that teaching, like all crafts, is one that
you learn gradually. I’m not advocating that you set
a large number of new goals for yourself as an educator but
I do know from experience that achieving one or two small
but significant goals or learning one or more new skills can
help you to make you feel like a less martyred, more organized
and much better teaching assistant.
The following are a list of personal goals that you might
set for yourself before you begin the quarter as a teaching
assistant. I’ve divided the goals into two categories:
administrative/organizational and pedgagoy based. Both categories
are, in my opinion, equally important. Good teachers work
hard at the administrative and organizational side of teaching
in order to be better teachers in the classroom.
Administrative and Organizational Goals
Develop an efficient method of tracking students grades for
section by using Excel or a handheld organization system.
Figure out a way in which you personally can quickly memorize
your students names.
Design a grading schedule that you’ll stick to and which
allows you to hand back papers in a timely manner.
Adopt a grading rubric which you can use to quickly grade
student papers in a fair and standardized way.
Decide for yourself what aspects of student papers matter
to you the most i.e. thesis statement, paragraph unity, appropriate
quotations and specific grammar issues and vow to focus on
those issues when you grade, rather than getting overly involved
in grading minutia.
Keep a computerized record or a binder of your lesson plans
to be used in the future and to help you build a library of
teaching ideas you can use in the future.
Teaching Based Goals
Write a lesson plan—complete with discussion questions,
quotations to examine for every discussion section (this sounds
easier than it is).
Develop an in-class assignment which involves you teaching
your students something about how to write an English paper.
If you develop an assignment that you like, you can keep using
it (with some modifications) during the myriad courses you’ll
TA for at UCSB.
Make one day in section a day during which you are fully engaged
in teaching your students something new about the subject
rather than simply discussing what’s already been mentioned
in lecture. Use one or more of the texts you’ve discussed
as a jumping off point for you to lead a discussion that has
to do with your own personal teaching and/or research interests.
Part III: Day by Day Lesson Planning
I structure my daily lesson plans using a methodology developed
by a group of teachers working with St. Marks School Summer
Programs. My general formula for creating a lesson plan depends
on four components: SWBAT (Students Will Be Able To), Overview,
Business, and Discussion. In using these four components I
find it much easier to incorporate and discuss material from
lecture while also including the needs and interests of my
students and as myself as an educator. An explanation of each
component is as follows.
SWBAT
SWBAT is basically a set of goals I set for students and myself
as an educator. Early on in the course I might list after
SWBAT “feel comfortable with each other and myself as
an educator!” In other words, Students would leave my
discussion Being Able To feel comfortable with each other
and myself as an educator. I usually have three SWBAT goals
for an individual day of teaching section and the goals are
usually a mix of both administrative and content based. I
design SWBAT before I write any other part of a section lesson
plan because I find that I usually get so excited by discussion
topics that I’ll forget to adequately budget time for
discussing papers, midterms or other less urgently fun material.
The following is an example of how the SWBAT section of my
lesson plan might look on a day in the middle of the quarter
when a paper due date is coming up.
SWBAT:
Know my guidelines for papers, know what’s most important
to me in a paper
Know their paper topic and know who else in section is doing
the same topic and have a sense of how they’ll be approaching
the paper topic.
Understand/contest/critique linkages between Edna O’Brien’s
protagonist in the novel Down by the River and Joyce’s
female characters in Ulysses.
Based on these goals, I know that I’m going to be spending
quite a bit of time in section discussing papers and paper
topics. Thus, when I actually design the questions we’ll
go over in discussion, I have a sense of how much time we’ll
have to discuss each major topic.
Overview
The Overview section of my lesson plan lays out the flow of
the section and it’s where I guesstimate how much time
we’ll be spending on each topic. If my timing seems
way off then I’ll think about restructuring the SWBAT
or goals section of my lesson plan so that no discussion topic
will be covered in a skimpy manner.
The following is an example of how I would write the Overview
section of a lesson plan based on the SWBAT I developed in
the last section.
Overview:
Business (5 minutes: pass back paper prospectuses, take role,
announce showing of Michael Collins—attend showing or
be watch the video by next Tuesday!!!)
Discussion (45 minutes: paper guidelines 10 minutes, sharing
paper topics and discussing in small groups 15 minutes, discussion
of House of Splendid Isolation 20ish minutes).
Business
Unless I take role at the beginning of section, I tend to
forget to do so. I also like to make time to announce meetings
of the English Club, relevant films that might be showing
through Arts and Lecture, and/or to pass back papers, quizzes
or exams—passing back papers or exams always ends up
taking more time than I think it will. I also make it a point
to let students know some of what we’ll be doing in
section, give them a sense of the flow of the day. I also
make it a point to ask students if they have any questions
about the course, lecture or section at this point in the
day. Sometimes students are really confused by something that
the professor said or that I said, or they may be totally
lost or behind in the material. This is the point in section
for students to voice those issues. If it’s a serious
enough problem, I’ll put my lesson plan on hold and
make sure that everyone is significantly confused, lost or
bewildered before I try to have an in-depth discussion about
a text, papers, or any other subjects.
Discussion
Discussion is, of course, the most important and fun part
of teaching a discussion section. The English Department TA
Handbook includes a wealth of material on teaching discussion
sections and sequencing
discussion questions and it is included online here. The
best discussions always come when students have adequate comprehension
of the material you plan on discussing. By carefully sequencing
discussion questions using a methodology such as Bloom's
Taxonomy or the advice laid out in the English Department
Handbook you'll be able to design discussion questions which
test for comprehension and then become more nuanced and address
those holistic goals you defined for yourself early on in
the quarter. By carefully planning your individual sections
and designing a holistic lesson plan, you'll be on your way
to becoming a better educator and having more interesting
and rich discussion sections.
Resource Description |
| Author/Artist: Sarah McLemore |
Media: N/A |
| Date of Composition: Summer 2003 |
Dimensions: N/A |
| Original Course:N/A |
Bibliographic Information: N/A |
| Description: Guide |
Location of Artifact: English Department Knowledge
Base |
| Category:Guide |
Date of Publication/Exhibition: Summer 2003 |
| Period/MA Field:N/A |
Keywords: lesson plan, discussion, ta |
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