Tag Archives: social-emotional learning

A Lesson Plan on Watson, Crick, and DNA

OK, folks, here is the last post for today, a lesson plan on Watson, Crick, and DNA. The work of this lesson is simply this short reading and its accompanying vocabulary-building and comprehension worksheet. I wrote this lesson last fall for the Personal Development class the school in which I served required its students to take. I wanted the material, and its presentation, to arouse the big essential question, “Is biology destiny?”

However, if you’re more interested in teaching this material as a science lesson, here is a slightly longer version of the reading and worksheet. If you want to amplify this lesson, especially for girls interested in science, the reading does mention Rosalind Franklin, whose story is a cautionary tale by any standard I recognize.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

The Prisoner’s Dilemma

Over the years, I have produced a number of documents based on the interest of one student. This reading on the prisoner’s dilemma and its vocabulary-building and comprehension worksheet are one such set of documents.

My own first exposure to the prisoner’s dilemma came from a friend who encountered it as an undergraduate in what, if memory serves, was a history course. This same friend went on to law school, so he may have encountered it there. In any case, the prisoner’s dilemma is part of a broader study of mathematical models of human cognition and resultant conduct called game theory. I actually started to develop a unit on game theory when I realized two things: the first was that the student for whom I prepared the material offered in this blog post wasn’t as interested in it as he thought; the second was that I was woefully unqualified to teach a single lesson on game theory, let alone a whole unit.

If you have the time–I didn’t–a unit on game theory might be just the thing for a certain kind of student. However, it is a complicated field, and even adapting it for struggling or alienated high school students is no small task.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

A Lesson Plan on Memory

Here is a lesson plan on memory with its work, to wit this short reading and its accompanying vocabulary-building and comprehension worksheet.

If you want them, here are slightly longer versions of these documents.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

Cultural Literacy: Survivor’s Guilt

This may not–but it may be–the best time to publish this Cultural Literacy worksheet on survivor’s guilt. Since I had it already prepared, there it is.

If you find typos in this document, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

COVID19 at Mark’s Text Terminal

March 11, 2021

In the year since the outset of this pandemic, Mark’s Text Terminal ramped up production–and the site has undergone significant revisions to simplify taxonomic systems of organizing posts, and to make the blog and its posts more searchable.

I have used my free time over this year not only to to publish material already in my data warehouse, but also to develop some new documents, especially on English usage, some short literacy exercises based on Barbara Ann Kipfer’s great book The Order of Things, and cross-disciplinary worksheets based on Judith Hochman and Natalie Wexler’s excellent framework from The Writing RevolutionAnd as I start to shine a light into the back corners and top shelves of my data warehouse, I find a number of projects I started then, for one reason or another, abandoned. For example, I have the framework for a unit on paraphrasing and summarizing that I anticipate with particular pleasure building up into something usable for teaching that important procedural knowledge.

I taught under my special education license in New York City for 16 years, so you will find that the material offered on this blog contains a lot of language about that city, and even particular places in the Five Boroughs, the better to call up and build upon prior knowledge I could be relatively confident my students possessed. For more about using worksheets from Mark’s Text Terminal, see the About Posts & Texts page just above the banner photograph. Here are a set of users’ manuals for the most commonly posted materials on this blog. As below, you may email me with any questions you might have about the material posted on this website. Nota bene, please, that most of what I post here is in Microsoft Word: that means it is easily exportable to other word processing programs, as well as adaptable to your students, children, and circumstances. I wrote most of the material found on this blog for struggling high school students. Most of it can  be easily modified for a wide range of abilities in students.

Mark’s Text Terminal can offer you a variety of seasonable materials. To help your students and children understand ex-President Trump’s response to this crisis, here is a lesson plan on personality disorders. To understand the biology of COVID19, here are a reading and comprehension worksheet on viruses. Here is a short Cultural Literacy worksheet on the concept of a pandemic (and don’t forget to tell your children or students–or both, in these circumstances–that the Greek word root pan means all and everything–though in Latin, I must point out, the same root means bread). Since our current circumstances are regularly likened to it, here is a reading and comprehension worksheet on the influenza epidemic of 1918. This reading and comprehension worksheet on immunity should definitely be au courant in our current situation, as should the same set of documents on antibodies. This reading on Edward Jenner and Smallpox explains the science of vaccination, of which I assume I needn’t belabor the importance. Finally, here is a lesson plan on using the 2020 United States census as a teachable moment.

As I peruse them, I notice on the various job search platforms there is demand for workers in health care. If you, your students, or anyone else for that matter are thinking of working in health care, you might find this list of Greek word roots used in the health professions to be useful, and perhaps even indispensable (I hope).

You will notice that the basic structure of this blog alternates posts between a set of documents and a quote of some kind. Over time, I have begun to develop these quotes–especially those tagged as readings and research–as assignments themselves. Many of these passages are linked to readings outside of Mark’s Text Terminal. If you want to use these posts for learning, here is a worksheet template with an extensive list of questions to drive inquiry in them. For more on this, see the About Posts & Texts and Taxonomies pages.

As this crisis deepened, and I read accounts of parents struggling to sustain their children’s education, it became clear to me that I should post some material on teaching practice. For now, keep this in mind: all teaching and learning starts with a question. So, here, to begin, is a a taxonomy of questions from Roland C. Christensen, David A. Garvin, and Ann Sweet’s (eds.) Education for Judgment: The Artistry of Discussion Leadership. (Cambridge: Harvard Business School Press, 1991). Here is a list of question stems to start discussion and essays. I don’t remember where I got this list of 17 Teaching Tips, but it is solid stuff and easy enough to use with whatever you’re doing at home with your kids. For my money, the best framework for instructional planning out there (because it is based firmly upon the principles in the National Research Council’s book How People Learn) is Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe’s concise yet exhaustive Understanding by Design. I’ve used it to guide my own planning since I discovered it. Here is a trove of documents from the pages of that book, as well as a couple of assessments from the pages of Integrating Differentiated Instruction and Understanding by Design: Connecting Content and Kids by Mr. McTighe and Carol Ann Tomlinson. I used the Understanding by Design framework to write this list of adapted essential questions for the struggling students I have served in social studies and English language arts classes in New York City. This table of structured activities from Janet L. Kolodner’s article “Case Based Reasoning” in The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), might help to focus home learning for the best retention. Finally, to get a sense of your child’s cognitive style, you might find useful this cognitive styles table from Daniel Willingham’s book Why Don’t Students Like School?  (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2009). I look to Professor Willingham’s work when I need guidance on the best instructional design for any learner, but particularly the struggling learners whom I have served throughout my career. If you want more on this, I wrote this review essay with all these documents embedded in a few paragraphs about teaching and learning.

As this pandemic continues, and the failure of distance learning becomes increasingly obvious, I have an opportunity to harp on a topic I take quite seriously–the importance of handwriting. If I were teaching remotely, the first thing I would figure out is how to get paper worksheets into the hands of my students. If you’re interested at all on the manifold benefits of longhand writing, here is a review essay on penmanship and handwriting with links (as usual) to outside sources affirming those benefits.

One organization worth following is TeachRock, which has developed, in a very short time, a great deal of  high-interest material. TeachRock is on Twitter , and you can sign up for its mailing list at its homepage. Highly recommended. Recently, the author of The Historical Diaries blog left her approval here in the form of liking some of my posts. Her own blog is literate and stylish, and mines history for obscure but compelling facts. It is definitely worth a look; I’ll soon publish a worksheet template here that could be used with posts on The Historical Diaries, as well as my own posts tagged with readings and research.

Your kids, especially if they are younger, would all but certainly benefit from listening to Vermont Public Radio’s (I’ve listened to public radio stations across the country, and VPR is the best of them, I think) podcast “But Why: A Podcast for Curious Kids.”

If you have any questions, or if there is something you and your students need, please leave a comment on any post with your email address. I vet all comments before they appear on the site, so you won’t be exposing your email address to the open internet. I’ll take your address, delete your comment, and get back to you. If you need something I don’t already have (I have volumes of material to publish), I can probably write something for you.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

A Lesson Plan on Psychosis

Here is a lesson plan on psychosis with the short reading and vocabulary-building and comprehension worksheet that drives it.

If you would like a slightly longer set of the work documents for this lesson, they are under that hyperlink.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

Aesop’s Fables: “The Boy Who Cried Wolf”

Here is a lesson plan on Aesop’s fable “The Boy Who Cried Wolf” along with its reading and comprehension worksheet if you can use them.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

Obesity

Health teachers, here is a reading on obesity along with its attendant vocabulary-building and comprehension worksheet. Do I need to belabor the importance of this material in a nation as fat as the United States?

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

Blog Post No. 3,001: A Trove of Documents for Teaching Stephen King’s Novella “The Body”

In keeping with something resembling a tradition at Mark’s Text Terminal, I am posting this mass of unfinished material as I round the corner to the next thousand posts here.

My first exposure to Stephen King was the film adaptation of his novella “The Body,” which director Rob Reiner rendered as “Stand By Me.” I thought it was a brilliant rite-of-passage story. So when the credits rolled and I noticed that he was the source, I needed to revise upward my opinion of Mr. King: I’d tended to think of him as a pulp novelist working in the horror genre, something he himself would probably own. I’m no stranger to pulp novels; a glance at my Goodreads shelves discloses that I read far too many mystery and thriller novels. Horror really isn’t my thing–I find everyday life plenty scary–so I never read any of Stephen King’s novels. Of course I was aware of his presence in American culture–how could one miss him?

After I began teaching high school students in 2003, I began to think about a unit on “The Body.” There was something about the universality of experience in the story that I thought would appeal to the New York City kids I was teaching–even though the story is set in rural Maine in the late 1950s.. Moreover, I saw a chance to write a comparative unit that incorporated both text and film, with an analysis of each for its strengths and weaknesses. I also wanted to use the story to build vocabulary, procedural knowledge, and a love of reading in the minds of my academic charges.

So, around 2011, I read the story, watched the movie again, and sat down to plan. What follows is the fruit of my labor. As you will quickly perceive, this unit simply got away from me. I tried to do too many things, across too long a span of time, to sustain the dramatic tension of of the story, let alone kids’ attention and interest, let alone following the narrative itself.

After I post all this material, I plan to remove it from my hard drive. Therefore, the only extant copies of it will be here in cyberspace, or perhaps on your own hard drive, should you choose to take this material.

Let’s start with the supporting material. First of all, here is the (incomplete) unit plan. I imagine I planned to use this body of text emendations to fill in lesson plans, but quite possibly the unit plan as well; it looks like something I typed up during a time-wasting faculty meeting, then emailed to myself. Next, here is a list of big exegetical questions I conceived to drive discussions; this too, alas, is incomplete. Finally, for this paragraph, here is the lesson plan template for this unit’s lessons.

Regular readers and users of this blog know that I use a lot of context clues worksheets as a means of building procedural knowledge in reading. Unsurprisingly, then, I had big plans for using them here. At this time, although I didn’t realize it, I was on my way to changing from teaching ten new vocabulary words at a time to one, which is much more appropriate for the struggling learners in whose service I have tended to work. This is the list of vocabulary words, by chapters of the novella, that I planned to teach. Here are the worksheet templates for teaching multiple words in one class session as well as only one word per class session.

Before getting to the lessons themselves, here are a learning support on basic literary terms and a worksheet template for independent practice (i.e. homework).

Now, onto the lessons. The first several are complete, but the majority are not (as I said, this really did get away from me). In the interest of preventing this post from becoming more turgid than it already is, I’ll present this in list form. All the material, lesson plans, do-nows, worksheets, and anything else related to each lesson (in Word, so you may do with them as you wish) will be consolidated into one document for easy downloading and cataloguing. These will be in two sections: finished materials and unfinished materials. Keep in mind that the unfinished materials are really only templates awaiting full development; in fact, as I review the materials, I notice that the only undeveloped part of each lesson is the multiple-word context clues worksheets. As above, I doubt very much those worksheets are even appropriate for this unit, particularly if you are teaching it to struggling learners.

I. Finished Materials

Lesson 1: This lesson deals with the the concept of a rite of passage.

Lesson 2: This lesson introduces students to, or reinforces their understanding of, the concept of metaphor.

Lesson 3: This lesson introduces students to, or reinforces their understanding of, the concept of simile.

Lesson 4: This lesson begins the reading of the novel and is a critical exegesis of chapters 1 and 2.

Lesson 5: This lesson takes students through an analysis of chapters 3 and 4.

Lesson 6: This lesson guides students through an exegesis of lessons 5 and 6.

Lesson 7: Nota bene, please, that although I prepared materials for this lesson, an exegesis of chapter 7, I didn’t actually teach it. It is a story within the story and is of questionable propriety, even for high schoolers. It really does not bear on the narrative, so it can be skipped. If you’ve read this novella, or are planning to teach it, you will definitely understand what I’m circumlocuting here.

Lesson 8: This lesson guides students through a lengthy context clues worksheet and a relatively short exegesis of chapter 9.

Lesson 9: This lesson deals with chapter 10.

Lesson 10: This lesson guides students through an analysis of chapter 11.

Lesson 11: Students will perform an an exegesis of chapter 12 in this lesson.

Lesson 12: This lesson takes students through a close reading of chapter 13.

II. Unfinished Materials

Here is all the rest of the material I wrote for this unit. Most of it is incomplete and arguably superfluous. But it is work, and someone may have use for it. I assembled as simply–and this the greatest possible brevity–as I could.

Lesson 13 (Chapter 14); Lesson 14 (Chapter 15); Lesson 15 (Chapter 16); Lesson 16 (Chapter 17); Lesson 17 (Chapter 18); Lesson 18 (Chapter 19); Lesson 19 (Chapter 20); Lesson 20 (Chapter 21); Lesson 21 (Chapters 22, 23, 24); Lesson 22 (Chapter 25); Lesson 23 (Chapter 26); Lesson 24 (Chapter 27); Lesson 25 (Chapter 28); Lesson 26 (Chapters 29,30, 31); Lesson 27 (Chapter 32); Lesson 28 (Chapter 33); Lesson 29 (Chapter 34).

That’s it! I avoided looking at this unit for several years out of fear of its quality. As I scrolled through and collated each lesson while preparing this post, I definitely felt that my anxiety was well-founded: most of it is overdeveloped, and yet somehow underdeveloped at the same time, if that is possible. As a unit, it is uneven at best. But I think it has potential as the start of something, or I would not have posted it. If nothing else, it is a pile of text that might be used for a variety of purposes beyond the unit itself.

Finally, I should mention that “The Body” is part of an omnibus called Different Seasons. Three of its four stories have been produced as films: “The Body, “The Shawshank Redemption,” and “Apt Pupil.” The fourth story, “The Breathing Method,” I learned while researching this post, will appear as a film this (2020) year. In the course of preparing the foregoing unit on “The Body” I ended up reading all four stories in this collection, and they are all first rate. Pulp novelist or no, I think there is a very good chance Stephen King’s place in American literary history will be as a worthy inheritor of Edgar Allan Poe’s mantle.

If you find typos in these documents, fix them for your own use. The chances that I will have a chance to use this material again, let alone develop it further, are slim to none. I hope you find this material useful. If you use it or develop it further, and are so inclined, please advise. I seek your peer review.

A Lesson Plan on Learning

OK, moving right along on this beautiful morning in southwestern Vermont, here is a lesson plan on learning. You’ll need this short reading and its attendant vocabulary-building and comprehension worksheet. If you need or want them, here are slightly longer versions of those documents.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.