HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
LESSON PLANNING_TRAINING.pptx
1. EFFECTIVE LESSON PLANNING
What is a lesson plan?
A teacher’s detailed description of the course of instruction of an individual person. It is a
teacher’s guide for facilitating a lesson. It typically includes the goal (what students need to
learn), how the goal will be achieved (the method of delivery and procedure) and a way to
measure how well the goal was reached (usually via homework assignments or testing).
5. What to consider when writing a lesson plan?
Know your students
Know the content
Know the
instructional
materials
• Ability and interest levels
• Backgrounds
• Attention spans
• Ability to work together in groups
• Prior knowledge and learning experiences
• Special needs and accommodations
• Learning preferences
• Subject matter that you will be teaching
• School expectations and curriculum
• National/International curriculum guides
• Technology, software, audio/visuals, teacher,
mentors, community resources, equipment,
library resources, etc
• Ability and interest levels
• Backgrounds
• Attention spans
• Ability to work together in groups
• Prior knowledge and learning experiences
• Special needs and accommodations
• Learning preferences
• Subject matter that you will be teaching
• School expectations and curriculum
• National/International curriculum guides
6. What to consider when designing a lesson plan
Ability and interest levels
Backgrounds
Attention spans
Ability to work together in groups
Prior knowledge and learning experiences
Special needs and accommodations
Learning preferences
Know your
students
Know the
content
Know the
materials
7. Know your
students
Know the
content
Know the
materials
• Subject matter that you will be teaching
• School expectations and curriculum
• National/International curriculum guides
What to consider when writing a lesson plan?
8. Know your
students
Know the
content
Know the
materials
• Subject matter that you will be teaching
• School expectations and curriculum
• National/International curriculum guides
What to consider when writing a lesson plan?
9. Key components of a lesson plan
Profile Objectives
Materials/Eq
uipment
Procedure Assessment
15. Profile
Objectives
Materials/Eq
uipment
Procedure
Assessment
Key components of a lesson plan
Outlining the steps of the teaching process
Useful instructional strategies
Make references to the biblical worldview throughout the lesson
Intersperse the lesson with evaluative questions in line with the
lesson objectives and expected student outcomes.
Have students think of the essential questions.
16. Profile
Objectives
Materials/Eq
uipment
Procedure
Assessment
Key components of a lesson plan
Assess the outcome and to what extent the
objectives were achieved
Ensure the assessment activity is directly and
explicitly tied to the stated objectives.
Take time to reflect upon the result, and revise the
lesson plan accordingly
19. The Need for Biblically Integrated Lessons
Foundational Truths
• Biblical integration is the understanding and application of biblical-theological truth to
the various spheres of life and academic study.
• Scripture is inspired (2 Tim. 3:16-17; 2 Peter 1:20-21), inerrant, infallible,
authoritative, clear, and sufficient.
As one goes through the Scriptures certain themes become prominent. These themes
form the basis of our theology and serve as the basis for the “language” we speak;
hence a Biblical worldview.
20. Worldview
• A worldview is a commitment, a fundamental
orientation of the heart, expressed as a set of
presuppositions which we hold about the basic
constitution of reality.
James Sire, The Universe Next Door
21. Worldview
• A worldview seeks to answer the following questions:
• Who am I?
• Why am I here?
• What is my purpose?
• What is wrong with the world?
• What is the solution?
• How do I determine what is right and wrong?
• Where is this world going?
• How will it all end?
22. Biblical Worldview Components
ATTRIBUTES AND ACTIVITY OF GOD
• God is triune: father son and Holy spirit. He is relational in essence and desires a relationship with His
creation. (Gen. 1:26;Matt. 3:16-17; matt. 7:11)
• God is just and good. He is the source of justice and sets the moral standard. He is the source of all
reality. (Rom. 9; John 1:1; Mark 10:18)
• God is infinite, eternal, transcendent, the great I AM, Jehovah. He is beyond this world, beyond the four
dimensions. (Exod. 3:14; Ps 90:2; John 8:58;Rev. 1:8)
• God is love, holy, intelligent, truth, logic, and reason. (John 1:1-8; 1John 4:16; 1 Pet. 3:9)
• God is personal, self conscious and self determined. He thinks, acts and has free will. (Gen 1:26; Ex.
33:19; Ps. 115:3)
• Jesus is God, man’s savior, the mediator between God and man; he died for man’s sin, was buried, and
rose from the dead. (Rom. 10:9-10; 1 Tim. 2:5; Heb. 9: 27-28)
23. CREATION AND LIFE
God created everything from nothing. (John 1:3; Gen. 1
Creation is orderly and organized, created with specific properties. (Job 38-39)
Creation is open. It is not preprogrammed but open to input by God and man. (Acts 5:12;
Heb. 2:4)
Creation Includes the visible, natural and supernatural realms. (Col. 1:16-17)
Creation is sustained by God’s power. (Col. 1: 16-17)
Creation is under a curse (Gen. 3-6)
24. Man is made in the image of God and has value and worth, Man is like God I Spirit (Gen. 1:26-28,9:6;
Ps. 139: 13-16)
Man is moral, creative, and intelligent. (James 1;5)
Man is personal. Man is self conscious, self determined, and has free will (Matt. 26: 39; Gal. 5: 10-26)
Man is lower than God but above creation. (Gen 1:26,28; Ps. 8:4-8)
Man is relational. Man was made to have relationship with God and man. (Matt. 22: 37-39; John 14:
6; Rom. 6-8; Eph. 2:18)
Man was made for a purpose. (Gen. 1;26-28)
Man was created good, sinned, fell under a curse, has a sin nature, and in need of a savior. (Is, 53:6;
Rom. 5: 12, Eph. 2:8-9)
Man is body (finite), spirit and soul (eternal). (Matt. 10:28; 1Thess. 5:23)
Mankind
25. MORAL STANDARD AND RESPONSIBILITY
• God is the source of and sets the moral standard (Ex. 20 1-17: Rom. 1:
3:21, 6,7)
• The Bible reveals the moral standard. (Rom 3:21)
• There is absolute truth, (John 1:1)
• There are good and bad consequences for actions. (Rom. 3:23; 6:23; gal;.
5:16-25, 6:7-10)
• Moral Order is upheld through the family, church and government. ( Gen. 2
18-24; Matt 1:18; Rom. 13:1-7; Eph. 5: 22-6:4; 1Cor. 12:12-31)
26. PURPOSE
• Man is to love God and man. (Duet. 6:4-8; Matt. 22: 37-39)
• God’s will should be done on earth as it is in heaven, (Matt. 6:10; Col. 3: 17)
• Man has been given dominion over earth. (Gen 1:26-28; Ps. 8: 4-6)
• Christians are to fulfil the great Commission. Christians are to go into all the world and teach and
baptize. (Matt 28: 18-20)
• History shows God’s concern for and involvement in human events. History is directed toward a
specific end. (Rom. 5; 2 Pet 3: 9)
101 Biblical Integration
https://bit.ly/3vbYyjj
27. TO-DO
• Choose a topic in your subject area/ in your department.
Develop a slide in the pattern of a biblically integrated lesson
plan on how you will teach your chosen topic.
Note:
Your lesson must show steps to differentiate the lesson.