Sample Lesson Plan
Sample: School Age Lesson Plan Template
Part 1: The Plan
Standards:
- CCSS.Math.Content.K.G.B.5
- Model shapes in the world by building shapes from components (e.g., sticks and clay balls) and drawing shapes.
- CCSS.Math.Content.K.G.B.4
- Analyze and compare two- and three-dimensional shapes, in different sizes and orientations, using informal language to describe their similarities, differences, parts (e.g., number of sides and vertices/”corners”) and other attributes (e.g., having sides of equal length).
Objective
The student will create triangles with 3 sides and 3 corners, but with different length sides using straws and playdough.
Set Up and Materials needed
- Book: Triangle (The Shapes Trilogy) by Mac Barnett
- Laminated poster with Triangle shaped pictures:
- Pizza slice
- Watermelon wedge
- Roof
- Tent
- Hanger
- Half of a sandwich
- Laminated poster with different shaped triangles facing different directions
- Straws cut into different lengths
- Playdough
- Trays arranged with a ball of playdough and 21 straws.
- One tray per student.
Key Terms
- Triangle
- Sides
- Corners
Activity Procedure
Anticipatory Set:
- Read Triangle (The Shapes Trilogy) aloud to the class.
- Ask: Why couldn’t the square fit through the Triangle’s door? How is a square different from a triangle?
- Prompt students until they state that a triangle has 3 sides and 3 corners.
Direct Instruction:
- Present Poster 1 with the pictures in a triangle shape.
- Use a dry erase marker to draw a triangle over the first picture.
- Say:
- The pizza slice is in the shape of a triangle.
- How many sides did I draw?
- How many corners can you count?
- Have a child come up and count the sides and corners.
- Repeat with the other pictures.
- Present Poster 2: Ask:
- Are these all triangles?
- How do you know?
- Have children come up and count sides and corners for each.
Guided Practice:
- Students are sitting on a carpet in a circle.
- Take out a tray with playdough and different size straws.
- Say: Let me show you how I can make a triangle with these shapes.
- Model carefully adding a small ball of playdough for each of the three corners.
- Hold up the triangle and ask: Is this a triangle?
- Turn it in a different direction and ask: Is it still a triangle?
- Give students a tray with straws and playdough.
- Ask them to get three straws of the same size and make a triangle.
- Ask them to get two straws of the same size and choose a 3rd to make a triangle.
- Ask them to get 3 straws of different sizes to make a triangle.
Independent Practice:
Give students time to make different triangles until all of their straws are used.
Closure:
- Put a poster size piece of paper in the middle of the circle
- Ask students, one at a time, to bring their favorite triangle that they made and lay it carefully on the poster paper.
- Each time ask: Does your triangle have 3 sides and 3 corners?
- When all triangles on the poster paper, prompt students to recognize that triangles sometimes look different and are facing different directions but they all have 3 sides and 3 corners.
Assessment
Students will be given a page of quadrilaterals and triangles of different sizes. Students will be able to point to all of the triangles.
Modifications
Create a poster showing the steps for creating triangles with straws and playdough. Have models of 3 equal sides, 2 equal sides and no equal sides.
Extensions
- Students can make triangles with bigger materials such as yard sticks or pvc pipes.
- Students can trace triangle shapes, overlap them and color new triangles formed while doing so.
Guided review of the Sample Lesson Plan
- Do the two standards go together?
- Read the objective statement and the assessment. Are they aligned?
- Read the materials list. How might a teacher prepare these materials beforehand?
- Read the procedure. Can you visualize the lesson and recreate it?
- Read the modifications and extensions. Did this lesson lead to flexibility for diverse learners?
Resources and References
- National Governors Association Center for Best Practices and Council of Chief State School Officers. (2022). Mathematics Standards. https://www.thecorestandards.org/Math/