Lesson Plan 2: Cells & Vocabulary Continued

By , May 1, 2012 6:02 pm

This is a a second model lesson,to be used after the first for teaching vocabulary in science. It references activities from 50 Instructional Routines to Develop Content Literacy (2nd Ed) published by Pearson.

LESSON PLAN 2

March 26, 2012

SUBJECT: Science

TOPIC: Cells

GRADE: 7th

TIME/PERIOD: 50 minutes

OBJECTIVES:

SWBAT: Students will be able to explain the functions of the organelles of the cell

SWBAT: Students will be able to illustrate that all organisms are composed of cells and the reactions that sustain life occur within cells

STATE STANDARDS (COMMON CORE STANDARDS)

# (Common Core Standard) 6-8.RS.4 

Determine the meaning of symbols, key terms, and other domain-specific words and phrases as they are used in a specific scientific context relevant to grades 6-8 texts and topics.

# (Content Standard) SCI.7.3.1 2010

Explain that all living organisms are composed of one cell or multiple cells and that the many functions needed to sustain life are carried out within cells.

ELL STANDARDS

#ELP.7.1 

Word Recognition, Fluency and Vocabulary development

Language minority students will listen, speak, read, and write to convey knowledge of sounds, words, word parts, and context clues.

TIME TEACHER ACTIVITY STUDENT ACTIVITY MATERIALS
7 min Anticipatory set-the hook

  • Powerpoint “What does a cell look like” Images of the organelles of the cell, formative class assessment to identify these organelles with their functions.
  • Add to Vocabulary Awareness Chart (pg. 138 50 Activities Content Lit Book)
  • Class voting on Animal cell or Plant Cell
As students enter the room and sit down a powerpoint will be playing of various images of the different parts of a cell. After everyone has entered we will go through the powerpoint and students will participate by sharing information about organelles from their Vocabulary Awareness chart. They can add to this chart from the information given by their classmates.

Students will then vote on which type of cell they would like to build a class model for, either a plant cell, or an animal cell

  • Powerpoint
  • Board
  • Chalk/ Dry Erase makers
  Objectives

 

  • What does a cell look like + Vocabulary awareness
  • Lab- Looking at cells and Building a Cell
  • Vocabulary test next class!
This is posted on the board for the students as they come into the classroom and is referenced in instruction
  • Board
  • Chalk/ Dry Erase Markers
12 min Instruction

  1. 7 minutes to explain Lab Activities Part 1 using microscopes and slides

 

Use microscopes and slides to identify the different parts of the cell– draw, label, and describe the functions of organelles/cell parts. Students can use content guides and vocabulary awareness to complete the lab. I will be circulating the classroom asking questions of each student and making sure the lab is going smoothly, there may be some trouble with some students microscope techniques.

 

  1. 5 minutes to explain Cell Model building

 

Student will be grouped in specific lab groups from the previous activity, they will work together to complete the different part of a giant cell model with their elbow partner. They will be allowed to sign up for whichever organelle or cell part they wish. They will be expected to label the important parts of their organelle and they will present this to the class as we put the giant model together.

  • Student will listen as instructions are given then break into their lab groups to complete the lab.
  • Before the lab they will draw an example of what they expect to see in a typical animal cell and a typical plant cell.
  • The students will then work with their elbow partner to create a model of the cell organelle for which they signed up.
  • Microscopes
  • Slides
  • Lab Notebook
  • Model making materials

 

 

Students Need

  • Vocab awareness
  • Content Guides
  • Books
23 Practice

Guided:

N/A

 

Independent (Lab Groups)

All practice for this lesson is lab groups and not necessarily guided unless some groups are having trouble.

 

 

 

– Students will observe the different parts of cells under the microscope in their lab groups. They will complete labeled drawings of what they see in their lab notebook. The will include the important functions of each organelle under the drawings.

  • Students will then be grouped into partners- this time using their lab elbow partner, to complete a model of an organelle in the cell.
  • Students will label this model and present it to the class and place it in the large class model.
  • Microscopes
  • Slides
  • Lab Notebook
  • Model making materials

 

 

Students Need

  • Vocab awareness
  • Content Guides
  • Books
 5 min Assessment

Formative:

Class presentation

 

Summative:

– Vocabulary Test Next Class

 

Students will “jigsaw” the models of the different organelles which they will present to the class. Copies of the vocabulary test for next class.
3 min Closure:

Fast facts about cells, and setting up for next lesson about organs

 

Students listen as I share some quick facts about cells and reference the article they read last class from the BBC setting up for the next lesson on organs. Leaving them with the take home point: Three hundred million cells die in the human body every minute. While that sounds like a lot, it’s really just a small fraction of the cells that are in the human body. Estimates have placed the total number of cells in the body at 10-50 trillion so you can afford to lose a few hundred million without a hitch.

 

Fast Facts on Cells

Rationale for this lesson:

Through this lesson, student will be able to conceptualize what a cell looks like and the functions which are completed by the cell to sustain life (SCI 7.3.1). They will increase their content area vocabulary using the vocabulary awareness and concept guide to document their progress ((6-8 RS.4 & ELP 7.1). This lesson will allow them to discover various types of cells under the microscope and record their findings in a journal which allows them to model the actions of real scientists.

Comments are closed

Panorama Theme by Themocracy