Lesson Plan 1 - Presentation Up 2

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/8/2019 Lesson Plan 1 - Presentation Up 2

    1/5

    1

    Lesson Plan Outline

    Introduction

    Lesson topic: Franklin D. Roosevelts New Deal

    Length of Lesson: (anticipated duration 90 minutes)

    VA Standards of Learning:

    USII.6 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the social, economic, and

    technological changes of the early twentieth century by

    d) identifying the causes of the Great Depression, its impact on Americans, and the

    major features of Franklin D. Roosevelts New Deal.

    Cognitive Objectives

    1. Students will identify and define the major programs of FDRs New Deal.

    2. Students will explain how these programs were supposed to address the problems of the

    Great Depression.

    Materials/Technology and Advanced Preparation

    1. Computer w/projector and internet access;

    2. Audio excerpts from FDRs First Inaugural Address: (www.hpol.org/fdr/inaug/) from

    3:35 4:17, then 8:20 12:15 of recording.

    3. Powerpoint on New Deal Programs (attached);

    4. Alphabet Soup worksheet (attached);

    5. Basket with acronyms on slips of paper;

    6. 8 x 8 squares of poster board.

  • 8/8/2019 Lesson Plan 1 - Presentation Up 2

    2/5

  • 8/8/2019 Lesson Plan 1 - Presentation Up 2

    3/5

    3

    o Teacher will then ask the students to identify whether they think the agency/program is

    designed to provide relief, to assist in recovery, or to reform the system and why noting

    that some agencies/programs may have more than one purpose.

    Closure

    o Beginning in the front corner of the room the teacher will ask the first student to stand

    next to the second.

    o The teacher will draw acronyms from a basket, the student who identifies the

    agency/program correctly will move to stand next to the third student, where process will

    be repeated until someone makes it to the end of the classroom (round robin).

    Homework

    o Teacher will then pass the basket of acronyms around the room asking each student to

    draw one acronym from the basket. Teacher will also pass out 8 x 8 squares of poster

    board to each student.

    o Teacher will explain that, for homework, each student is to design a square that best

    symbolizes the agency whose acronym the student has drawn. The design may be

    done in marker, crayon, colored pencil, pencil, with construction paper or any other

    media the student wishes to use.

    o On the back of each square student is to write their name, the acronym of the agency

    chosen, the true name of the agency chosen, the purpose of the agency, and whether

    the agency exists (in some form) today. These blocks will later be used as game pieces

    for review games.

    o Teacher will write this assignment on the blackboard and remind students to write the

    assignment in their agenda books.

    Assessment

    Formative During the course of the lesson, teacher will gauge students understanding of the

    material based on the note taking on the worksheet as well as responses to questions.

  • 8/8/2019 Lesson Plan 1 - Presentation Up 2

    4/5

    4

    Summative Students will be asked in the following class to identify the agency/program their

    quilt square identifies and why the design created reflects this agency as well as whether the

    agency exists today. Questions concerning the major new deal programs will appear on the unit

    test.

    References

    Adams, D. and Goldbard, A. (1995). New Deal Cultural Programs: Experiments in Cultural

    Democracy. Downloaded fromhttp://www.wwcd.org/policy/US/newdeal.html.

    Appleby, J., Brinkley, A., and McPherson, J. (2005). The American Journey Reconstruction to

    the Present. Backlick, OH: Glencoe McGraw Hill.

    Bryan, J. The Great Depression and New Deal. Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute.

    Retrieved

    from www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1998/4/98.04.04.x.html.

    Citizendium. New Deal-Timelines. Downloaded from

    www.en.citizendium.org/wiki/New_Deal/Timelines.

    Cohen, A. (2009 ) Nothing to Fear:FDR's Inner Circle and the Hundred Days That Created

    Modern America. New York, NY: The Penguin Press.

    Farm Credit Administration: History of the FCA and FCS. Downloaded from

    http://www.fca.gov/about/history/historyFCA_FCS.html.

    The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. Downloaded from

    www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu.

    Hoch, B. (7/22/2005). The Three Rs: Relief, Recovery and Reform through New Deal

    Programs. Downloaded from http://theomahaproject.org.

    Kangas, S. (1997), The Great Depression: Its Causes and Cure. Liberalism Resurgent.

    Downloaded from http://www.THE_GREAT_DEPRESSION.htm.

    National Labor Relations Board: National Labor Relations Board Overview. Downloaded from

    www.nlrb.gov

  • 8/8/2019 Lesson Plan 1 - Presentation Up 2

    5/5

    5

    Nehls, K. and Burney, C. (12/6/2005). The Effect of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, downloaded

    from http://www.theomahaproject.org.

    University of Washington Libraries. Essay: The Federal Emergency Management Relief

    Administration (FERA) . Downloaded from

    http://content.lib.washington.edu/feraweb/essay.html.

    US Department of Labor. Downloaded from http://www.dol.gov/whd/flsa/index.htm.