Wednesday, October 29, 2008

orienteering lesson plan


SUNY
Cortland Physical Education


















































Lesson
Plan


_5___of ­­_20__



NYS/NASPE


Standards



School
and Teacher Names:


Teaching
Style:
Command
Practice Reciprocal Self-Check Guided Discovery


Inclusion Convergent Divergent
Jigsaw Cooperative



Date:
October 20, 2008


Grade:
Middle School


# in class: 25



Objectives



Assessment Tool



Length of class: 14 mins



Domains



Psychomotor



1a/1



1. By the end of the lesson the
students will be able to walk to the degrees of North, South,
East, or West successfully.



Teacher Observation



Unit:
Orienteering


Focus: N, W, S, E



Affective



2/5



2. During the activities the
students will be working together cooperatively and give praises
when succeeding in finding the directions.



Self Assessment paper



Equipment: Poly spots,
stickers, poster holders, and maps



Cognitive



1a/2



3. Students will be able to find
more than half of the controls by using a map during class.



Teacher observation



Safety Statement



2/5



4. During the lesson the students
will be mindful of their personal space as they go from direction
to direction.



Self Assessment paper



References: PECentral.com;
Orienteering The Sport of Navigating with Map and Compass By:
Steven Boga; Professor Malmberg

























































































































































Content



Time (mins)



Organization
&


Transitions



Teaching
Progressions



Adaptations
Assessments, Reminders



Instant Activity
















  • TBI





Hook &


Set Induction



1



T


SSSSSSSSSSSS




  • How many people have always
    wanted to travel around the United States? Well, today is your
    chance!











Demo






1



T


SSSSSSSSSSSS




  • Demonstrating where North,
    South, East, and West are according to the gym by having signs
    and pointing out the directions.





  • Signal
    for attention


  • Cues


  • CFU







Body of Lesson



6



SSSSSS


SSSSSS


SS T SS



Skill:























Understanding
Degrees:


We will
explain what degree goes with what direction 0/360=North,
90=East, To be able to tell us what direction


and being able to orient yourself
with degrees 180=South, 270=West they are
facing.



















Reading
a Compass:
0/360=North, 90=East


Teaching them how to
move with a compass 180=South, 270=West



















Map
Reading:
0/360=North, 90=East Finish first


Students
will be able to read a map with degrees and 180=South,
270=West


Find the end result



















Learning
man-made map symbols: major road,
footpath, Check for understanding


Intorducing
symbols and being able to recognize them building, railroad and


on a map
fence



















Learning
nature map symbols:
streams, lake, cliff, and Check for understanding


Introducing
symbols and being able to reconogize boulder


them on a map



















Map
symbol relay:
major road, footpath,


The
students will be put into team and they will match building,
railroad, fence, Be the first team to finish the relay


the
name with the symbol.
streams, lake, cliff and



boulder



















Map
memory:
Directions, degrees and Put 15 out of 20 controls in the


The
student will look at a key map and they will have symbols
correct spot


to
remember where the controls are on the map and


place them on a blank team
map.



















Scavenger
Hunt in the gym:
Directions, degrees and The first to finish


Using a map to locate
controls in the gym symbols



















Unscramble
word hunt:
Directions, degrees and Spell the word the fastest


Locating letters to spell
out a word or phrase symbols



















Jigsaw
Puzzle:


Locating
puzzle pieces that are spread out around an Directions,
degrees and To finish the puzzle


area

symbols



















Scavenger
hunt in the gymnastics room: Directions,
degrees and To finish first


The
students will find the controls located in the
symbols


gymnastics room using a
map



















Scavenger
Hunt in PER:
Directions, degrees and To finish first


The
students will find the controls located in PER symbols


using a map



















Scavenger
Hunt outside:
Directions, degrees and To finish first


Students
will locate controls using a compass symbols


and a map







Assess












  • Finding the correct colors
    during the Color game, as well as being successful in scavenger
    games.














Closure


















  • Next week we will be
    exploring different games from different parts of the United
    States.











Pre-planning:
Previous instruction in this activity (earlier grade levels)


This
is the first time they have worked with Orienteering.











Post-planning:
“Assessment Drives Teaching:” future needs based on
assessment results


Giving the
students, the knowledge to be able to do a scavenger hunt by
themselves.








Teacher
Reflection Notes:






"Guiding and inspiring
youngsters in the process of becoming physically educated and healthy
for a lifetime."









Friday, October 24, 2008

Orienteering

Orienteering

P.E. Mini Confrence

SUNY Cortland's P.E. Mini Confrence is always a huge success. Many Physical Education Teachers from around the area come to learn new teaching techniques from other teachers. I went to the Main speaker and he was very enlightening. I was very moved by his presentation. I never knew that I was going to see a speaker that is as famous of a physical educator as he was. He has won many awards for his patience and helpful teachings to adapted students. After listening to him speak and watching clips from his life, I was very interested in becoming an adapted concentration. I only hope to some day make a positive impact on others lives like he has. I was so privledged to have seen him speak. For the rest of me teaching career I will think about him and how I want to positively change children's lives like he has. He is an inspiration to all physical Educators.
Before he spoke our class did an introduction to the confrence. We came out saying "We will teach you". It was so much fun and really got us involved and ready for the confrence. I also liked the little activity we did, that got everyone down onto the basketball floor meeting one another. It was a great way to meet future employers.
I can't wait for next years Mini Confrence and I hope to be apart of it more.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Feedback

Feedback is very important for students to hear from their teachers. Feedback allows them to understand areas they need to improve on and areas that they are being successful at. It is important with feedback that you make it go along with the cues that are taught and that you are positive with what you say.
After listening to my transcript, I gave feedback to five students. Two were boys and three were girls. I found that I am pretty even with feedback between the sexes but I usually just give feedback to the same individuals over and over again. Before I listened to my transcript I figured that my feedback was just going to be general, however I was surprised to find out that they were not all general. I was specific and postive with skills that students were performing. It was weird listening to my transcript becuase there was many breaks inbetween each feedback because I was walking around to each group. I liked listening to my transcript for my feedback because it made it very clear to me what I need to fix and how encouraging feedback should be.

Is that MY voice?

Transcripts are a great way to help students learn how to teach. Listening to their voices allows them to know if they need to have a more energenic voice or speak up louder.
For me, I feel that I spoke clearly so everyone could hear me but, I also feel I could have been more enthusiastic about my lesson. After listening to my transcript, I now know what I need to fix, but I was very happy that I did not say "um's" and 'uh's" a lot. Areas that I need to improve on are using more descriptive words when explaining a task and getting more involved in the game. I was just walking around to each group a lot and not being energetic and encouraging to the teams. I would just say a few feedback comments here and there (however, feedback is for another blog in the future).
After I was done instructing the lesson I was very annoyed with myself becuase I forgot to add an important challenge to my lesson. I really wanted to have individual scoring within the group so that there was some competition and more involvement in the activity.
For the most part, I was satisfied with how I taught and I really enjoyed listening to myself on the transcript because now I know how to improve.