LESSON PLAN 7
Name: Ashley Freije
Lesson Title & Subject(s): The Holocaust
Topic or Unit of Study: World War II
Grade/Level: 11
Instructional Setting:
Standard classroom. 20-25 students. A whiteboard will be at the front of the classroom as well as a projector to show computer presentations.
ore Curriculum/Student Achievement Standard(s):
USH.5.4 Describe Hitler’s “Final Solution” and identify Allied responses to the Holocaust.
USH.9.4 Describe issues/problems of the past through the viewpoints of those involved.
Lesson Goal(s):
Students will learn about Hitler’s “final solution,” including its timeline and execution. They will also learn how other nations reacted to the tragedy and it’s lasting impact.
Lesson Objective(s):
Given a list of vocabulary words, students will be able to define the terms with 80% accuracy.
Given a prompt. students will be able to provide one reason the internment of Japanese-Americans was similar to that of Jews, and one reason they were different with 75% accuracy.
Instructional Materials:
Lapsansky-Werner, Emma J., Levy, Peter B., Roberts, Randy, Taylor, Alan. (2010). United States History: reconstruction to the Present. Boston, MA: Prentice Hall.
Sequence of Instructional Procedures/Activities/Events (provide description and indicate approximate time for each):
1. Identification of Student Prerequisite Knowledge and/or Skills:
Students will have learned about Hitler’s views on Jews in a previous lesson.
2. New Knowledge and/or Skills To Be Taught:
Students will learn the details and timeline of Hitler’s “final solution” as well as its execution and effects.
3. Modeling: I Do
I will lecture students on the Holocaust, its execution, and its still-present effects.
4. Guided Practice: We Do
We will discuss the Holocaust and ho wit has influenced global policies.
5. Independent Student Practice: You Do
Students will begin work on assigned homework.
6. Culminating or Closing Procedure/Activity/Event:
I will ask students if they have any questions about the lesson and preview the next lesson.
Pedagogical Strategy (or Strategies):
Direct Instruction: Lecture
Class Discussion: Holocaust effects
Independent Practice: Homework
Differentiated Instruction:
A visual timeline will be provided for special needs children and visual learners to help them better understand the progression of Hitler’s “final solution.”
Technology Integration
A SmartBoard will project the lesson PowerPoint.
Student Assessment/Rubrics:
Students will have an assigned homework where they define key terms and give one similarity and one difference between Japanese-American internment and Jewish internment.