Thank you for the mini lesson. I’m always curious to find ways to improve my lesson planning and instructional capabilities. I also want to say that the woman in the video is a good speaker. I enjoyed watching this video and learning from Smekens Education!
Thank you for your kind comment! We're glad that you found the video helpful. Please visit the article on our website to access a downloadable mini-lesson planning template. www.smekenseducation.com/Execute-MiniLessons-in-4-Steps0.html
Thank you! This is great & will help me sooo much this week!! Now, I have a question: what if your scholars have difficulty working independently? My class LOVES to collaborate - which is great! But I want them to work independently. Do I send Step 4 home as homework?
Thank you for your kind words. As for your question, I think you could assign Step 4 to be done at home to ensure they are doing it alone, but I would be leery of doing that too quickly. I’d want to first gauge that they could “do” the skill in class before sending them home to practice it. That said, maybe have them execute paired and small-group products first. This builds their confidence and gives you a chance for some formative assessment to determine if they are ready to tackle this at home and alone. Here are some ideas...(www.smekenseducation.com/Scaffold-Writing-Experiences.html). Another option is to make the independent and in-class task a smaller one. Rather than a “start a new piece,” maybe they need to return to a previous piece and do a smaller application of the skill. Although it’s labeled as a “Bell Ringer” article, this might provide you with some ideas as to what these “smaller” tasks might look like (www.smekenseducation.com/Explore-Bell-Ringer-Options.html).
Excellent mini-lesson on mini-lessons!
You've helped me out. I have a job interview for Adult ESL.
Thank you for the mini lesson. I’m always curious to find ways to improve my lesson planning and instructional capabilities. I also want to say that the woman in the video is a good speaker. I enjoyed watching this video and learning from Smekens Education!
Thanks, signed up and it seems like a nice service :D I appreciate it !!
Brilliant mini-lesson skills. Thank you very much.
Thank you for making this video. Your explanation is so clear and easy to understand 😊😊
Wonderful very nice method 👏 thank you so much
Thank you! I have a job interview tomorrow for a teaching position in healthcare, and I have no experience. This is very helpful! 😊
That is so helpful. Thanks a million.
You're welcome!
Great explanation!
Thank you! It is very helpful!
Thank you for your kind comment! We're glad that you found the video helpful. Please visit the article on our website to access a downloadable mini-lesson planning template. www.smekenseducation.com/Execute-MiniLessons-in-4-Steps0.html
I just want to be you!!! Thank you!!!
Thank you for the kind words! We hope that the videos we provide help you to be the best YOU possible! As a teacher or as a student.
This is so helpful and I'm doing secondary teaching :)
We are happy to know that this helps support your instruction even in a secondary setting. Thanks for the encouraging words!
Thank you
Thank you! This is great & will help me sooo much this week!! Now, I have a question: what if your scholars have difficulty working independently? My class LOVES to collaborate - which is great! But I want them to work independently. Do I send Step 4 home as homework?
Thank you for your kind words. As for your question, I think you could assign Step 4 to be done at home to ensure they are doing it alone, but I would be leery of doing that too quickly. I’d want to first gauge that they could “do” the skill in class before sending them home to practice it. That said, maybe have them execute paired and small-group products first. This builds their confidence and gives you a chance for some formative assessment to determine if they are ready to tackle this at home and alone. Here are some ideas...(www.smekenseducation.com/Scaffold-Writing-Experiences.html).
Another option is to make the independent and in-class task a smaller one. Rather than a “start a new piece,” maybe they need to return to a previous piece and do a smaller application of the skill. Although it’s labeled as a “Bell Ringer” article, this might provide you with some ideas as to what these “smaller” tasks might look like (www.smekenseducation.com/Explore-Bell-Ringer-Options.html).
🙏🙏🙏
She looks so much like Amy Sedaris. She sounds like Amy Sedaris. How is this not Amy Sedaris?
You're funny Ma'am.