Composing a Unit Plan
A "unit plan" is a rather nebulous concept because
a unit can vary in size (length) and complexity.
However, there are some sort of generic steps one can follow
in putting a unit plan together.
Please understand that what follows is not the final word. It is, rather, a kind of first aid kit. Please also note that integrated units,
which are increasingly common in elementary and middle schools, are
a bit more complex, though you would generally follow the same procedures
in constructing one. An integrated unit in an elementary setting teaches
more than one subject area through the same material.
A secondary "integrated unit"is generally built around
a theme that teachers of the various subjects are using to tie their
classes together. For instance, Math, Science, Social Studies,
and English teachers might all be working with the theme of "Mining." 1. The
first step, regardless of length, is to decide on the
unit topic. Before deciding to
teach a unit, you need to know whether what you are contemplating
teaching even fits into the scope and sequence of your course and
what the state and local standards are to which you need to teach.
State and local standards are available on the InterNet and probably
also in your administrators’ offices or in your departmental
office. After determining that
your idea fits your class, begin shaping it into a unit. The unit may be something like "Shaping
the Map of Modern Europe," or "Impact of the Railroads on
Westward Expansion in the U. S." or "Famous American Women,"
or "Harlem Renaissance Poetry," or even (Heaven Forbid!)
"Diagramming Sentences." In a school where the
textbooks and/or the general curriculum are imposed on you, you may
simply follow the Unit headings -- even the unit suggestions -- provided
by the teacher's manual(s) that accompany the textbooks. In some schools, you
will find some or all of the units prepared for you and on file in
the department office. You
should check with your department head/principal to see how this is
handled in your school. Some
schools encourage you to construct your own units, but some don't,
especially schools in which you work as a member of an "integrated
team" You may also choose
to follow commercial "units" given to you by publishers
or that you (or a colleague) have bought.
There are lots of these available; I encourage you to take
advantage of them, but also caution you to be very careful with them: some are good; some aren't. Review them very critically. In some schools, where
there are multiple teachers for the same subjects, you may find colleagues
who will share what they've already done. (Teachers tend not to be very quick to
do this, but ask around anyway;
it's a behavior that needs to end!) The InterNet is also
a good source of lesson and unit plans.
Again, though, be cautious. 2. Decide
what the unit objectives are. What do you want the
kids to learn and what do you want them to be able to do with the
knowledge? List these
as rather general conceptual and/or behavioral objectives: "Students will be able to list the forces that shaped
the political geography of Modern Europe," "Students will demonstrate the ability to identify compound/complex
sentences," "Students
will be able to compose a coherent essay." Check your objectives against the
state and local standards. In many schools, you will be given a list
of objectives that your students are expected to fill for your class. While it is usually okay to have objectives
that aren't on the list, you've got to be sure to cover all the required
ones. In this era of
"Standards," your job is going to increasingly depend on
whether your students pass tests that cover the state standards. If you are starting a unit from scratch,
I strongly recommend that you work from the state standards to compose your objecives. (If you don't already have your own personal
copy of them, the Illinois standards are available from the Illinois
State Board of Education website. http://www.isbe.state.il.us/ils/Default.htm) 3. The
third step, assuming you’re going to have to prepare
your own plans, is to find out what resources are available
to you. Check the stock of
materials in your classroom, your home library, colleagues’
libraries, school/district curriculum and/or resource libraries, and
school library. Check for audio-visual materials, the
availability of research materials for your students, and the like
-- videos, audio-cassettes, recordings, posters, film clips, computer
stations, software, etc. Often
your librarian will be happy to fix you up with a cart of “additional
readings” that you can keep in your room for your students for
the duration of the unit, or at least fix up a special display in
the library. One good rule of thumb
is to never depend on something you don't have in your hot
little hands as you are planning. If
you are planning to bring in a speaker, have a backup plan just in
case he/she cancels out; if some critical piece of material is "on
order," dream up an alternative just in case it doesn't arrive
on time. If you're planning a field trip, be sure
to have some make-up activities for the kids who will inevitably be
absent that day. 4. Review/Preview
the materials. Watch the films, for
instance, to make sure they are suitable -- both in terms of academic
content, film quality, and "industry rating." (You'd be
surprised at what's in some of the movies with PG ratings.)
Read the books. Check
the calculators and overheads to make sure they work. Count the manipulatives, etc. Check everything thoroughly. And have a back-up plan. (The overhead projector you checked this morning may not
work this afternoon.) 5. Decide
on an appropriate sequence for the material. You should decide this
based on both your beliefs about and knowledge of how your kids learn
best, and the nature of the material (and, of course, external mandates). Is a chronological presentation
better than a spatial presentation?
Is it better to work from the whole to the parts, the parts
to the whole, the general to the specific, the specific to the general,
etc. 6. Divide
the material into smaller chunks. <At this point,
if you haven't already done so, it would be a real smart idea to get
a school calendar!> For
a unit of several weeks duration, you would probably benefit by breaking
it up into weekly chunks first, then into days. For shorter units, divide the material
into days (class periods). 7. Decide
on daily objectives. You have to decide
what objectives each of the day's portions correlate with. You may need to change the material around
so it ties to one of your objectives, or you may have to add objectives
so all the material you want to use is tied to an objective. You may have to scrap parts of the material
because it doesn’t fit with the objectives, or you may have
to add material because you haven’t covered all the objectives. At this point, you
can begin making the general objectives more specific. Too, some of your objectives
may be external or generic ones -- objectives such as 'Demonstrates
knowledge of how to be a student,' 'Demonstrates ability to get along
with others,' or 'Demonstrates ability to follow directions' -- that
you teach to all year long and that are not tied to the material per
se .
With these, you need to figure out ways to either integrate
them into the unit, or at least to test them with the unit materials. 8. Begin
composing your daily lesson plans. Constantly correlate
the lesson plans with the objectives
and sequences outlined for the unit. When you finish, what you should have is a rather large stack of daily lesson plans tied together with an introductory prose narrative. |