sample lesson plan in research

Think Like a Researcher: Instruction Resources: #6 Developing Successful Research Questions

  • Guide Organization
  • Overall Summary
  • #1 Think Like a Researcher!
  • #2 How to Read a Scholarly Article
  • #3 Reading for Keywords (CREDO)
  • #4 Using Google for Academic Research
  • #4 Using Google for Academic Research (Alternate)
  • #5 Integrating Sources
  • Research Question Discussion
  • #7 Avoiding Researcher Bias
  • #8 Understanding the Information Cycle
  • #9 Exploring Databases
  • #10 Library Session
  • #11 Post Library Session Activities
  • Summary - Readings
  • Summary - Research Journal Prompts
  • Summary - Key Assignments
  • Jigsaw Readings
  • Permission Form

Course Learning Outcome:   Develop ability to synthesize and express complex ideas; demonstrate information literacy and be able to work with evidence

Goal:  Develop students’ ability to recognize and create successful research questions

Specifically, students will be able to

  • identify the components of a successful research question.
  • create a viable research question.

What Makes a Good Research Topic Handout

These handouts are intended to be used as a discussion generator that will help students develop a solid research topic or question. Many students start with topics that are poorly articulated, too broad, unarguable, or are socially insignificant. Each of these problems may result in a topic that is virtually un-researchable. Starting with a researchable topic is critical to writing an effective paper.

Research shows that students are much more invested in writing when they are able to choose their own topics. However, there is also research to support the notion that students are completely overwhelmed and frustrated when they are given complete freedom to write about whatever they choose. Providing some structure or topic themes that allow students to make bounded choices may be a way mitigate these competing realities.

These handouts can be modified or edited for your purposes.  One can be used as a handout for students while the other can serve as a sample answer key.  The document is best used as part of a process.  For instance, perhaps starting with discussing the issues and potential research questions, moving on to problems and social significance but returning to proposals/solutions at a later date.

  • Research Questions - Handout Key (2 pgs) This document is a condensed version of "What Makes a Good Research Topic". It serves as a key.
  • Research Questions - Handout for Students (2 pgs) This document could be used with a class to discuss sample research questions (are they suitable?) and to have them start thinking about problems, social significance, and solutions for additional sample research questions.
  • Research Question Discussion This tab includes materials for introduction students to research question criteria for a problem/solution essay.

Additional Resources

These documents have similarities to those above.  They represent original documents and conversations about research questions from previous TRAIL trainings.

  • What Makes a Good Research Topic? - Original Handout (4 pgs)
  • What Makes a Good Research Topic? Revised Jan. 2016 (4 pgs)
  • What Makes a Good Research Topic? Revised Jan 2016 with comments

Topic Selection (NCSU Libraries)

Howard, Rebecca Moore, Tricia Serviss, and Tanya K. Rodrigues. " Writing from sources, writing from sentences ." Writing & Pedagogy 2.2 (2010): 177-192.

Research Journal

Assign after students have participated in the Developing Successful Research Topics/Questions Lesson OR have drafted a Research Proposal.

Think about your potential research question.

  • What is the problem that underlies your question?
  • Is the problem of social significance? Explain.
  • Is your proposed solution to the problem feasible? Explain.
  • Do you think there is evidence to support your solution?

Keys for Writers - Additional Resource

Keys for Writers (Raimes and Miller-Cochran) includes a section to guide students in the formation of an arguable claim (thesis).  The authors advise students to avoid the following since they are not debatable. 

  • "a neutral statement, which gives no hint of the writer's position"
  • "an announcement of the paper's broad subject"
  • "a fact, which is not arguable"
  • "a truism (statement that is obviously true)"
  • "a personal or religious conviction that cannot be logically debated"
  • "an opinion based only on your feelings"
  • "a sweeping generalization" (Section 4C, pg. 52)

The book also provides examples and key points (pg. 53) for a good working thesis.

  • << Previous: #5 Integrating Sources
  • Next: Research Question Discussion >>
  • Last Updated: Sep 29, 2023 2:51 PM
  • URL: https://libguides.ucmerced.edu/think_like_a_researcher

University of California, Merced

Building a Lesson Plan

Introduction, 1. lesson plan template, find good lesson plan examples.

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Contact the Education Librarian

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  • View on YouTube The full video transcript is available in the description on YouTube.

Download this template for your lesson plan, and fill it out as you move through each section of this guide.

  • Danielson Framework Lesson Plan Template

Looking at existing lesson plans is a great starting point for understanding them, but it's important to make sure that you work from good, reliable examples. Here are a few good places to find them:

Teacher Professional Organizations

  • Search for "lesson plan" at the National Education Association's resource library
  • Lesson plans from the National Council of Teachers of English
  • Classroom resources from the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics Free resources for non-members are available near the bottom of the page.
  • Lesson plans from the National Science Teaching Association

Trustworthy Sources: Educational Producers, News Sources, Museums, and National Organizations

  • Social Studies lesson plans from PBS
  • Lesson plans from the New York Times
  • Lesson plans in the arts and history from the National Endowment for the Humanities
  • Lesson plans in English and social studies from the Pulitzer Center
  • Art and architecture lesson plans from the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Sites Where Professional Teachers Share Lesson Plans

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Princeton University Library

Doing research at princeton's library: introduction: sample lesson plans.

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  • Library Nuts and Bolts
  • 1)Background Information
  • 4)Specialized Article Databases
  • 5)News Sources
  • Teaching with Special Collections
  • Evaluating Your Sources
  • Sample Lesson Plans
  • Bibliographies Made Simple!
  • Academic Integrity at Princeton

Sample Library Research Lesson Plans

  • Intro to the PUL/PWP Collaboration (includes lesson plan ideas)
  • The Great Library Scavenger Hunt
  • Ideal (or ""Dream") Source Exercise
  • << Previous: Evaluating Your Sources
  • Next: Bibliographies Made Simple! >>
  • Last Updated: Dec 19, 2023 3:42 PM
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100 Activities for Teaching Research Methods

100 Activities for Teaching Research Methods

  • Catherine Dawson - Self-employed researcher and writer
  • Description

A sourcebook of exercises, games, scenarios and role plays, this practical, user-friendly guide provides a complete and valuable resource for research methods tutors, teachers and lecturers. 

Developed to complement and enhance existing course materials, the 100 ready-to-use activities encourage innovative and engaging classroom practice in seven areas:

  • finding and using sources of information
  • planning a research project
  • conducting research
  • using and analyzing data
  • disseminating results
  • acting ethically
  • developing deeper research skills.

Each of the activities is divided into a section on tutor notes and student handouts. Tutor notes contain clear guidance about the purpose, level and type of activity, along with a range of discussion notes that signpost key issues and research insights. Important terms, related activities and further reading suggestions are also included.

Not only does the A4 format make the student handouts easy to photocopy, they are also available to download and print directly from the book’s companion website for easy distribution in class.

Supplements

Catherine's book is a fantastic resource for anyone who is teaching research methods in the social sciences. Covering all aspects of the research process, it is packed full of innovative ideas, useful tips, and structured activities for use within the classroom. If you are a tutor, teacher, or lecturer who is looking to provide interesting and engaging content for your students, this book is an absolute 'must have'.

Every university with a Social Science department has to deliver research methods in some capacity, but there is no need for us all to sit in our institutional silos and reinvent the wheel. Dawson provides a huge and varied list of pre-designed activities for methods teachers to draw upon covering the whole research process and an eclectic range of methodological approaches. The activities are pedagogically engaging, comprehensively resourced and provide us with an opportunity to rethink how social science research methods can be taught in a more interactive and engaging way.

Preview this book

Sample materials & chapters.

100 Activities for Teaching Research Methods: Listening to Interviewees

For instructors

Select a purchasing option, order from:.

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100 Activities for Teaching Study Skills

Teaching at NYU Libraries

  • 1. Orientation to the Instruction Program
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  • 3. Practicalities & How-To's
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  • Lesson Plans

Sample Lesson Plans

Tours and workshops, foundational classes, subject-specific classes.

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Feel free to make a copy any of the sample lesson plans linked to below, to use as is or adapt for your own purposes.

Do you have a lesson plan to share? This collection is meant to be a continually evolving resource and we welcome your contributions. Send your lesson plan to UIS at [email protected] and we'll upload it into this page.

NYU Libraries offers tours and workshops during NYU Welcome, as well as other times throughout the year. Individual students can find out about and sign up for these tours and workshops at library.nyu.edu/classes .

Folder of tour outlines and workshop lesson plans , containing:

  • Tours of Bobst Library
  • Research 101
  • Research 201
  • Intro to RefWorks

These classes are requested by course instructors and taught by members of the Libraries Core Instruction Team (i.e. UIS librarians and TLE associates).

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First Year Writing

Cas - administered by the expository writing program (ewp).

  • First semester course:   Writing the Essay
  • Second semester course :   none
  • Resources: Course progressions and BEAM method 

GALLATIN - Administered by Gallatin

  • Sample lesson plan for FYWS
  • Sample lesson plan for FYRS

LIBERAL STUDIES - Administered by Liberal Studies

  • Sample lesson plan for Writing as Exploration
  • Sample lesson plan for Writing as Critical Inquiry

NURSING - Administered by EWP

  • See CAS for sample lesson plan

SILVER - Administered by EWP

Sps - administered by sps.

  • Sample lesson plan for Writing Workshop I
  • Sample lesson plan for Writing Workshop II

STEINHARDT - Administered by EWP

  • Sample lesson plan for ACE: Education

TANDON - Administered by EWP

  • Sample lesson plan for ACE

TISCH - Administered by EWP

  • Sample lesson plan for WTE: Art
  • Sample lesson plan for ACE: Art

Caribbean Cultures (Global Cultures, Global Liberal Studies)

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  • Last Updated: Jan 23, 2024 12:18 PM
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  • Research Skills

50 Mini-Lessons For Teaching Students Research Skills

Please note, I am no longer blogging and this post hasn’t updated since April 2020.

For a number of years, Seth Godin has been talking about the need to “ connect the dots” rather than “collect the dots” . That is, rather than memorising information, students must be able to learn how to solve new problems, see patterns, and combine multiple perspectives.

Solid research skills underpin this. Having the fluency to find and use information successfully is an essential skill for life and work.

Today’s students have more information at their fingertips than ever before and this means the role of the teacher as a guide is more important than ever.

You might be wondering how you can fit teaching research skills into a busy curriculum? There aren’t enough hours in the day! The good news is, there are so many mini-lessons you can do to build students’ skills over time.

This post outlines 50 ideas for activities that could be done in just a few minutes (or stretched out to a longer lesson if you have the time!).

Learn More About The Research Process

I have a popular post called Teach Students How To Research Online In 5 Steps. It outlines a five-step approach to break down the research process into manageable chunks.

Learn about a simple search process for students in primary school, middle school, or high school Kathleen Morris

This post shares ideas for mini-lessons that could be carried out in the classroom throughout the year to help build students’ skills in the five areas of: clarify, search, delve, evaluate , and cite . It also includes ideas for learning about staying organised throughout the research process.

Notes about the 50 research activities:

  • These ideas can be adapted for different age groups from middle primary/elementary to senior high school.
  • Many of these ideas can be repeated throughout the year.
  • Depending on the age of your students, you can decide whether the activity will be more teacher or student led. Some activities suggest coming up with a list of words, questions, or phrases. Teachers of younger students could generate these themselves.
  • Depending on how much time you have, many of the activities can be either quickly modelled by the teacher, or extended to an hour-long lesson.
  • Some of the activities could fit into more than one category.
  • Looking for simple articles for younger students for some of the activities? Try DOGO News or Time for Kids . Newsela is also a great resource but you do need to sign up for free account.
  • Why not try a few activities in a staff meeting? Everyone can always brush up on their own research skills!

sample lesson plan in research

  • Choose a topic (e.g. koalas, basketball, Mount Everest) . Write as many questions as you can think of relating to that topic.
  • Make a mindmap of a topic you’re currently learning about. This could be either on paper or using an online tool like Bubbl.us .
  • Read a short book or article. Make a list of 5 words from the text that you don’t totally understand. Look up the meaning of the words in a dictionary (online or paper).
  • Look at a printed or digital copy of a short article with the title removed. Come up with as many different titles as possible that would fit the article.
  • Come up with a list of 5 different questions you could type into Google (e.g. Which country in Asia has the largest population?) Circle the keywords in each question.
  • Write down 10 words to describe a person, place, or topic. Come up with synonyms for these words using a tool like  Thesaurus.com .
  • Write pairs of synonyms on post-it notes (this could be done by the teacher or students). Each student in the class has one post-it note and walks around the classroom to find the person with the synonym to their word.

sample lesson plan in research

  • Explore how to search Google using your voice (i.e. click/tap on the microphone in the Google search box or on your phone/tablet keyboard) . List the pros and cons of using voice and text to search.
  • Open two different search engines in your browser such as Google and Bing. Type in a query and compare the results. Do all search engines work exactly the same?
  • Have students work in pairs to try out a different search engine (there are 11 listed here ). Report back to the class on the pros and cons.
  • Think of something you’re curious about, (e.g. What endangered animals live in the Amazon Rainforest?). Open Google in two tabs. In one search, type in one or two keywords ( e.g. Amazon Rainforest) . In the other search type in multiple relevant keywords (e.g. endangered animals Amazon rainforest).  Compare the results. Discuss the importance of being specific.
  • Similar to above, try two different searches where one phrase is in quotation marks and the other is not. For example, Origin of “raining cats and dogs” and Origin of raining cats and dogs . Discuss the difference that using quotation marks makes (It tells Google to search for the precise keywords in order.)
  • Try writing a question in Google with a few minor spelling mistakes. What happens? What happens if you add or leave out punctuation ?
  • Try the AGoogleADay.com daily search challenges from Google. The questions help older students learn about choosing keywords, deconstructing questions, and altering keywords.
  • Explore how Google uses autocomplete to suggest searches quickly. Try it out by typing in various queries (e.g. How to draw… or What is the tallest…). Discuss how these suggestions come about, how to use them, and whether they’re usually helpful.
  • Watch this video  from Code.org to learn more about how search works .
  • Take a look at  20 Instant Google Searches your Students Need to Know  by Eric Curts to learn about “ instant searches ”. Try one to try out. Perhaps each student could be assigned one to try and share with the class.
  • Experiment with typing some questions into Google that have a clear answer (e.g. “What is a parallelogram?” or “What is the highest mountain in the world?” or “What is the population of Australia?”). Look at the different ways the answers are displayed instantly within the search results — dictionary definitions, image cards, graphs etc.

What is the population of Australia

  • Watch the video How Does Google Know Everything About Me?  by Scientific American. Discuss the PageRank algorithm and how Google uses your data to customise search results.
  • Brainstorm a list of popular domains   (e.g. .com, .com.au, or your country’s domain) . Discuss if any domains might be more reliable than others and why (e.g. .gov or .edu) .
  • Discuss (or research) ways to open Google search results in a new tab to save your original search results  (i.e. right-click > open link in new tab or press control/command and click the link).
  • Try out a few Google searches (perhaps start with things like “car service” “cat food” or “fresh flowers”). A re there advertisements within the results? Discuss where these appear and how to spot them.
  • Look at ways to filter search results by using the tabs at the top of the page in Google (i.e. news, images, shopping, maps, videos etc.). Do the same filters appear for all Google searches? Try out a few different searches and see.
  • Type a question into Google and look for the “People also ask” and “Searches related to…” sections. Discuss how these could be useful. When should you use them or ignore them so you don’t go off on an irrelevant tangent? Is the information in the drop-down section under “People also ask” always the best?
  • Often, more current search results are more useful. Click on “tools” under the Google search box and then “any time” and your time frame of choice such as “Past month” or “Past year”.
  • Have students annotate their own “anatomy of a search result” example like the one I made below. Explore the different ways search results display; some have more details like sitelinks and some do not.

Anatomy of a google search result

  • Find two articles on a news topic from different publications. Or find a news article and an opinion piece on the same topic. Make a Venn diagram comparing the similarities and differences.
  • Choose a graph, map, or chart from The New York Times’ What’s Going On In This Graph series . Have a whole class or small group discussion about the data.
  • Look at images stripped of their captions on What’s Going On In This Picture? by The New York Times. Discuss the images in pairs or small groups. What can you tell?
  • Explore a website together as a class or in pairs — perhaps a news website. Identify all the advertisements .
  • Have a look at a fake website either as a whole class or in pairs/small groups. See if students can spot that these sites are not real. Discuss the fact that you can’t believe everything that’s online. Get started with these four examples of fake websites from Eric Curts.
  • Give students a copy of my website evaluation flowchart to analyse and then discuss as a class. Read more about the flowchart in this post.
  • As a class, look at a prompt from Mike Caulfield’s Four Moves . Either together or in small groups, have students fact check the prompts on the site. This resource explains more about the fact checking process. Note: some of these prompts are not suitable for younger students.
  • Practice skim reading — give students one minute to read a short article. Ask them to discuss what stood out to them. Headings? Bold words? Quotes? Then give students ten minutes to read the same article and discuss deep reading.

sample lesson plan in research

All students can benefit from learning about plagiarism, copyright, how to write information in their own words, and how to acknowledge the source. However, the formality of this process will depend on your students’ age and your curriculum guidelines.

  • Watch the video Citation for Beginners for an introduction to citation. Discuss the key points to remember.
  • Look up the definition of plagiarism using a variety of sources (dictionary, video, Wikipedia etc.). Create a definition as a class.
  • Find an interesting video on YouTube (perhaps a “life hack” video) and write a brief summary in your own words.
  • Have students pair up and tell each other about their weekend. Then have the listener try to verbalise or write their friend’s recount in their own words. Discuss how accurate this was.
  • Read the class a copy of a well known fairy tale. Have them write a short summary in their own words. Compare the versions that different students come up with.
  • Try out MyBib — a handy free online tool without ads that helps you create citations quickly and easily.
  • Give primary/elementary students a copy of Kathy Schrock’s Guide to Citation that matches their grade level (the guide covers grades 1 to 6). Choose one form of citation and create some examples as a class (e.g. a website or a book).
  • Make a list of things that are okay and not okay to do when researching, e.g. copy text from a website, use any image from Google images, paraphrase in your own words and cite your source, add a short quote and cite the source. 
  • Have students read a short article and then come up with a summary that would be considered plagiarism and one that would not be considered plagiarism. These could be shared with the class and the students asked to decide which one shows an example of plagiarism .
  • Older students could investigate the difference between paraphrasing and summarising . They could create a Venn diagram that compares the two.
  • Write a list of statements on the board that might be true or false ( e.g. The 1956 Olympics were held in Melbourne, Australia. The rhinoceros is the largest land animal in the world. The current marathon world record is 2 hours, 7 minutes). Have students research these statements and decide whether they’re true or false by sharing their citations.

Staying Organised

sample lesson plan in research

  • Make a list of different ways you can take notes while researching — Google Docs, Google Keep, pen and paper etc. Discuss the pros and cons of each method.
  • Learn the keyboard shortcuts to help manage tabs (e.g. open new tab, reopen closed tab, go to next tab etc.). Perhaps students could all try out the shortcuts and share their favourite one with the class.
  • Find a collection of resources on a topic and add them to a Wakelet .
  • Listen to a short podcast or watch a brief video on a certain topic and sketchnote ideas. Sylvia Duckworth has some great tips about live sketchnoting
  • Learn how to use split screen to have one window open with your research, and another open with your notes (e.g. a Google spreadsheet, Google Doc, Microsoft Word or OneNote etc.) .

All teachers know it’s important to teach students to research well. Investing time in this process will also pay off throughout the year and the years to come. Students will be able to focus on analysing and synthesizing information, rather than the mechanics of the research process.

By trying out as many of these mini-lessons as possible throughout the year, you’ll be really helping your students to thrive in all areas of school, work, and life.

Also remember to model your own searches explicitly during class time. Talk out loud as you look things up and ask students for input. Learning together is the way to go!

You Might Also Enjoy Reading:

How To Evaluate Websites: A Guide For Teachers And Students

Five Tips for Teaching Students How to Research and Filter Information

Typing Tips: The How and Why of Teaching Students Keyboarding Skills

8 Ways Teachers And Schools Can Communicate With Parents

Learn how to teach research skills to primary students, middle school students, or high school students. 50 activities that could be done in just a few minutes a day. Lots of Google search tips and research tips for kids and teachers. Free PDF included! Kathleen Morris | Primary Tech

10 Replies to “50 Mini-Lessons For Teaching Students Research Skills”

Loving these ideas, thank you

This list is amazing. Thank you so much!

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So glad it’s helpful, Alex! 🙂

Hi I am a student who really needed some help on how to reasearch thanks for the help.

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So glad it helped! 🙂

seriously seriously grateful for your post. 🙂

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So glad it’s helpful! Makes my day 🙂

How do you get the 50 mini lessons. I got the free one but am interested in the full version.

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Hi Tracey, The link to the PDF with the 50 mini lessons is in the post. Here it is . Check out this post if you need more advice on teaching students how to research online. Hope that helps! Kathleen

Best wishes to you as you face your health battler. Hoping you’ve come out stronger and healthier from it. Your website is so helpful.

Comments are closed.

Research Lesson Plan: Research to Build and Present Knowledge

*Click to open and customize your own copy of the  Research Lesson Plan.  

This lesson accompanies the BrainPOP topic Research , and supports the standard of gathering relevant information from multiple sources. Students demonstrate understanding through a variety of projects.

Step 1: ACTIVATE PRIOR KNOWLEDGE

Prompt students to think of a time they had to do research, either for school or for themselves. Ask: 

  • How did you determine what information to look for?
  • What went well? What was challenging?

Step 2: BUILD KNOWLEDGE

  • Read aloud the description on the Research topic page .
  • Play the Movie , pausing to check for understanding. 
  • Assign Related Reading .  

Step 3: APPLY and ASSESS 

Assign Research Challenge and Quiz , prompting students to apply essential literacy skills while demonstrating what they learned about this topic.

Step 4: DEEPEN and EXTEND

Students express what they learned about research while practicing essential literacy skills with one or more of the following activities. Differentiate by assigning ones that meet individual student needs.

  • Make-a-Movie : Create a tutorial that explains the steps for writing a research report.
  • Make-a-Map : Make a spider map in which you state a research question in the center, and around it, identify sub questions and sources for finding answers in order to write a research report.
  • Creative Coding : Code a museum where each artifact represents a component of the research process.

More to Explore

Related BrainPOP Topics : Deepen understanding of research with these topics: Online Sources , Internet Search , and Citing Sources . 

Teacher Support Resources:

  • Pause Point Overview : Video tutorial showing how Pause Points actively engage students to stop, think, and express ideas.  
  • Learning Activities Modifications : Strategies to meet ELL and other instructional and student needs.
  • Learning Activities Support : Resources for best practices using BrainPOP.

Lesson Plan Common Core State Standards Alignments

sample lesson plan in research

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Anaheim Elementary School District

Research Based Lesson Design

Here is the presentation used at the Dig Deeper into RBLD training .

In Anaheim Elementary School District, our core audience is English learners.  Tier one instruction must be designed to meet the needs of at least 80% of students which typically includes English learners.  While all students benefit from Explicit Direct Instruction (EDI), English learners need EL scaffolds in conjunction with EDI.  With Research Based Lesson Design (RBLD), English learner strategies are planned for every instructional phases of EDI.  For a one page printable handout of the EL scaffolds in RBLD,  click here .

Both Concept Development and Guided Practice are taught using  a gradual release of responsibility .

For lesson planning, the  sequence that RBLD phases are planned  differs from the order in which they are taught.  Grade level teams are encouraged to collaborate in planning lessons.  A lesson using RBLD can be planned using different formats.  Some possible options are in a  PowerPoint , on paper and pencil, on a poster, or using this optional  template  (Click “File,” then “Make a copy.”)  Contact your Curriculum Coach for any support.

Learning Objectives

Activate prior knowledge, lesson importance, concept development, skill development, guided practice, lesson closure, independent practice, strategies used throughout a lesson.

Content objective is defined, displayed, and reviewed orally.

Visuals/TPR as appropriate for clarification

Highlight, circle, color code

Academic language restated in more comprehensible language

Sentence stem

Prior lesson visual support

Primary language connections (e.g. cognates)

Write, draw, share, TPR during Interact Step

Bridge Map to connect new learning

Multi-Flow Map that shows the effects from learning the lesson’s objective

Examples are visually displayed

Sentence frames or stems

Contextualized definitions  and  vocabulary charts

Discovery Education clips (Web 2.0 support)

Visual indications for examples v. non-examples

Pictorial support ,  TPR ,  realia

Highlighting, circling, underlining, color coding

Thinking Maps

Flow Map for procedure

Note-taking/process grids

Partner support

Sentence frames

Visual support/TPR

Color coding

Access to visuals from the lesson

Structured Think Pair Share

IMAGES

  1. Lesson Plan in Practical Research 1.docx

    sample lesson plan in research

  2. Detailed Lesson Plan Research 1 Selects Relevant Literature

    sample lesson plan in research

  3. Research Report Sample Template

    sample lesson plan in research

  4. A Detailed Lesson Plan in Research 1

    sample lesson plan in research

  5. SOLUTION: Sample lesson plan in research

    sample lesson plan in research

  6. 💄 Sample of detailed lesson plan in science high school. A Detailed

    sample lesson plan in research

VIDEO

  1. sample Lesson Plan, class 5, EVS, WEATHER AND CLIMATE

  2. Sample Lesson Plan, Geography, Class 7- WATER

  3. Sample Class: Composition and Identity

  4. sample lesson plan on Statistics for demo

  5. Measuring Matter Song

  6. Project-Based Learning Plan

COMMENTS

  1. PDF How to Write a Research Paper Lesson Plan

    Step 1: Begin the lesson plan with an image [3 minutes] Show the third slide of the PowerPoint presentation with a picture of stacked books and an apple on the top of the book that is titled "Education.". Begin to discuss the significance of the apple as. a very powerful fruit.

  2. Research Lesson Plan

    This lesson plan accompanies the BrainPOP topic, Research, and can be completed over several class periods.See suggested times for each section. OBJECTIVES. Students will: Activate prior knowledge about how to do a research project.. Identify the sequence of events for conducting research.. Use critical thinking skills to analyze how and why having a focus is key to conducting research and ...

  3. PDF Lesson Plan 1: Research paper Writing: An Overview

    Lesson Plan 1: Research paper Writing: An Overview . Objectives: -SWBAT identify parts that comprise a scientific research paper -SWBAT understand some different ways scientists develop ideas for their research -SWBAT understand the advantages of conducting a literature search -SWBAT understand the process of writing a research paper

  4. Lesson Plan: Characteristics of Effective Research Questions

    Markowski, Brianne and Dineen, Rachel, "Lesson Plan: Characteristics of Effective Research Questions" (2018). Information Literacy. 15. This Lesson Plan is brought to you for free and open access by the Open Educational Resources @ UNC at Scholarship & Creative Works @ Digital UNC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Information Literacy by ...

  5. PDF EFFECTIVE INTERNET RESEARCH: TWO-LESSON PLAN

    The student will learn how to do effective internet research. OBJECTIVE: This two-class lesson plan leads students through a discussion of the difficulties of internet research; provides guidance on how to effectively pre-research; demonstrates online resources available for research through the Brooklyn Collection and Brooklyn Public Library ...

  6. #6 Developing Successful Research Questions

    Course Learning Outcome: Develop ability to synthesize and express complex ideas; demonstrate information literacy and be able to work with evidence Goal: Develop students' ability to recognize and create successful research questions Specifically, students will be able to. identify the components of a successful research question. create a viable research question.

  7. Bank of Lesson Plans

    Lesson plans/exercises: Research Clinic. Outline Session #1. One of Audrey's lesson plans for first session. Elana's plan (4 short sessions) Denise's plan for a Freshman Writing Seminar. Research Clinic Research clinic sample plan. Mini exercises. Videos created for flipped classroom ("asychronous" learning)

  8. 1. Lesson Plan Template

    Research Guides; Building a Lesson Plan; 1. Lesson Plan Template; ... Looking at existing lesson plans is a great starting point for understanding them, but it's important to make sure that you work from good, reliable examples. Here are a few good places to find them:

  9. Sample Lesson Plans

    Princeton University Library One Washington Road Princeton, NJ 08544-2098 USA (609) 258-1470

  10. 100 Activities for Teaching Research Methods

    Developed to complement and enhance existing course materials, the 100 ready-to-use activities encourage innovative and engaging classroom practice in seven areas: finding and using sources of information. planning a research project. conducting research. using and analyzing data. disseminating results.

  11. Research Guides: Teaching at NYU Libraries: Lesson Plans

    Feel free to make a copy any of the sample lesson plans linked to below, to use as is or adapt for your own purposes. ... Second semester course: First Year Research Seminar Sample lesson plan for FYRS; LIBERAL STUDIES - Administered by Liberal Studies. First semester course: ...

  12. 50 Mini-Lessons For Teaching Students Research Skills

    It outlines a five-step approach to break down the research process into manageable chunks. This post shares ideas for mini-lessons that could be carried out in the classroom throughout the year to help build students' skills in the five areas of: clarify, search, delve, evaluate, and cite. It also includes ideas for learning about staying ...

  13. Sampling in Research Lesson Plan

    This lesson plan presents the concept of sampling in research. Students will discuss the sampling process, work in teams to design a sampling plan for a research scenario and critique real-world ...

  14. Research Lesson Plan: Research to Build and Present Knowledge

    Step 4: DEEPEN and EXTEND. Students express what they learned about research while practicing essential literacy skills with one or more of the following activities. Differentiate by assigning ones that meet individual student needs. Make-a-Movie: Create a tutorial that explains the steps for writing a research report.

  15. Lesson Plan

    A Detailed Lesson Plan in Practical Research 2: Quantitative Research I. Learning Objectives Competency: The learner: Selects relevant literature (CS_RS12-If-j-1) Synthesizes information from relevant literature (CS_RS12-If-j-3) Writes coherent review of literature (CS_RS12-If-j-4) Objectives:

  16. A Detailed Lessson PLAN IN Practical Research 1

    A DETAILED LESSON PLAN IN PRACTICAL RESEARCH 1 I. OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to, Shares research experiences and knowledge, CS_RS11-IIIa-explains the importance of research in daily life, CS_RS11-IIIa-describes characteristics of research CS_RS11-IIIa- II.

  17. Practical Research Lesson PLAN Final

    DETAILED LESSON PLAN IN PRACTICAL RESEARCH 1 FOR CLASSROOM OBSERVATION. Date: May 30, 2022 Grade: Grade 11 Section: ABM-Huffington I. Objectives: ... At this time, let us analyse the scenario of a sample research paper on who are the respondents/ participants involved study, in what way do the researchers identify these participants and how the ...

  18. Research Based Lesson Design

    With Research Based Lesson Design (RBLD), English learner strategies are planned for every instructional phases of EDI. For a one page printable handout of the EL scaffolds in RBLD, click here. Both Concept Development and Guided Practice are taught using a gradual release of responsibility. For lesson planning, the sequence that RBLD phases ...

  19. How To Write A Research Title

    Lesson Plan in Practical Research 1. School: Jalandoni Memorial National High School Grade Level: Grade 11 (HUMSS) Teacher: Nicole M. Garcia, RCh. SST1 Learning Area: Practical Research 1. Schedule: February 20, 2020 (Thursday), 1:00-3:00 PM. Quarter: 2 nd Sem., 4th quarter A. Content Standard The learner demonstrates understanding of: 1. the range of research topics in the area of inquiry 2 ...

  20. Lesson Plan in Writing a Research Paper Grade 10

    A Detailed Lesson Plan in English Grade 10. I. Objectives At the end of this lesson, the students will be able to: a. interpret the primary purpose of an academic research paper.; b. examine ways to get started with the writing process.; and c. explain the importance of research in daily lives

  21. How To Write a Research Plan (With Template and Examples)

    If you want to learn how to write your own plan for your research project, consider the following seven steps: 1. Define the project purpose. The first step to creating a research plan for your project is to define why and what you're researching. Regardless of whether you're working with a team or alone, understanding the project's purpose can ...

  22. Detailed Lesson Plan

    A Semi-Detailed Lesson Plan on Practical Research 1 By: Clynne Dale B. Lamiseria. I. Objectives Indicates scope and delimitation of the study (CS_R11-IIIc-e-5) Cites benefits and beneficiaries of research (CS_R11-IIIc-e-6) Presents a written statement of the problem. (CS_R11-IIIc-e-7) II.

  23. Lesson Plan In PR2

    LESSON PLAN IN PRACTICAL RESEARCH 2 FOR GRADE 12 UNIT 1: NATURE OF INQUIRY AND RESEARCH. Date: June 14 and 18, 2018. I-OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, the students must: