Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Building a Structure With Legos: Oral Communication and Process Analysis - An Educator's Reference Desk Lesson Plan

Submitted by: Carol Szabo
Email: CBS53@aol.com
School/University/Affiliation: Elgin Community College

Date: February 22, 1999


Grade Level(s): 9, 10, 11, 12, Higher Education

Subject(s):

  • Language Arts/Listening Comprehension

Duration: 45 minutes

Description: Students team up with a partner. They set up their work area so they are sitting back to back and cannot see each other's work space. Each partner gets a bag of lego pieces (both partners have the identical pieces). They take turns building a structure and giving directions to their partners to build the identical structure. Compare and discuss. Do the activity at least twice per person.

Goals: Students will become aware of the pitfalls of communicating both orally and in written expression. They will realize the importance of transitional expression, specific details, order and clarity when attempting to communicate. Also, realizing the importance of audience--how this influences the language used. Use as an intro to writing a process analysis.

Objectives: Students will be able to improve on their skills as the lesson progresses. The better their partner does constructing the legos according to the instructions given, the better job the partner is doing giving the directions.

Materials: baggies of lego pieces---each team must have identical pieces in their bags.

Procedure:
1. Give each team materials.
2. Position themselves so they cannot see each other's work space---back to back works well.
3. One member builds a structure from his pieces.
4. He then gives the partner oral instructions on how to duplicate his structure.
5. Neither may look at each other's work until the end of the exercise.
6. The person building cannot ask questions---just must follow directions.
7. Compare structures and then switch roles.
8. Do the activity at least twice.

Assessment: How well the structures are duplicated will give insight into the ability of the students to communicate effectively. Discuss the problems that came up and how to solve them. Apply the discussion to writing a process analysis--- what points are important to remember?

Great idea that is simple to use with students to work on listening comprehension and effective communication skills.

Two skills any student can improve on.

Posted via web from Reflexions

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Artistic Representation of my life.
From: coachnorm, 14 minutes ago



My artistic representation for Educational Environments Grad School class at Texas State University

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