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Sample Lesson Plans | CRLT, Exams of Literature

Sample Lesson Plans. 50-minute Comparative Literature class on Rachilde's novel The Juggler.1. Objectives for student learning: Students will be able to …

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University of Michigan GSI Guidebook
Sample Lesson Plans
50-minute Comparative Literature class on Rachilde’s novel The Juggler.1
Objectives for student learning:
Students will be able to …
1. Place the novel and its protagonist within the context of Rachilde’s life and literary career.
2. Identify and analyze the “decadent” connections between Baudelaire and Rachilde.
On board:
Rachilde: Marguerite Emery Vallette (1860-1953)
“Mademoiselle Baudelaire”
Over 60 published works:
Monsieur Vénus (1884); La Jongleuse/The Juggler (1900, 1982 reprint, 1990 translation)
1. Announcements and reminders (5 minutes)
2. Introduce the novel (10 minutes)
2.1. Prompts (5 minutes):
Poll: “How many read the introduction to the novel?” “Has anyone heard of Rachilde before?”
If many students have read it:
“What was interesting, curious, or unexpected about the author?”
“What are some connections between Rachilde’s life and what you have seen in the novel so far?”
If just a couple or no one has read it:
“The novel is said to be somewhat autobiographical: from reading the first fifty pages, what can you sur-
mise about Rachilde’s life?
“Why do you think she was called ‘Mademoiselle Baudelaire’?”
2.2. Connect novel and author through a short lecture on Rachilde’s biography (5 minutes)
3. “Decadent” connections between Baudelaire and Rachilde (20 minutes)
3.1. Discussion: “What are some key images we have seen in Baudelaire’s poems that also appear in the
novel?” (list images on board; e.g. make up, costumes, hair, Creole…) (5-7 minutes)
3.2. Group activity (5 minutes):
Split class into groups of 4 or 5; assign roles: one note taker, one reporter. Assign one image to each
group and ask them to look for specific examples in the text of that image and answer the question:
“How is Rachilde using this Baudelairean image in the text? And to what effect?” (write questions on
board)
3.3. Class debrief of group work (8-10 minutes)
4. Check for understanding (10-12 minutes)
4.1. Discussion: “So how can we understand Rachilde’s nickname ‘Mademoiselle Baudelaire’? As praise,
irony, condemnation?” (If no time, ask students to write for a minute, then discuss answers next
time.)
5. Sum up main points and preview next class (the question of love in the novel) (3-5 minutes)
________________________________
1Submitted by Stiliana Milkova, CRLT
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University of Michigan GSI Guidebook

Sample Lesson Plans

50-minute Comparative Literature class on Rachilde’s novel The Juggler.^1

Objectives for student learning:

Students will be able to …

  1. Place the novel and its protagonist within the context of Rachilde’s life and literary career.
  2. Identify and analyze the “decadent” connections between Baudelaire and Rachilde.

On board:

Rachilde: Marguerite Emery Vallette (1860-1953) “Mademoiselle Baudelaire” Over 60 published works: Monsieur Vénus (1884); La Jongleuse/The Juggler (1900, 1982 reprint, 1990 translation)

1. Announcements and reminders (5 minutes)

2. Introduce the novel (10 minutes)

2.1. Prompts (5 minutes): Poll: “How many read the introduction to the novel?” “Has anyone heard of Rachilde before?” If many students have read it:

  • “What was interesting, curious, or unexpected about the author?”
  • “What are some connections between Rachilde’s life and what you have seen in the novel so far?” If just a couple or no one has read it:
  • “The novel is said to be somewhat autobiographical: from reading the first fifty pages, what can you sur- mise about Rachilde’s life?
  • “Why do you think she was called ‘Mademoiselle Baudelaire’?” 2.2. Connect novel and author through a short lecture on Rachilde’s biography (5 minutes)

3. “Decadent” connections between Baudelaire and Rachilde (20 minutes)

3.1. Discussion: “What are some key images we have seen in Baudelaire’s poems that also appear in the novel?” (list images on board; e.g. make up, costumes, hair, Creole…) (5-7 minutes) 3.2. Group activity (5 minutes): Split class into groups of 4 or 5; assign roles: one note taker, one reporter. Assign one image to each group and ask them to look for specific examples in the text of that image and answer the question: “How is Rachilde using this Baudelairean image in the text? And to what effect?” (write questions on board) 3.3. Class debrief of group work (8-10 minutes)

4. Check for understanding (10-12 minutes)

4.1. Discussion: “So how can we understand Rachilde’s nickname ‘Mademoiselle Baudelaire’? As praise, irony, condemnation?” (If no time, ask students to write for a minute, then discuss answers next time.)

5. Sum up main points and preview next class (the question of love in the novel) (3-5 minutes)


(^1) Submitted by Stiliana Milkova, CRLT

Center for Research on Learning andTeaching

Sample Lesson Plans Continued

80-minute Biology discussion on “prokaryote gene regulation”^2

Goal for student learning: To identify the structure and regulation mechanism of the lac operon and trp operon by using a role-play activity.

Materials: Lecture and discussion notes.

**1. In-class quiz on previous three lectures (5 min).

  1. Review and role-play set-up (20 min).** 2.1 Review the structure of the lac and trp operon (7 min). Draw the structure on the board for refer- ence and review the biological process and regulation of lac operon. 2.2 Ask the students to come to the board in pairs to complete the figure with important compo- nent molecules (5 min).
  • If the students can successfully draw the pathway, ask another student to talk through the pathway again.
  • If the students have difficulty drawing the pathway, the other students or the GSI could help them to figure out the pathway. 2.3 Review the trp operon mechanism (8 min). - Ask students to work in groups of 3-4 people each for 5 min to talk through how this operon is being regu- lated while referring to the structure on the board. (Instructions: discuss how the trp operon responds to environment with/without tryptophan, what proteins are involved, and how they interact with each other). - To debrief, ask someone to talk through the trp operon mechanism (3 min). 3. Check for Understanding: Play the “Lac Operon” role-play (45 min). 3.1 Introduce the lac operon and trp operon role-play activity and explain the process (5 min). Assign the roles of different molecules to volunteer students who will be the “actors,” while all the other students will be the “directors” of the play. 3.2 Role-play (15 min): The “actors” play the dynamic regulation of the lac operon, and the “directors” judge whether they play a functional lac operon or not. Change the environmental conditions, play the responses of the lac operon again (10 min). If time permits, repeat for the trp operon. (5min) 3.3 Group Discussion (10 min): As a large group, discuss the following questions: - What are the ways to improve the play by better representing the regulation of the pathway? - How would one exhibit specific versus non-specific interactions? - What other responses will be stimulated under other conditions, such as mutations? 3.4 Students discuss remaining exercise questions in small groups (15 min). - Sample exercise question: What do you think would happen in each of the following? - An E.coli missing a functional lacZ gene. - An E.coli missing a functional lacI gene. - An E.coli in which the repressor molecule no longer can bind lactose. 4. Summarize the discussion and any remaining questions (10 min).

(^2) Submitted by Yaxuan Yang, Molecular, Cellular & Developmental Biology as a sample lesson from Bio 172 (under the

direction of Dr. Kenneth Cadigan)

Center for Research on Learning andTeaching

Sample Lesson Plans Continued

50-minute Civil Engineering discussion on reading plans & specifications^4

Objectives for student learning:

Students will be able to:

  1. Compare the features of Plans and Specifications.
  2. Analyze and discuss the relationship between these two documents with others. **1. Announcements and reminders (5 minutes)
  3. Introduce Assignment 1—Class discussion (10 minutes)** - Pose the following questions to stress the importance of Assignment 1’s components: - Why is the “General Description” in the specifications? - What is the recap sheet? What does it tell us about this project? - If the plans and the specifications conflict, what happens? 3. Introduction to reading Plans & Specifications—Small group discussion (10 minutes) - Form students into groups of four people. Provide the same set of drawings for each group. - Review the structure of information in the plans. Remind students that information is arranged from the most general to the most specific. - Assign each group a particular subcategory (i.e., civil, architectural, structural, etc.) so they can practice read ing these documents. - Ask each group to identify all information that is relevant to their subcategory. - Ask each group to select one student to present a summary of their subcategory to the class. 4. Analysis of Plans & Specifications—Jigsaw Exercise (15 minutes) - Divide students into pairs of two or three. - For students with Plans, students are to write answers on a handout to the following questions: - On what sheet might you find: General information describing the project property? - Identify a center line: Where might you find this? - Identify a hidden line: What might this represent? - Find a section cut on sheet 4: Where does this lead you to? What is this showing? - For students with Specifications, write answers on a handout to the following questions: - Identify the four subcategories of the “finishes” division. - Identify the strength of concrete required. Why is it important that the concrete strength is specified? - Identify three types of concrete finishing described. Why are there three different types? - Choose a division of your own interest. Do the specifications help you understand it? - Arrange students into groups such that each pair has one person who worked on plans and the other person who worked on specifications. Students are to describe their answers to each other. 5. Reflection —Think-Pair (5 minutes) - Ask students to think individually about what process helped them find information and what parts of the plans and specifications they found confusing. - Have students pair with a new partner and discuss their thoughts regarding the above questions. 6. Summarize the lesson and answer student questions (5 minutes)

(^4) Submitted by Branden Clements, Civil and Environmental Engineering as a sample lesson adapted from CEE 431 (un-

der the instruction of Professor Sang Hyun Lee)