Reflections of an Interdisciplinary Lesson Plan
I implemented a digitally supported interdisciplinary virtual lesson with five students selected by a fourth grade teacher at Britton Elementary, and are students that needed to be challenged in literacy learning. These are my experiences and reflections after four lessons.
Lesson One
We started by watching a read aloud on YouTube of
Thunder Cake by Patricia Polacco. In my original lesson plan, I planned to
include Thunder Cake and Thank You, Mr. Falker (also by Patricia Polacco), but
decided to omit the second book and later add Chicken Sunday. The lesson
objectives were to talk about the story of Thunder Cake and discuss family
stories and the definition of folklore. I explained that the students would be creating
their own story on Story Jumper in response to the two books. T. Overall, they made
more connections with the synopsis of the story than the illustrations, and
noticed details in the text without noting anything about the drawings until I
asked questions about the style of illustration. I explained that Patricia
Polacco often told stories about her childhood, her family, and other members
of her community that made an impact on her and used a mix of loose and sketchy
pencil drawings with an overlay of expressive colors. One very interesting observation
from Student 1 when I asked what they noticed about the illustrations: “I think
the color of the cake is the color of mud because it started raining and it was
muddy outside”.
Lesson Two
This was a 30 minute lesson where all five students were present, so we read/listened to Thunder Cake again to catch up the fifth student, and I also decided to add Chicken Sunday. In my original plan, I was going to have the students draw/paint physical illustrations with paper and art materials (preferably colored pencils), but moving to virtual learning made that less attainable. I decided to focus on the Oklahoma Fine Arts Standard of Responding/Critiquing for illustrations in the two books. The students gave their synopsis of what they noticed in both these books during this time.
Thunder Cake- The grandmother taught the girl to count down from ten every mile when they went to get each ingredient for the cake; they gathered the ingredients from different places instead of the store; you could see the sky get gray in the background when the thunder started happening; the illustrations were colorful.
Chicken Sunday- One student noticed the
fact that on one page of the story, the background illustration of the
grandmother’s dining room shows family pictures, which are real photographs
edited into the drawing. We made the connection that the author did this to
show how real the story was of her past. In these two lessons, the students did
an overall good job of paying attention to details in both the stories, and
made progress noticing the significance of illustrations based on their verbal
responses.
Lesson Three
This lesson was an hour long, and was difficult primarily
because it took almost half the time to get the kids logged into Story Jumper,
and adding them to my classroom on the website. I had to omit Bubbl.us, which I
believe made the overall lesson suffer because there was no paper trail of the
verbal observations the kids had that they could keep track of. However, I knew
I had limited time and wanted them to develop their stories. At this point,
only three students were in the group, one of which could not use Story Jumper
and instead began writing her story on paper. I explained in each lesson that
they should write a story about them and their family members, or members of
their community. The students figured out how to use Story Jumper very easily,
finding the title page and creating their characters. One student began writing
a fairy tale (Student 4), while another wrote about the twelve days of Christmas
(Student 1). They were very engaged with Story Jumper, and found it very easy
to use and easy to incorporate themselves into their story with relevant images
and backgrounds to accompany it.
Student 1's story of the Twelve Days of Christmas:
Lesson Four
This was an hour-long lesson as well, and for the first
time, all five students were present. Student 5 (who was new to Story Jumper,
not being present in the third lesson) began writing his story about a time
that his family “almost got robbed” (picture below). This time was used solely
to work on their stories, and engagement levels were high with Student 1,
Student 2 (present virtually using a phone and writing her story on paper), Student
4, and Student 5. Student 3 did not make much progress this day, and only ended
up finishing the title page. This was the last lesson that I had time for, and
I asked them how they liked the overall experience. They all had a positive
response and said that they thought Story Jumper was fun (except for Student 3,
who said she enjoyed both the stories and the opportunity to write her own). I
told them to continue working on their stories, and that everyone in the group
on Story Jumper could view one another’s stories. Overall, they demonstrated
that they understood story structure and communicating their messages using
both text and digital illustrations.
Student 5's story of an almost robbery:
Final Reflections on the PEDDL Framework
Strengths and weaknesses:
The PEDDL framework is an excellent tool to support interdisciplinary literacy.
The questions in the framework lend themselves particularly well to literary
analysis, student responses to artwork, and understanding why authors tell stories
and choose styles of illustrations to express emotions and themes. Digitally
supported disciplinary literacy was fostered by the use of Story Jumper, largely
because of the enthusiastic engagement of the students towards the application,
but also because of listening to YouTube read-alouds, and being able to do so
in their own environment (with no physical distractions from classmates). It is
difficult to find a weakness with the framework itself, or the digital tools
that I used (though I cannot say for sure the effectiveness of Bubbl.us). I did
think that the connection between the stories we read and the work that I
expected the students to do was broken because I ran out of time to use
Bubbl.us, and if we had used it, the themes of their stories would have been
more pertinent to the content of both the Patricia Polacco stories.
What I learned about myself as a teacher:
I learned that I need to spend more time creating examples
so that students can more easily know the direction that I would like their work
to take. It took them no time at all to learn how to use Story Jumper (mainly
because it is very easy and exciting to explore), but if I had created my own
story and presented it, they would have had a rubric to follow, and I believe
they would have gotten more accomplished. I do think, however, that the issue
of logging them on to the application was a long, but unavoidable experience,
but I will become more proficient about not taking up as much time with
technology hangups. I will also need to develop my assessment strategies more
thoroughly. As my very first experience with virtual teaching, however, I think
it went well.
What I learned about supporting digital and multimodal
literacies in a classroom:
My takeaway from using both traditional texts (storybooks
written 25-30 years ago) and fairly new websites to create stories was
generally a positive experience for the students. They could both read and hear
the books, and could use paper and pencil and digital illustrations to express
their stories. As students who were included in my group of students that need
to be challenged, this combination of tools was an excellent way to engage them
and deepen their learning.
Suggestions for others:
I recommend the PEDDL framework and the three applications I
used/planned to use (Story Jumper, Bubbl.us, YouTube read alouds) for
disciplinary literacy. Even though teachers do not exactly have spare time,
taking time to explore and evaluate different websites and apps for students is
a fun experience, and will inspire ideas for deepening learning for students
that need challenging. Taking time to teach students how to use technology in
an academic way is an ongoing process, because they pick it up quickly, but
need to be refocused often. It is definitely worth the effort.


thanks for the student work.
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