High-Quality Oral Presentations: Speaking in Complete Sentences
Tell us how the curriculum is working in your classroom and send us corrections or suggestions for improving it.
These are the CCS Standards addressed in this lesson:
- SL.2.3: Ask and answer questions about what a speaker says in order to clarify comprehension, gather additional information, or deepen understanding of a topic or issue.
- SL.2.4: Tell a story or recount an experience with appropriate facts and relevant, descriptive details, speaking audibly in coherent sentences.
- SL.2.6: Produce complete sentences when appropriate to task and situation in order to provide requested detail or clarification.
Daily Learning Targets
- I can speak in complete sentences when using my notecards to present to an audience. (SL.2.4, SL.2.6)
- I can show empathy when I give feedback to my peers. (SL.2.3)
Ongoing Assessment
- During Work Time B, circulate and observe as students practice presenting and giving empathic feedback to peers. Consider using the Speaking and Listening Checklist to document progress toward SL.2.3, SL.2.4, and SL.2.6 (see Assessment Overview and Resources).
Agenda
1. Opening
A. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes)
2. Work Time
A.Engaging the Speaker: Using Complete Sentences (25 minutes)
B. Oral Presentation Practice: Using Complete Sentences (20 minutes)
3. Closing and Assessment
A. Pinky Partners Protocol: Reflecting on Empathy (10 minutes)
Purpose of lesson and alignment to standards:
- This is the second lesson in a series of three during which students practice their presentations regarding a specific criterion on the Criteria for High-Quality Oral Presentations anchor chart: using complete sentences. Students then practice showing empathy while giving and receiving feedback.
- In Work Time A, students play a sorting game called Complete or Incomplete? as a whole class. This game helps them review the difference between complete and incomplete sentences. Also, this game helps prime them for the presentation practice they participate in later in the lesson. Recall that primary learners thrive when they get to play and find joy and comfort in identifying patterns and relationships.
How this lesson builds on previous work:
- Similar to Lesson 7, this lesson sees students using the Criteria for High-Quality Oral Presentations anchor chart from Lesson 6 and their oral presentation notecards, written in Lessons 1-5, to practice their presentations and give empathic feedback.
- In Lesson 5, students were introduced to the habit of character of empathy. Similar to Lesson 6, this lesson sees students apply and reflect on this habit of character.
Areas in which students may need additional support:
- For students who have trouble differentiating between complete and incomplete sentences in Work Time A, consider partnering with varying levels of confidence and skill using oral language. The students with greater confidence using oral language can serve as models in their partnership, initiating discussion and providing implicit sentence frames. Also, consider working with a smaller, teacher-directed group to support students.
Down the road:
- In Lesson 9, students will continue practicing by layering in additional oral presentation notecards with feedback on each of the criteria for high-quality oral presentations.
In Advance
- Pre-distribute Materials for Work Time B at students? pre-determined workspaces.
- Post: Learning targets and applicable anchor charts (see Materials list)
Tech and Multimedia
Consider using an interactive white board or document camera to display lesson Materials.
- Continue to use the technology tools recommended throughout Modules 1 and 2 to create anchor charts to share with families; to record students as they participate in discussions and protocols to review with students later and to share with families; and for students to listen to and annotate text, record ideas on note-catchers, and word-process writing.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standard 2.I.C.9
Important points in the lesson itself
- The basic design of this lesson supports ELLs with opportunities to hone their speaking skills with grammatically correct syntax by identifying complete and incomplete sentences.
- ELLs may find it challenging to extrapolate complete sentences from the words and phrases in their notes. During or after Work Time A, provide additional practice with this skill. If necessary, consider helping them transcribe complete sentences based on their notes for them to temporarily use during this lesson.
Levels of support
For lighter support:
- During Work Time A, challenge students to add on to the incomplete sentences to make them complete.
- During Work Time B, consider designating confident speakers as "coaches." Encourage them to circulate and support students who need additional support.
For heavier support:
- During Work Time B, consider allowing students to work in heterogenous triads. Students can observe two models of the presentation feedback before contributing themselves.
Universal Design for Learning
- Multiple Means of Representation (MMR): Continue to support comprehension by activating prior knowledge and scaffold connections for students. Continue to provide visual display of questions and student responses on a chart or a board during discussions.
- Multiple Means of Action & Expression (MMAE): Continue to support students in setting appropriate goals for their effort and the level of difficulty expected.
- Multiple Means of Engagement (MME): Continue to support sustained engagement and effort for students who benefit from consistent reminders of learning goals and their value or relevance.
Vocabulary
Key: Lesson-Specific Vocabulary (L); Text-Specific Vocabulary (T); Vocabulary Used in Writing (W)
Review
- empathy, feedback, audience (L)
Materials
- Complete or Incomplete sentence strips (one to display)
- Criteria for High-Quality Oral Presentations anchor chart (begun in Lesson 6)
- Oral Presentation Notecards: Bee Model (from Lesson 2; one to display)
- What Does Peer Feedback Look and Sound Like? anchor chart (begun in Lesson 4)
- Peer Feedback Protocol anchor chart (begun in Lesson 4)
- Oral presentation notecards (from Lesson 2; one set per student)
- Specific, Positive Feedback sentence starters (from Lesson 6; one per pair and one to display)
- Speaking and Listening Checklist (for teacher reference; see Assessment Overview and Resources)
- Sandwich bag (from Lesson 2; one per student)
- Pinky Partners Protocol anchor chart (begun in Module 1)
Assessment
Each unit in the K-2 Language Arts Curriculum has one standards-based assessment built in. The module concludes with a performance task at the end of Unit 3 to synthesize their understanding of what they accomplished through supported, standards-based writing.
Opening
A. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes)
- Gather whole group.
- Tell students that today, they will practice their oral presentations using the Criteria for High-Quality Oral Presentations anchor chart they created in Lesson 6.
- Remind students that the reason they are practicing their presentations and receiving feedback is to build their confidence in using the criteria for high-quality oral presentations, and to make the best possible presentation at the upcoming Celebration of Learning!
- Direct students' attention to the posted learning targets and read the first one aloud:
"I can speak in complete sentences when using my notecards to present to an audience."