Objectives, Essential Questions, and Learning Targets
Planning, modeling, and Scaffolding
Introduction to Questioning
Blooms Taxonomy
Academic Language
100

What is a learning objective?

Descriptions of what students are expected to do by the end of class. 

100

How long should the hook "link" be in a lesson plan?

1-3 minutes

100

Is an "I can statement" necessary in a lesson plan?


Yes, it describes what students should expect from the lesson.


100

Where does this question lay on Bloom's Taxonomy Pyramid?

Describe what happens when____?

Remembering 

100

Is academic language the critical element in reading comprehension and academic achievement?


Yes, Academic language accounts for half of the impact of all factors influencing reading comprehension.

200

In the ABCD approach, what does each letter represent when writing a lesson objective?

A - Audience

B - Behavior

C - Condition

D - Degree

200

What is modeling?

a teaching strategy where a teacher explicitly
shows the students how to complete an
activity or assignment before the students
begin.

200

What are convergent questions?

Questions that have one correct or "best" answer

200

Where does this question lay on Bloom's Taxonomy Pyramid?

How would you present _______?

Applying 

200

What is academic vocabulary?

Academic vocabulary is the vocabulary
that frequently appears across academic
disciplines, but rarely occurs in oral conversation.

300

True or False: Is the essential question meant to be simple and have one answer that defines the entire lesson?

False: Essential questions are meant to be thought-provoking and open-ended, with no limitation on a single right answer.



300

True or False: Scaffolding is an instructional technique that has two main types: verbal and procedural.


True

300

This statement is an example of qualitative or quantitive criteria:

75% accuracy in multiplying fractions.


Quantitive criteria


300

Where does this question lay on Bloom's Taxonomy Pyramid?

What ideas validate _____?

Analyzing 


300

What are three ways to help students master academic language?

1) Spotlight key vocabulary

2) Blend new language into writing

3) Get them talking

400

How does the teaching and learning process start and end? 

Plan, Implement, and Evaluate


400

What are some benefits of scaffolding?

- Improves the likelihood that students will retain new information

- It helps connect foundational knowledge to new concepts 

400

True or False: Focusing Questions include hints, clues, or aids to help students form the correct initial response.


False- questions are used to direct students’ attention to the lesson or the material to be covered that day.


400

Where does this question lay on Bloom's Taxonomy Pyramid?

How would you determine the facts ______?

Evaluating 

400

True or False: Vocabulary knowledge also
refers understanding of word parts (prefixes, suffixes, roots), multiple meanings, and
figurative language that shapes the subtleties of vocabulary use. 

True - Vocabulary and syntactic knowledge in oral and written language give students specific skills to meet academic demands across the curriculum.


500

Effective Instruction Example:

You're teaching a complex math concept to a class of students with varying abilities. Which instructional strategies would most effectively ensure all students understand the material?

Using a variety of teaching methods, such as lectures, discussions, group work, and hands-on activities.




500

True or False: A teacher demonstrates how to complete a task in metacognitive modeling.

False: The teacher models how to think through a task, such as by thinking aloud.



500

What is the appropriate "wait time" a teacher should wait after posing a question?


He/She waits three or more seconds after posing the question.


500

Where does this question lay on Bloom's Taxonomy Pyramid?

What is the main idea of this text, and can you list three key points that support it?

Remembering and Understanding


500

As students approach upper elementary to middle secondary school, what teaching "tier" vocabulary are they on?


Tier 3: Uncommon or technical
words that are typically associated
with a specific content area.