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2007-05-10 06:12:50 · 4 answers · asked by Rockabilly Queen 1 in Education & Reference Teaching

4 answers

That's an impossible question to answer. It makes it sound like education is just a bunch of lesson plans a teacher follows and 'transmits' information to the kids.

A typical elementary teacher with some experience will not have lesson plans all written out. Anything written down will be done likely on a day-to-day basis with some of it dependent upon how that particular group of children did with whatever was looked at the day before. It's not like somebody can say, "Oh you need 100 math lesson plans for the school year." It just doesn't work that way.

2007-05-10 06:18:43 · answer #1 · answered by glurpy 7 · 1 0

One lesson plan for each lesson.

Generally, one lesson is given for each subject taught that day. Not all subjects are taught every day... art and music, for instance.

Some schools specialize. Say, there are three fourth grade teachers... One might teach science to all fourth grade students, one reading, and one math. This cuts down on the number of lesson plans each teacher has to prepare, but more importantly, allows the teachers to teach in the areas the are strongest.

2007-05-10 06:25:47 · answer #2 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

You need a general outline of what you need to cover in a quarter, semester, or school year.
List the resources, and books you plan to use.
Adjust it to your students needs, and be flexible.
Set lesson plans can be derailed very quickly when unexpected things come up, and leave little, or no room for you to expand on a particular subject.

2007-05-10 07:52:34 · answer #3 · answered by busymom 6 · 0 0

Enough to last the entire school year in each subject covered. Depending on the age of the student, some will be longer than others.

2007-05-10 06:30:04 · answer #4 · answered by banananose_89117 7 · 0 0

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