The Communication Between People by O'Misha Allison I. Lesson Plan Overview and Description
The Communication Between People by O'Misha Allison I. Lesson Plan Overview and Description
II.
Content Outline
A. Types of communication (ways to communicate) / When each one was created and by
whom
i. The ways in which and the devices people use to communication information to
each other
Telephone (1876 Alexander Graham Bell)
Cell Phone (1973 Fluh and Nussbaum)
Computer (1939 Konrad Zuse)
(Pony Express) Mail (1860 Majors and Waddell)
B. Technological communication (then and now)
i. Communication technology, also known as information technology, refers to all
equipment and programs that are used to process and communicate information.
ii. Communication (Now)
Cell Phones
Text messaging
FaceTime
Instant communication
Social Media Communications
FaceTime, Instagram, Twitter, etc.
E-mail
Yahoo, AOL, Outlook, etc.
C. Non-technological communication
i. Communication (Then)
Face-to-Face conversations
Print communication
People wrote letters in order to communicate.
Mail Transportation
In order to receive messages, people had to wait for their mail to
come, and it generally took many days to receive.
Home Telephone Communication
D. Why people communicate (verbally vs. non-verbally)
i. Give and receive information
ii. Verbal communication
Communication is very clear
Word are either spoken or written.
iii. Non-verbal Communication
Communication through facial expressions, gestures and postures.
III.
Standards
PDE SAS Standards PA Civics, History, Geography;
NCSS Thematic Strands and Performance Indicators
1. Pennsylvania Department of Education Standards Aligned System
Subject Area - 8: History
Standard Area - 8.2: Pennsylvania History
Grade Level - 8.2.3: GRADE 3
Standard 8.2.3.C: Identify and describe how continuity and change have
impacted Pennsylvania history.
Subject Area 7: Geography
Standard Area 7.1: Basic Geographic Literacy
Grade Level: 7.1.3: GRADE 3
Standard 7.1.3.A: Identify how basic geographic tools are used to
organize and interpret information about people, places and environment.
2. PDE Common Core
N/A
3. National Curriculum Standards for Social Studies: Thematic Strands and Performance
Indicators
II.
Time, Continuity, & Change
a. Demonstrate an understanding that different people may describe the
same event or situation in diverse ways, citing reasons for the
differences in views.
VIII.
IV.
Lesson Objectives
A. Students will be able to understand the evolution of communication starting with the
invention of the Pony Express.
B. The students will be able to work in groups to strengthen their understanding of the
evolution of communication by researching.
C. Students should be able to report to the class what they found interesting about their
research and report information that may could be questionable.
D. Each student will take a test of comprehension as an assessment.
E. Students will be able to participate in a discussion as a class.
V.
Teaching Procedures
1. Introduction/Anticipatory Set
i. Before the lesson begins, pass out a sheet with 4 images on it. These images will
include the first inventions of the telephone, the cell phone, the computer, and an
example of pony express mail. Underneath each image, there will be an excerpt of
what the invention is, when it was invented, and by whom. We will discuss the
images and the inventions briefly and have a class discussion on who uses these
inventions today.
ii. Distribute the outline of how the lesson will progress and what they should know
for the exit ticket at the end of the lesson.
iii. Introduce the lesson by discussing how students communicate today. We will then
move into how people in the world communicated before the advanced technologies
in the 1900s made is easier for communication to transpire between people.
2. Lesson Input
i. The main component of this lesson will be discussion and direct-teaching.
ii. There will be supplement material provided to the students as they learn what
communication is, how people in the early years communicated, how people use
communication today, and the types of communication available for people today.
The students will be encouraged to use the fill in the blank outline for study purposes
(this is just one example of the supplemental aids that will provided).
iii. Set aside time for students to ask questions, clarify questions and vocabulary, and
solidify their understanding.
3. Guided Practice
i. The class will discuss the topic of communication with their base groups and use
the port.
4. Independent Practice
i. Each person will use the computer to research a way technology is used to
communicate information between people (it is ok if some students research the same
topic, but they will be researching independently). They will share with a small group
what they found about the technology they picked and how this technology is helpful
when trying to communicate to family and friends.
5. Differentiation
Lesson will be differentiated based on the specific learning and behavioral needs of
students in classroom, such as ELL, gifted (above level), and remediation (below
level).
6. Closure
i. Students will participate in a think-pair share activity where each pair of students
will discuss one they learned with each other. Each student must come up with
something different than their partner. Each pair will share what their partner said
(this will take place before the 5 multiple choice exit ticket).
VI.
/wiki/Histo
ry_of_com
munication
informing my
thinking and
decisions about
this lesson.
http://com
munication
.ucdavis.ed
u/graduate/
ph.d.program/in
troduction/
history
Significant
Influence in
informing my
thinking and
decisions about
this lesson.
communication between
people.
2) The website gives
clear explanation on the
evolution of
communication
technologies.
3) This website is not
guaranteed to be 100%
accurate, therefore extra
research will be
conducted for
confirmation.
1) This website contains
a lot of useful
information.
2) This website is
geared towards older
students and teachers.
3) This website is not
guaranteed to be childfriendly.
accessed by
anyone, but
does not
guarantee
accuracy.
information that
can be used and
could support
future lessons.
The website
can be
accessed by
any one, but
it is not
elementary
student
accessible.
VII.
Formative/Summative Assessment(s)
Each student will participate in the class discussion about the types of
communication then and now, technological vs. non-technological
communication, and verbal vs. nonverbal communication.
Each student will complete the survey about which students use what
technologies.
Each student will create a graph of their choice with the results of the
survey take in class about who uses what technologies.
Topic test at the end of the lesson (5 multiple-choice questions; exit ticket)
VIII.
Technology/Materials/Equipment
Notebook- to list what technology the students use the most and which
communication devices the students use the least (that way the students will
have a guide to use when taking the survey).
Outline that will include the study guide for a future quiz on communication
(then and now).
Image sheet (images of the first inventions of the telephone, cell phone,
computer, and pony express mail).
Access to a computer
IX.
Reflection on Planning
Since this lesson is on the communication between people back then vs. how simple it
is now for people to communicate all around the world, I decided to do a teacherdirected lesson. I will teach the students the many ways people communicated in the
earlier years and how difficult it was for them to get information back and forth to
each other with the limited technological access. The information in the textbook was
extremely weak so I had to supplement the text to further my understanding (as well
as my students) of concept of communication for my content outline. After this
lesson, my students should have a great understanding of how communication have
evolved to human life easier.