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A lesson plan is a detailed, structured guide prepared by a teacher before a lesson. It shows exactly what the teacher will teach, how the teaching will occur, the materials to be used, and how learners’ understanding will be assessed.
Key points:
It is lesson-specific, unlike a scheme of work which is term- or year-specific.
It ensures teaching is purposeful, organized, and goal-oriented.
It links curriculum objectives to classroom activities.
Exam-friendly definition:
A lesson plan is a written outline that shows how a teacher intends to teach a particular lesson to achieve stated learning outcomes.
Example:
If teaching JHS English, a lesson plan will detail how a teacher intends to teach “Parts of Speech” to JHS 2 students in a 40-minute lesson using charts, textbooks, and interactive exercises.
Ensures Clear Direction During Teaching
Prevents improvisation and confusion.
Helps the teacher know exactly what to teach and how.
Promotes Effective Time Management
Allocates time for introduction, lesson delivery, assessment, and closure.
Reduces time wastage in class.
Helps Achieve Lesson Objectives
Ensures that learners meet specific outcomes by the end of the lesson.
Aligns teaching methods with objectives.
Builds Teacher Confidence
Teachers feel prepared and professional.
Reduces nervousness, especially for new teachers.
Ensures Systematic Assessment
Integrates continuous assessment like questioning, class exercises, or quizzes.
Enhances Learner Engagement
Structured activities like group work, discussions, and practical demonstrations keep learners active.
Learners’ Level and Needs
Consider age, previous knowledge, and learning abilities.
Example: JHS 1 learners need simpler examples than SHS 3 learners.
Duration of the Lesson
A JHS lesson is usually 35–40 minutes.
Allocate time for introduction (5 mins), presentation (20 mins), evaluation (10 mins), and closure (5 mins).
Lesson Objectives
Must be clear, measurable, and achievable within the lesson duration.
Teaching Methods
Choose strategies suitable for content and learners:
Discussion for opinions
Demonstration for science experiments
Group work for collaborative skills
Instructional Resources
Include textbooks, charts, models, ICT tools (PowerPoint, videos).
Resources must support learning outcomes.
Assessment Strategies
Decide how to check learners’ understanding: questioning, exercises, quizzes.
Classroom Size
Adjust teaching strategies for large or small classes.
Example: Large class → group work or peer teaching; small class → direct questioning.
| Component | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Subject | Name of the subject (e.g., Integrated Science) |
| Class | Grade or level (e.g., JHS 2) |
| Date | Day lesson is delivered |
| Duration | Time allocated (e.g., 40 minutes) |
| Reference | Textbooks, curriculum, or other sources |
| Previous Knowledge | What learners already know about the topic |
| Learning Outcomes/Objectives | What learners should achieve by the end |
| Teaching and Learning Materials (TLRs) | Charts, models, ICT tools, textbooks |
| Introduction | Activities to capture learners’ attention and link prior knowledge |
| Presentation | Main teaching and learning activities |
| Evaluation | Activities to assess learning (questions, exercises) |
| Closure | Summary, recap, and linking to next lesson |
Always remember Introduction → Presentation → Evaluation → Closure (IPEC). This is commonly tested.
Describe what learners should be able to do at the end of the lesson.
Must be specific, observable, measurable.
Use action verbs from Bloom’s Taxonomy: identify, classify, analyze, construct, evaluate.
Example (JHS English):
By the end of the lesson, learners should be able to identify three types of nouns.
Evidence that shows the learning outcome is achieved.
What the learner should do to demonstrate understanding.
Example:
Learners correctly underline nouns in sentences.
Learners classify living and non-living things in a chart.
Subject: Integrated Science
Class: JHS 2
Topic: Living and Non-living Things
Duration: 40 minutes
Previous Knowledge:
Learners know basic characteristics of living things from JHS 1 science lessons.
Learning Outcomes:
Learners will classify objects into living and non-living things.
Indicators:
Learners correctly identify objects in their classroom as living or non-living.
Teaching and Learning Materials:
Flashcards of animals and plants, charts, whiteboard
Introduction (5 mins):
Ask learners: “Can you name some living things you see in the classroom?”
Show a short picture presentation of living and non-living things.
Presentation (20 mins):
Discuss characteristics of living things (growth, movement, reproduction, response to stimuli).
Discuss characteristics of non-living things (do not grow, no movement, no reproduction).
Learners work in pairs to classify objects shown in flashcards.
Evaluation (10 mins):
Ask learners to write 3 living and 3 non-living things in their notebooks.
Use questions like: “Which of these objects can reproduce?”
Closure (5 mins):
Summarize key points.
Assign homework: “Observe your home and list 5 living and 5 non-living things.”