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Home › Classroom Resources › Lesson Plans
Lesson Plan
Inventing and Presenting Unit 3: Persuasive Speaking and Invention Promotion
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| Grades | 6 – 8 |
| Lesson Plan Type | Unit |
| Estimated Time | Eleven 45-minute sessions |
| Lesson Author |
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Jeannette, Pennsylvania
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| Publisher |
OVERVIEW
This lesson is part of a larger interdisciplinary unit combining experimentation and the scientific method, critical thinking, clear writing, and effective speaking. In this lesson, students propose in writing an appropriate scenario for sharing inventions they have created and the results of their experimentation. They create visuals to share the data they have gathered. The unit culminates with each student delivering a speech presenting their invention in a large-group setting.
FEATURED RESOURCES
Invention Speech Unit Student Notes: This handout includes questions on topics including purpose and audience, content and tone, structure, and delivery, designed to help students write an effective speech.
The Invention Unit: A Culminating Activity for Science and English: This handout contains a list of all the requirements for the Inventing and Presenting project.
Invention/Investigation Speech Proposal: This handout describes the requirements for the speech proposal, including information about the audience and tone of the speech, as well as how it will be delivered.
FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE
Young adolescents thrive in active learning situations, and they work best when they are engaged in their topic and are able to connect their learning to their own lives. These connections can more easily be made in interdisciplinary units that accommodate multiple learning styles and multiple ability levels. When students produce something that they value and for which there is a real audience, the learning and assessment are authentic. In their article describing an team-taught interdisciplinary science class that heavily integrated writing, Gardner and Southerland state "One of the most significant means for helping students to see this interconnectedness [among science disciplines], they reported, came from their writing experiences..." As one student in their class noted “Writing helped concretize what I knew." (35) This lesson, part of an interdisciplinary unit integrating language arts and science, provides students with chances to use writing and presenting to "concretize" their scientific thinking.
Further Reading
Gardner, Susan A. and Sherry A. Southerland. "Interdisciplinary Teaching? It Only Takes Talent, Time, and Treasure." English Journal 86.7 (November 2007): 30–36.
National Research Council. 1996. National Science Education Standards: Observe, Interact, Change, Learn. National Academy Press.
National Middle School Association. 1995. This We Believe: Developmentally Responsive Middle Level Schools. Westerville, OH: NMSA.

