Successful
teachers are invariably good planners and thinkers. In my career as a teacher
and teacher educator, I have read and evaluated thousands of lesson plans
written by education students at all levels. On a consistent basis, I see
mistakes that distort or weaken what the plans are supposed to communicate.
You can improve your lesson-planning skills by first thinking carefully about
what the lesson is supposed to accomplish. There is no substitute for this. In
teaching students how to develop lesson plans, the following are mistakes I
have observed that students make most often:
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