{"id":17231,"date":"2014-01-06t08:13:37","date_gmt":"2014-01-06t13:13:37","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/?p=17231"},"modified":"2013-12-30t18:14:53","modified_gmt":"2013-12-30t23:14:53","slug":"a-new-plan-for-lesson-planning","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/2014\/01\/a-new-plan-for-lesson-planning\/","title":{"rendered":"a (new) plan for lesson planning"},"content":{"rendered":"
by nancy chick, cft assistant director<\/em><\/p>\n i’ve been teaching my own courses since 1993, and i still experiment with how to manage my notes, preparations, to do lists, readings, and lesson plans–not because i’m adventurous but because i’m dissatisfied. a goldilocks of office and organizational supplies, i’ve rejected previous attempts as “too big,” “too messy,” “too hard to archive,” or “too disorganized.”\u00a0i’ve cycled through file folders, accordion folders, accordion files, three-ring binders,\u00a0boxes, and a stack or three on the corner of my desk. i just asked friends for their strategies, and a surprising number rely on the cloud (e.g., dropbox, google drive) and a paperless teaching practice. i’m no luddite, and my handwriting is a mess, but i’m pretty grounded in the physical, and i still do most of my teaching preparations manually, rather than digitally.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n in preparing for my spring wgs 200, i’ve finished the syllabus, organized all of the readings, collected relevant\u00a0notes from previous courses, and designed a new template<\/a> for organizing the individual class meetings–made in word, printed out for handwritten preps. everything is in chronological order with each class meeting separated by dividers, all in an old manila-folder box. (see picture to the left.) i was ready to go granular and start working on individual assignments and daily activities.<\/p>\n