Fact vs. Opinion

Created By:
Cindy Jimenez
Title/Role:
Teacher Librarian
Organization/School Name:
Scandinavian Middle School
Location:
California

Grade Level:
7
Type of Lesson:
Stand-alone lesson
Type of Schedule:
Combination
Collaboration Continuum:
Moderate
Content Area:
Language Arts
Content Topic:
Fact Vs. Opinion
Standards for the 21st-Century Learner
Skills Indicator(s):
1.1.4 Find, evaluate, and select appropriate sources to answer questions.
2.1.5 Collaborate with others to exchange ideas, develop new understandings, make decisions, and solve problems.
3.1.4 Use technology and other information tools to organize and display knowledge and understanding in ways that others can view, use, and assess.
Dispostion Indicator(s):
2.2.4 Demonstrate personal productivity by completing products to express learning.
Responsibilities Indicator(s):
1.3.5 Use information technology responsibly.
Self-Assessment Strategies Indicator(s):
1.4.4 Seek appropriate help when it is needed.
2.4.3 Recognize new knowledge and understanding.
Scenario:
TL meets with school instructional coach (IL) to determine a skill that the students are struggling with. The IL identifies fact and opinion. The TL meets with the ELA teacher to collaborate and plan the lesson. The curricular objective states that the student should be able to clearly identify which statements are fact and which are opinion. The lesson supports and extends learning in the classroom. The teacher will teach fact and opinion and have the students complete the Fact vs. Opinion worksheet in the classroom. The students will come to the library to learn to use Destiny to locate reference and nonfiction books from which they will identify facts and opinions. The TL will show a sample PowerPoint from a book she reads to the class. Then the students will create a multimedia project that demonstrates the facts and opinions from the books they read.

Overview:
Students will learn to distinguish the difference between facts and opinions. They will practice identifying facts and opinions. Essential Question: What is the difference between fact and opinion?

Final Product:
Students will complete the Fact vs. Opinion Part 2 worksheet, use the Destiny user's guide to find resources, and create a multimedia project (PowerPoint) demonstrating facts and opinions from the book they read.

Library Lesson:
Students will learn how to locate relevant print and nonprint resources and use the information to find facts and opinions.

Estimated Lesson Time:
75 minutes
Assessment
Product:
The teacher and TL assess the completed worksheets looking for sentences that correctly list facts and opinions. The students' multimedia project will be evaluated by TL and teacher looking for title of the book, author of the book, names of both students, slides containing 5 facts and 5 opinions and a link to a website containing a video related to the topic.

Process:
Teacher and TL observe and guide the students toward understanding as they complete the worksheet. The TL and teacher pay attention to the students' multimedia presentations to determine that facts and opinions are properly identified.

Self Questioning:
Was I able to locate appropriate print and nonprint resources using Destiny? Did I understand the difference between a fact and an opinion? Did I correctly identify them in the text? Did I demonstrate my understanding correctly in my multimedia project?

Instructional Plan
Resources students will use:
Moving Image (i.e. animations, movies, tv program, video)
Interactive Resource (i.e. webpages, multimedia learning objects, chat services)
Software
Text (books, letters, poems, newspapers, etc.)

Interactive Resource URL:
http://destiny.fresnounified.org

Resources instructor will use:
Projector
Laptop
White board
Smart board
Other

Other instructor resources:
Teacher created worksheets,TL created Destiny user guide, sample PowerPoint

Instruction/Activities
Direct instruction:
In the classroom, the teacher defines fact and opinion and has the students complete the Fact vs. Opinion worksheet. The teacher then brings the students to the library, where the TL will instruct the students to sit four to a table. The TL will read a short nonfiction book and review Fact and Opinion using the attached PowerPoint. The teacher will distribute the Fact vs Opinion Part 2 worksheet and ask students to work with a partner. The TL will review the Destiny user guide with the students. Each pair of students will use Destiny to help select a book and website to complete the worksheet. Then they will create a multimedia project (PowerPoint) that demonstrates their understanding of fact and opinion. When they are finished, they will present their project to the class. The teacher and TL will assess the worksheet and multimedia projects.

Modeling and guided practice:
Teacher defines fact and opinion. TL reads a short nonfiction book highlighting facts and giving examples of opinions. TL explains the Fact vs. Opinion Part 2 worksheet. Using a laptop and projector, TL models how to use Destiny to conduct a Subject search and One Search. TL shows sample PowerPoint. Teacher and TL assist students in using Destiny to select books and websites. Teacher and TL work with students as needed to complete their worksheets and multimeida projects.

Independent practice:
Working with a partner, students select a topic and conduct a Destiny subject search. Students locate aa book from the nonfiction or Reference collection and find examples of facts and opinions from their book as they complete the Fact and Opinion Part 2 worksheet. They create a short PowerPoint including 5 facts and 5 opinions from their worksheet.


Have you taught this lesson before:
Yes

Strategies for differentiation:
Students have the book read to them by a partner or teacher assistant. Students dictate facts and opinions to a teacher assistant rather than writing.
AASL/Common Core State Standards Crosswalk

Common Core State Standards English Language Arts:

CC.7.SL.4 » English Language Arts » Presentation of Knowledge and Ideas » 4. Present claims and findings, emphasizing salient points in a focused, coherent manner with pertinent descriptions, facts, details, and examples; use appropriate eye contact, adequate volume, and clear pronunciation. (7)

CC.7.R.L.1 » English Language Arts » Key Ideas and Details » 1. Cite several pieces of textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text. (7)

CC.7.W.7 » English Language Arts » Research to Build and Present Knowledge » 7. Conduct short research projects to answer a question, drawing on several sources and generating additional related, focused questions for further research and investigation. (7)

CC.7.W.6 » English Language Arts » Production and Distribution of Writing » 6. Use technology, including the Internet, to produce and publish writing and link to and cite sources as well as to interact and collaborate with others, including linking to and citing sources. (7)