Research for Better Schools

Lesson Study Conference 2002

Papers and Presentations

This page provides links to the presentations and lesson plans from the Lesson Study Conference. It is organized by category rather than the order in which the presentations occurred in the program.

Please note: In instances where a paper was not available, RBS staff drafted a presentation summary based on notes taken by Joyce Tugel, Penny Venet, and Marjorie Woodwell of TERC and Joan Mast of Scotch Plains-Fanwood Public Schools during the conference.

An Introduction

A Guide to Making Lesson Study Work

Learning from Experience

The Impact of Lesson Study

Lesson Plans

 

An Introduction

These three presentations offer explanations of what lesson study is, what makes it useful, and how it may be adapted to the U.S. setting.

A Guide to Making Lesson Study Work

This section provides information on important aspects needed to implement lesson study. The presentations concentrate on planning and writing an effective lesson plan, choosing and using a research theme, and the role of knowledgeable others.

Learning from Experience

In these presentations, educators who have engaged in lesson study offer their reflections on the experience. There are presentations from both elementary and high school teachers, as well as those offering technical assistance to schools using lesson study.

The Impact of Lesson Study

The lesson study process helps teachers reflect on their own practice from a different perspective. This section offers an example of useful Japanese teaching practices that have emerged from experiences with lesson study.

Lesson Plans

This section contains the plans for the lessons that were taught and observed through simultaneous translation, plus a lesson taught by Paterson Public School No. 2 teachers at the Greenwich Japanese School in Greenwich, CT. Though it was not possible during this conference for attendees to participate in the long-term research and preparation phases of lesson study, observation of the lessons gave them the opportunity to take part in the implementation, reflection, and improvement phases by studying student thinking during the lesson and then debriefing on ways that the lessons might be improved to better support student learning.

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