Part One: Lesson Media
Students will start with the Lesson Media – available in video, audio and written format.
Key Ideas: Don’t be a hypocrite: for the sake of our democracy, we need to be better critics. Students will work to improve their skills as both reviewers and reviewees, while putting their final project under the microscope for peer feedback.
Students can listen to the Featured Hot Take podcast – an interview with an expert that best reflects all of the meta-themes discussed in this lesson.
This podcast comes with reflection questions to help students understand how the interview relates to what they’ve learned. Again, you can decide whether students will consume this podcast at home, as an assignment, or in class.
When finished, students have the option of listening to two Hot Takes podcasts that feature longer interviews with the most prominent voices featured in the Lesson Media.
Students can also complete the Reflection Activity after watching the Lesson Media. This activity is designed to ensure students understand the main ideas presented in the stories.
As always, we recommend discussing the Lesson Media as a class once everyone has consumed the stories.
Resources:
Discussion Method Teaching: A Practical Guide
Best Practice Strategies for Effective Use of Questions as a Teaching Tool
Prompts That Get Students to Analyze, Reflect, Relate, and Question
