What Makes Up An Effective Lesson Plan: Part 03 Writing Objectives
Course Objectives
Course objectives answers the “why.” It tells us why the students are taking the class; it specified the outcomes the training is supposed to achieve. A good lesson plan will have a general goal, main goal or metagoal. This is the big picture, and then it will break the big goal into smaller parts.
What Makes Up An Effective Lesson Plan: Part 02 Preparing
Preparing
There are three considerations when dealing with the preparing of training: travel, classroom setup, and show prep.
Travel
This may or may not be included in the lesson plan. It is suggested that if it is not included in the lesson plan then it is presented someplace else. In some companies this could be part of a trainer’s manual.
What Makes Up An Effective Lesson Plan: Part 01 Introduction
Introduction:
A lesson plan is the expression of the course design. It allows the teacher/trainer/professor/facilitator a way to ensure that the lesson is delivered as effectively and efficiently as possible. It offers the person responsible for the delivery of the lesson a roadmap on how best to accomplish the objective(s) of the lesson.
While it would be comforting to state that there is one right way to develop a lesson plan, the reality is that teaching is as much of an art as it is a science. This paper will present some of the generally agreed upon steps and components of good lessons plans.
Side Note: teacher, trainer, professor, facilitator there are so many words for the various professionals that impart knowledge to others. For the sake of convenience to both the reader and the author, the term “trainer” will be used to represent all these noble professions.
Depending on the environment of the training the lesson plan could be developed after the course has been designed, during the course design, or the lesson plan could BE the course design. More often than not in a K-12 school setting the lesson plan serves as the course design, while in the training environment a lesson plan serves as a document delivered to a client at the conclusion of the development of a course. At the collegiate level, well no one cares…thank you tenure.
There are three main stages that the lesson plan should address: preparing, delivery, and conclusion. Depending on the environment that the training will occur in there could be more or less steps within the stages. For example, when a trainer must travel to a training site there are the considerations of travel. If training is local, some parts of the stages could be omitted.


