Posted by:
Richard St Amant
9/2/2009 12:14:53 AM
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Title: |
Top Reasons To Attend My School |
Grade Level: |
High School |
Subject Area: |
Language Arts
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Lesson Time: |
100 minutes of classroom activities (spaced out over two
to three weeks) and approximately 240 to 360 minutes of
homework time (over the same time period) |
Introduction: |
Many public school students take their schools for
granted. They may have had little part in the decision to
go to their particular school. Perhaps they are there
simply because it was the school in their neighborhood or
they lived within the school’ s district boundaries,
or it was the school their parents went to. This
lesson will help students look at and evaluate reasons why
someone might choose their particular school to go to, and
beyond that, teach them to pitch a marketing campaign to
attract prospective students to attend in the coming years.
This lesson, which will have several parts, will give the
students an opportunity to creatively learn and then
express why there are good reasons to attend their school.
The lesson will begin by welcoming the new “
junior members” of the “ High School Marketing
Firm. ” As junior members they will be invited
to pitch a campaign to a prospective client. Students will
be reminded of the process they will need to follow in
preparing a campaign. A multimedia presentation of
various marketing campaigns will be shared and then the
teacher will describe the design process. Students
will be asked to review the challenge and to ask the
prospective client about their specific needs. They will
then be broken into heterogeneous groups and a rubric will
be shared about the project. The groups will be asked to
investigate the problem and taught how to gather
information. Each group will choose a different
sector of the public from which to gather information and
will begin to discuss possible strategies (a homework
assignment will be to interview members of the area of the
public that they have chosen). Students will be asked to
reframe the problem and make sure that they are on the
right track. They will then be asked to generate
possible marketing plans (following the rubric that they
have been given). The teacher will help the groups
to refine their plans and help them to edit, develop, and
refine their ideas. At this point a panel made up of
the various public sectors will be asked for their input
and groups will have a chance to refine their plans
further. Groups will be given another day to put
together a proposal that they will share with the panel.
The panel (as well as the other groups) will listen
to the pitches created by each group and will discuss
whether the group has met the challenge or not. The
class will come together and further develop a marketing
plan based on the best pitches. Students will be
asked to reflect in their journals about the process.
This lesson will lay the groundwork for a future
lesson in which each student will create a personal
marketing plan that they will use in preparing for a job in
a career that they are interested in. That lesson
will take them through: writing a resume; searching for a
job; filling out applications; going out for a job
interview. |
Standards: |
Language Arts Standard 1. Uses the general skills
and strategies of the writing process Standard 4.
Gathers and uses information for research purposes
Standard 7. Uses reading skills and strategies to
understand and interpret visual media
Standard 8. Uses listening and speaking strategies for
different purposes Standard 9. Uses viewing skills
and strategies to understand and interpret visual
media Mathematics Standard 1. Level 1. Uses a
variety of strategies in the problem-solving process
1. Draws pictures to represent problems 2. Uses discussions
with teachers and other students to understand problems
Technology Standard 4. Understands the nature of
technological design 3. Identifies appropriate
problems which can be solved using technological design |
Objectives: |
Students will be able to : - describe the marketing
process
- identify key sectors of the public from whom
to gather information
- survey different public sectors
(students, teachers, administrators, parents) to determine
their interests in the school
- reflect on their own
interests and goals
- articulate how words and images
relate to one another, particularly in the marketing
process
- demonstrate how words, images, and sounds fit
together in a marketing piece
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Resources: |
computers - class set for a few days digital cameras
variety of visual art supplies Alliance for Excellent
Education - www. all4ed. org/promoting_power Center for
Development and Learning - www. cdl. org various high
school Web sites https://www. identityworks. com/default.
htm www. aiga. com www. designwritingresearch. org |
Materials: |
- high school marketing materials (online)
- visual art
supplies
- handouts
- Janson Media: "Public Relations
Expert"
- Discovery Education: https://streaming.
discoveryeducation. com
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Vocabulary: |
- graphic design: the practice or profession of creating
print or electronic forms of visual information for
areas such as publications, advertisement, packaging, or
Web sites
- client: a purchaser of a service or product; a
client looks for a designer to act as the translator
between their voice/idea and their audience
- awareness:
having or showing realization, perception, or
knowledge
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Procedures: |
1. Teacher will welcome students into the new “
marketing center. ” As “ junior
members” of the marketing center students will be
asked to develop a marketing plan. 2. Students will
view film (previously downloaded) entitled “ Public
Relations Expert. ” 3. After viewing the film
students will be asked what they know about marketing and
design. 4. Ask students about what sorts of brand
name products they are familiar with. Consider
displaying different examples of marketing campaigns, i. e.
Nike’ s “ Just Do It"; McDonald’ s
“ I’ m Loving It” . 5. Explain
that it is the marketing team’ s job to help develop
“ brand awareness. ” 6. Students will
need to be reminded that design is about serving a client,
getting their ideas across to others, and not strictly
about self-expression but, rather, resolving a problem.
While their experiences as students and their
personal style will be extremely valuable as they design a
new school logo, they must remember that they are designing
to meet the needs of their client (their school). 7.
Introduce the challenge: To develop “ brand
awareness” for their school. To figure out
what things make their school unique, special, or a
stand-out from other schools. 8. Allow students to
view various high school Web sites to see what features
other schools may be highlighting. 9. Break students
into homogenous groups and let them know of the group roles
and have them pick a leader, a secretary, and a
presenter/reader. 10. Provide students with
information about their school through existing materials
such as yearbooks, newsletters, brochures, etc.
Explain that this is the starting ground for their
presentations. 11. Assign a sector of the public
each group must gather information from: Faculty, Current
Students, Current Parents, Prospective Students, and
Prospective Parents. Homework Assignment One: Each group
member must interview a member of their assigned public
sector or have them fill out the attached questionnaire. |
Assessment: |
There are two sections of the lesson which will be
assessed using different rubrics. One rubric will be
used to evaluate how well students understood and adhered
to the design process in preparation for their
presentation. The other rubric will be used to
evaluate the presentation itself. |
Enrichment Extension Activities: |
This lesson could be tiered so that students with a lower
reading comprehension rate could work in a group with the
teacher reading the materials aloud to them while the
students with a higher reading level could read the
materials on their own. After the reading is
completed then the class can come together to discuss the
material and ask any questions. Students than could
be re-grouped homogenously. Each group would then
determine roles: • Group Leader • Group
Secretary • Group Reporter As tasks are completed the
group roles can be rotated so that every member of the
group will have an opportunity to function in the different
roles. Presentations could be incorporated into recruitment
events with selected student groups making presentations to
incoming students and/or their parents. Some of the
design elements could be incorporated into the
school’ s Web site. Working in conjunction
with the school’ s webmaster, students could learn
about web design and html markup and tagging. An
extension of the design process as mentioned previously
will be to have the students come up with a marketing
campaign for themselves as they prepare to do job/career
searching. |
Teacher Reflection: |
N/A. |
Related Files: |
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