School Library Connection Archive

Learning through Podcast Creation

Lesson Plan

In this lesson, students create their own podcasts on a topic of their choice. Using book clubs that feature titles with diverse characters, settings, and social issues as a platform, students choose a social issue of personal interest and create a podcast based on the research of that topic. The lesson plan below is for the research component of the project.

This unit was collaboratively developed between the middle school librarians, Shannon McNeice, Dave St. Germain, and myself, as well as the the 7th Grade ELA team: Helena Sweet, Jenna Massicotte, Katie Seymour, Carissa Teff, Maria Bolanos, and Maggie Sullivan.

SUBJECT:

English / Language Arts

GRADE LEVEL:

Middle School

OBJECTIVES:

Students will examine a topic in order to inform or explain it to an audience via a podcast.

Students will identify credible and reliable sources using both databases and the open web by applying the E.V.A.L. method (Expert authors, View the webpage, Analyze the website URL, Lateral Reading) created by Shannon McNeice.

MATERIALS:

Finding Great Sources! 2023 Podcasting Edition, Student Handout
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lbOGUOlsvIKHkTf20Jdks_zsXx552Hfa4BWWFUI1U7U/edit?usp=sharing

E.V.A.L., Student Handout
https://docs.google.com/document/d/12KK7nbtS0Ch9Thoqo2FKFyCXHV2qjYdQbMTzYdpOaWM/edit?usp=sharing

E.V.A.L. EdPuzzle
https://edpuzzle.com/media/63ed0e95a5fb3c4131c68b83

Other handouts for unit:

Podcasting Overview/Introduction Slides
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1lgEBm8xYFFK9o1-0Hy4CDz3e-k8jASJRY-M5_hWwVi0/edit?usp=sharing

Podcast - Mentor Text Study, Student Handout
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1khbkqYjrFdifMvfigO9qu1I9AcVpMpWhakbJEhitwPY/edit?usp=sharing

Podcast Outline/Script, Student Handout
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1GbFoRg9gO-4auVDLblYQOzro6Emx8LHw83b2GezIaz8/edit?usp=sharing

TIME NEEDED:

2–3 class periods for Finding Great Resources Lesson

3–4 Weeks for Entire Podcasting Unit

INSTRUCTIONAL PROCEDURE

Instructional Note: This lesson took place during week two of the unit. The classroom ELA teacher had already introduced the definition and elements of podcasts, had students listen and evaluate mentor podcasts, chosen a topic, generated research questions, and identified keywords.

Day 1: Introduction to Databases and Advanced Searching

Begin by asking students how and where they find answers to their research questions.

Introduce the database and have students explore the different features including advanced search, filters such as news source, source type, lexile if applicable, and permalinks.

Model how to use their identified keywords into the search bar and utilize filters to narrow results.

Give students time to locate 1–3 articles in the database on their topic.

Students will copy permalinks for each article on their Finding Great Sources! 2023 Podcasting Edition, Student Handout (Step 2).

Day 2: Open Web Searching and Source Credibility using the E.V.A.L. Method

Students will share one skill they learned about using a database from the first day. This could be bell work and done digitally, paper/pencil, or orally.

Ask students how searching a database can be different from searching on the open web (i.e. Google or Sweet Search).

Introduce the E.V.A.L. method for analyzing sources, and provide an EdPuzzle video overview.

Model using keywords in an open web search and introduce the E.V.A.L. worksheet to students.

Introduce students to the Sweet Search Engine (https://sweetsearch.com/) to cut down on ads and extraneous results. Go deeper by talking about the algorithms of search engines and how they may affect the results that come back.

Give students time to locate 1–2 sources on their topic and continue to collect notes on the Finding Great Sources! 2023 Podcasting Edition, Student Handout (Step 3).

Day 3 (if needed): Small Group/One to One Spotchecking and Begin Notetaking

Have students turn and talk about one source they found and explain how/why it is credible and reliable using language from E.V.A.L.

Call on a few volunteers to share out verbally and have all students share their response in some way such as a digital or physical notecard, so that the librarian/teacher can view to see who needs more guidance.

For more on this activity, see Steven Tetreault's editorial and the accompanying episode of the SLC Podcast, "One Lesson at a Time," where Melissa Thom shares with us the process of bringing this lesson to students.

Did you learn from your time with us? Then take advantage of our professional development certificate of completion! Listen to the podcast that accompanies this lesson and take the related PD Certification Quiz to earn a certificate for one hour of PD. (Consult with your supervising organization about applying these to your professional development requirements.)

About the Author

Melissa Thom, MA, (she/her) is a teacher librarian at Bristow Middle School in West Hartford, CT. She spent 12 years teaching grades four to six as a classroom teacher, and eight years ago she earned her library media specialist certification. She is the president of the Connecticut Association of School Librarians, a 2019 AASL Social Media Superstar Reader Leader finalist, and a 2022 Library Journal Mover and Shaker.

MLA Citation

Harrington, LaDawna. "Learning through Podcast Creation." School Library Connection, May 2023, schoollibraryconnection.com/Content/LessonPlan/2338178?topicCenterId=2247900.

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https://schoollibraryconnection.com/Content/LessonPlan/2338178?topicCenterId=2247900

Entry ID: 2338178