�Casey at the Bat�
Casey at the Bat
Course(s)/Subject(s): English and Math 8
Grade Level(s): Seventh and Eighth
Key Words: Technology, Spreadsheet, Percentages, Data
Analysis, Poetry, Editorial, Persuasion
Developer(s) Name: Denny Berry and Becky Groom
School: Joyce Kilmer Middle School
Attached Files: edrubric
Approximate Time Frame: Five 47-minute periods
Materials/Equipment Needed: Computer lab, Internet access to
ESPN SportsZone, spreadsheet and word processing software, copy of
Casey at the Bat.
Description of Lesson (includes context): After reading
Casey at the Bat and discussing the sports
hero, students use the Internet to research real baseball
heroes. In groups, students compare individual baseball players
hitting and/or pitching statistics and nominate one baseball hero per
group. Students then justify their conclusions by creating
spreadsheets and generating graphs of the data. Finally, students
individually write a short editorial which incorporates a graph and
tells why their player is a hero based on overall achievement as well
as statistics.
(Extension: Students prepare a slide show using graphs and the
editorial to convince a Baseball Hall of Fame committee that their
player belongs in that organization.)
1. What is the objective of this lesson?
FCPS POS Standards: English 1, 3, 4, 5 Math 1, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7
FCPS POS Benchmarks: English 8.1-1, 8.1-2, 8.1-4, 8.3-1,
8.3-2, 8.3-3, 8.4-1, 8.4-2, 8.4- 4, 8.5-1, 8.5-2 Math 1.4, 3.1, 3.2,
3.3, 4.1, 5.1, 6.1, 7.1
FCPS POS Indicators: Read a variety of forms: drama, poetry,
novel, short story, nonfiction
Write a variety of forms
Select words and content appropriate to purpose, audience, form
Use sentence structure,form, and word choice to enhance meaning
Defend and support opinions
Synthesize information from multiple sources
Math: 1.4.1, 1.4.2, 3.1.1, 3.1.2, 3.2.2. 3.3.1, 3.3.2, 4.1.2, 5.1.2,
6.1.1, 6.1.2, 7.1.2
VA SOL(s) (including Computer/Technology): English 8.3, 8.4,
8.5
Math 8.4, 8.13, 8.18 Computer Technology 8.1, 8.2, 8.3, 8.4
2. What will we examine as evidence of students
knowledge and/or skill?
Product(s): Editorial, Graph (Possible Slide Show)
Performance(s): Spreadsheet
Other:
3. What exactly will the students and teacher do during
the lesson?
Directions to students for proceeding with the lesson:
Read Casey at the Bat and discuss Casey as a hero.
(English)
Research and choose a player to bring to your group at the ESPN
SportsZone site - http://espn.sportszone.com . As a group, make
comparisons and decide on one baseball hero.(Math)
Using the player chosen in math class, research further information
about that players overall achievement. (English)
Create and use a spreadsheet to generate graphs displaying/comparing
the chosen players statistics against other players considered.
(Math)
Using the writing process (prewrite, draft, revise, and edit),
mini-lessons on persuasive writing and the rubric, draft an editorial
that argues the chosen player is a baseball hero. Import the graph
created in math. (English)
Directions to teacher/administrator using the lesson?
Prerequisites: a. Enlist the help of PE teachers in ensuring that all
students know the basic rules and conventions of baseball. b. Math
teacher should have completed the spreadsheet unit in Great
Expectations and have discussed using percents as comparisons. c.
English teacher should have taught newspaper writing and how to use
persuasion in editorials.
Read Casey at the Bat aloud to students; elicit
discussion on the mock epic and the hero. (English)
Bring students to the lab to conduct research. Students should print
statistics regarding the player of their choice. (Math)
Students convert the raw statistical data into percentages and then
compare percentages to arrive at a consensus baseball
hero. (Math)
5. Bring students to the lab to conduct research. Students should
take notes from the text at the ESPN web site. (English)
6. Students need to choose no more than three baseball statistical
categories (i.e., hitting, ERA, strikeouts) and create graphs which
demonstrate their players excellence in those categories.
(Math)
7. Using the rubric (see attachment), instruct the students in
editorial writing. Have students draft their editorials, revise in
peer writing groups, and exchange with partner editors. (English)
8. Import the math graph into the revised editorial. Print the final
draft.
4. What options in presentation(s) and/or response(s)
are suggested in order to provide the opportunity for all students to
demonstrate achievement of the benchmark(s) and indicator(s)?
In lieu of the editorial, students could write one persuasive
paragraph in support of their chosen baseball hero.
(English)
Students could choose one category of baseball statistics to graph.
(Math)
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