
How do live lessons work?
Live lessons are interactive slides and course outlines that are used to teach Treeway Live Classes. Click on the arrows to navigate backward and forwards through the slides.
How Do I Use the Lesson Plans?
Read this lesson plan before class to familiarize yourself with the ideas and concepts you’ll be teaching the students. You may print this page out if you need to use it as a reference point during live classes.
This lesson is a guide, but feel free to expand on the content or decrease/increase what you teach depending on the learning levels of the students in your class or the amount of time you have to cover the material.
Can I show videos in live classes?
Yes, feel free to include additional material to supplement the class lesson material. Videos, Physical Objects, Games, Activities, etc. are okay to share in live classes.
Videos should have no advertisements or logos and should be viewed by you before showing them to the students to ensure no offensive or questionable content is included.
The video should make up only a small portion of the live class.
How do bookmarks work?
Bookmarks help you keep track of lessons you’re going to teach in future live classes. The bookmarks you see are for all your bookmarked lessons across all grades.
You can bookmark a lesson by visiting the lesson you want to bookmark and clicking the “bookmark” button in the bookmark section.
You can remove a single bookmark by visiting a lesson you’ve bookmarked and clicking the “bookmark” button again to unbookmark it.
You can clear all of your bookmarks by clicking the “clear all bookmarks” button. Be careful, this will erase all of your bookmarks.
Log in to save bookmarks.
Class Summary
Reinforcing the social studies lesson that teaches about about authority figures. Students should leave the class understanding that these persons make sure that rules are followed. They should understand that there are different types of authority figures in different situations.
Lesson Slide
Main Teaching Points
- Authority figures have rules to keep things in order. They make rules to keep us safe. Authority figures also help us and make sure we have what we need. A librarian is in charge of the library. The librarian has rules for people who come to the library. “No talking” and “No running” are two examples of library rules.
- In the United States, voters pick a new president every 4 years. The president passes laws for the people to follow. The bible tells us to obey the laws of the country we live in. (Romans 13:1)
Discussion Questions
- Who are the authority figures in our home? The library? At the pool? The community? The country?
- What are some rules you have to follow at the library?
- Why do you think the librarian wants us to follow these rules?
- Why do we have rules and laws?
- Why are rules and laws important to us?
In-Class Activities
- Play: Simon Says or a similar game that teaches children to follow rules.