Description
Presenting Family Interviews serves as a culminating lesson in the No Me Without Community unit, inviting students to share and reflect on the family interviews they conducted. Grounded in Ethnic Studies and SEL, this lesson centers student voice, honors family knowledge, and reinforces the understanding that identity is shaped through relationships, history, and lived experience.
Designed for grades 3–5, this 30-minute lesson (which may be flexibly extended over multiple days) supports students in presenting recorded family interviews while peers practice active listening and collaborative meaning-making. Using Mind Map graphic organizers, students jigsaw responsibilities for capturing specific aspects of each presentation, reinforcing shared accountability and collective learning.
Educators guide students in offering thoughtful questions and affirmations that clarify understanding and celebrate one another’s stories. The lesson concludes with reflection through discussion and Learning Logs, supporting students in naming how family has shaped their identities and growth.
What’s Included
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Step-by-step lesson plan for student presentations
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Active listening and peer feedback structures
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Jigsaw and collaborative note-taking strategies
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Reflection prompts focused on family and identity
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Guidance for flexible pacing and assessment
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Alignment with WAESN Elements of Liberation and OSPI SEL Standards
Why Educators Use This Lesson
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Centers student voice and lived experience
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Builds empathy, listening, and public speaking skills
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Honors families as sources of knowledge and strength
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Encourages reflective and respectful peer engagement
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Serves as a meaningful unit culmination
This lesson is ideal for educators seeking community-rooted, developmentally appropriate Ethnic Studies instruction that supports students in sharing stories, honoring family influence, and deepening collective understanding.







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