Penny Kittle recently shared this article about the diminishing attention span of humans, thanks to the plethora of instant-gratification stimuli that burdens our plugged-in students. I was reminded of my vow to help my kids simplify their lives, slow down their minds, and just…be.

The unit plan Mike and I designed
All of this led my student teacher, Mike, and I to design a unit plan around mindfulness, reflection, and deep thinking. We wanted to use all of Siddhartha, parts of Hamlet, articles like the one above, various poems, the music of Cat Stevens, activities like contour drawing, and exercises like meditation to help our students slow down and explore their minds.
So, today we’re launching this unit of self-reflection and self-exploration, and one of the first mini-lessons we’ll teach is a reader’s response to “The Eight Second Attention Span” article.
Objectives: Using the language of the depth of knowledge levels, students will identify patterns in Egan’s writing that align with our unit theme, cite evidence in the text of those patterns, and synthesize Egan’s argument with our prior readings. Or, from the Common Core: students will read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.
Lesson: We’ll pass out copies of the article for students to read and annotate, and they’ll also have their writer’s notebooks out.
“First,” I’ll say, “let’s read this article and just identify Egan’s argument. What is he saying? Underline or highlight key lines or facts that help make his point.” We’ll read and annotate together, me using the document camera to model.
“Once you’ve figured out what Egan is saying here, go ahead and jot it down in your notebook in your own words. What’s the gist of what he’s talking about?”
After the jot, students will talk in their table groups about the article and what they’ve noticed. We’ll share out as a class and make sure our thinking is in sync.

Nonlinguistic storytelling through doodles–one of my proposed solutions from my response. We’ll do this exercise later in the unit.
“Okay, so Egan ends by offering two solutions to this problem. What are they?” Gardening and deep reading, students will offer.
“Let’s write a response for a while in our notebooks and brainstorm what our own solutions to this problem would be.”
We’ll all write, me modeling once again on the document camera. Then students will share in small groups what their proposed solutions are.
Follow-Up: I’ll ask students to practice one of their two proposed solutions are over the course of the week, then request a one-pager reflecting on the experiment. We’ll apply our reading of the article, our practice of deep thinking, and our reflection on all of it to our unit of study as we move forward in our exploration of our themes.
Tagged: Mini-lesson Monday, Mini-lesson: Reading
Hi Shana, not sure if you still check comments from years old posts, but I am looking to create a similar unit about the brain and mindfulness with my students, and wondering if you had more resources to share? Thank you!
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[…] an alternate perspective to whatever central text we might be reading. (Example: While reading Siddhartha and thinking about coming of age and going on journeys, Outliers, Marcelo in the Real World, The […]
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