A synthesis of many practices in education including interactive, responsive, and critical perspectives as well as the importance of the Literacy Matrix.
Practical strategies to teach vocabulary through games in EFL beginner classe...SubmissionResearchpa
One of the difficult aspects of learning a foreign language, particularly in an EFL context, is vocabulary teaching and learning .This article investigates the difficulties faced by EFL teachers and their learners in the process of teaching and learning English language .It aims at exploring the motivating potential of games in improving the teaching and learning vocabulary in EFL beginners’ classes in Uzbek secondary schools. by Zebo Botirova Hakimjon qizi and Islomjon Umrzoqov Israilovich 2020. Practical strategies to teach vocabulary through games in EFL beginner classes: the case study of some secondary schools in Namangan region. International Journal on Integrated Education. 2, 6 (Mar. 2020), 94-96. DOI:https://doi.org/10.31149/ijie.v2i6.123. https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/123/122 https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/123
A synthesis of many practices in education including interactive, responsive, and critical perspectives as well as the importance of the Literacy Matrix.
Practical strategies to teach vocabulary through games in EFL beginner classe...SubmissionResearchpa
One of the difficult aspects of learning a foreign language, particularly in an EFL context, is vocabulary teaching and learning .This article investigates the difficulties faced by EFL teachers and their learners in the process of teaching and learning English language .It aims at exploring the motivating potential of games in improving the teaching and learning vocabulary in EFL beginners’ classes in Uzbek secondary schools. by Zebo Botirova Hakimjon qizi and Islomjon Umrzoqov Israilovich 2020. Practical strategies to teach vocabulary through games in EFL beginner classes: the case study of some secondary schools in Namangan region. International Journal on Integrated Education. 2, 6 (Mar. 2020), 94-96. DOI:https://doi.org/10.31149/ijie.v2i6.123. https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/123/122 https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/123
A FAR-REACHING scheme to take Peacehaven & Telscombe FC into community ownership is being launched to ensure football survives in the two towns.
The plan is to bring Peacehaven & Telscombe FC, Peacehaven & Telscombe Youth, Mid Sussex League Peacehaven United and all the supporters together under the umbrella of a community football club.
Community football clubs are run by members of the community for the community and are financially supported by the community.
In the past many football clubs have relied, and many still do, on a financial benefactor to ensure the viability of their football club. But with a community owned football club where one member has one vote, each person who backs the club has an equal share and say in the running of their club.
Community run football clubs are relatively new but are gaining in popularity. Several league sides and top-level non-league clubs are community owned as well as many lower league teams. Locally, Lewes FC is a good example of a thriving community football club.
A meeting will be held to launch this brilliant venture in Peacehaven & Telscombe FC’s clubhouse, The Sports Park, Piddinghoe Avenue, Peacehaven on Thursday May 5.
Everyone is welcome to attend who has an interest in ensuring football is maintained in the two towns and who would like to become one of the club’s shareholders. You will also be able to find out about the many sponsorship opportunities too.
For football to survive and flourish in Peacehaven and Telscombe it is vital that a scheme such as this is introduced. Without it, Peacehaven & Telscombe FC will struggle to survive.
A prospectus is being produced which fully explains the scheme and outlines the benefits for individuals and businesses. This will be available at the May 5 launch night.
This is a brilliant opportunity for the whole community to get behind their football club, have a stake in their football club and to feel part of something forward-thinking and exciting.
Acting chairman Sue Norwood said: “I have been involved with Peacehaven & Telscombe FC for 35 years and have lived in Peacehaven for 52 years and I want this football club to continue to be at the heart of our two towns.”
She continued: “With the joint support from all the fans, Peacehaven & Telscombe Youth, Peacehaven United and of course, Peacehaven & Telscombe FC I want to see the community get behind this fantastic football club.”
“I want our children and grandchildren to have a football club they can be part of and be proud of and I want the people of our two towns to support and get involved with this fantastic scheme.”
An introduction to Cybersecurity. Timelines have been assembled from ten "Hacker" movies from 1983's WarGames to Blackhat in 2015. Additional resources are also listed to help perspective cybersecurity professionals gain awareness and skills.
DivvyCloud’s co-founder Chris DeRamus demonstrated how BotFactory automates security, cost and policy across leading public and private cloud infrastructure in a 30 minute webinar. Follow this link to see the full webinar: http://www.divvycloud.com/documentation/videos/botfactory-webinar/6381-2/
Cloud automation “Bots” monitor as well as programmatically control and self-heal software defined infrastructure. Customers like GE and Discovery use DivvyCloud Bots to automate control of cloud costs and security risks.
Reading 21st century literacyChapter 1 Examining literacy in t.docxcatheryncouper
Reading: 21st century literacy
Chapter 1: Examining literacy in the twenty-first century, pp. 2-26, of your eText provides a useful discussion of literacy practices, with particular attention given to the contemporary context.
CHAPTER 1
Examining literacy in the twenty-first century
Discovering what makes a good reader and a good teacher of readers
Jason was six and had already suffered a number of setbacks with heart surgery as a baby. He came to school aggressive and disinterested in everything school had to offer. On his first day of Year 1, he did not see the point in reading quietly, writing freely or working together with his peers. I thought ‘how do I turn a student like Jason into someone who values reading?’ As the bell rang to dismiss the class for the day, a very large man appeared at my classroom door. ‘If you have any problems with Jason, let me know and I will sort him out when he gets home.’ This parent reaffirmed for me that force is never the solution. Jason may not go home to a home of readers; he may not have access to books that he just can’t put down, and he may not be tucked into bed at night and go to sleep with thoughts of the BFG, Dirty Bertie or Superfudge. As his teacher, I believed that I could provide the impetus for reading by tapping into his interests and bridging the gap between his limited literacy experiences outside of school and the rich, meaningful literacy experiences of the classroom. Many Jasons enter our classrooms and far too many fall through an ever-widening gap. The barriers to literacy success become more and more impenetrable as readers like Jason progress through the year levels. So, what can we do to address the reading needs of our students? This book is packed with ideas, strategies and information about creating the best opportunities for literacy learners.
3
It also examines the theoretical underpinnings that drive the choices teachers make about literacy instruction.
The one-size-fits-all curriculum does not cater for the diversity of learners sitting in our classrooms. There is no teachers’ manual that guides what we do on a daily basis and no prescriptive set of lesson plans or set of blackline masters can identify the needs of your students. Literacy instruction starts with understanding your students and making available authentic literature, providing opportunities for students to work collaboratively with others, encouraging students to inquire and ask questions, and creating a classroom that accommodates a diversity of perspectives. Literacy teaching is not a one-size-fits-all task to be carried out in a one-size-fits-all classroom.
I have had the privilege of observing many outstanding literacy teachers. Their in-depth understanding of literacy learning, their passion for teaching and their willingness to know and trust their students have been critical to their classroom success. Literacy research has come a long way in the past thirty years and the benefits of children workin ...
Seeking the Meaning of the School Library Dr. Ross Todd, chef för Center for international Scholarship in School Libraries vid Rutgers University, New Jersey
Pupils are enabled to decide themselves on which topics they want to conduct research. By researching themselves, the children acquire methodological competencies that enable them to learn independently about specific contents, interacting with different media and by organising themselves in small project groups while supporting and teaching each other. Posters and models are developed, and experiments and tests are conducted continuously. In presentation slots that are regularly scheduled the children present their findings. In addition, they repeat important learning contents and aspects of their research. Teachers accompany the children during these autonomous learning situations.
State library conference_presentation_cody_versionCody Lawson
This presentation was given at the South Dakota State Library conference in the capital of Pierre. Two Assistant Professors in Teacher Education co-presented the session on Reading Across Content Areas and focused on our audience of Librarians in the Common Core Initiative.
68 En glish Journal 103.4 (2014) 68– 75wanted to write a.docxtaishao1
68 En glish Journal 103.4 (2014): 68– 75
wanted to write a darn story/poem/play) never
meant to convey. Some students fall in between—
either trusting teachers to have a reliable method,
or not particularly caring how we do it. While I
don’t mind being thought to possess some magical
second sight, these (mis)perceptions all disturb me
because I care more about students’ mastering the
hows than about any of the whats, more that they
can interpret a text than that they can recall the
literacy motif in The Tempest.
Like most En glish teachers, I often use ap-
prenticeship to build students’ interpretive skills,
using class discussions and modeling to offer “sup-
ported interaction with people [namely, me] who
have already mastered the Discourse” of En glish
studies (Gee, “Literacy” 7). James Paul Gee distin-
guishes apprenticeship from learning, which en-
tails meta- level language and cognition as students
recognize and have language for the knowledge
they are acquiring (“What”). Apprenticeship is ef-
fective in many ways, but it asks students to fake
their way through literary analysis by groping for
the kinds of language and thinking they have heard
from (perceived) genuine literary analysts (e.g., the
teacher and perhaps savvy classmates). This im-
provisation using inadequate materials, which Gee
calls “mushfake,” David Bartholomae calls “invent-
ing the university,” and my students call “fake it ’til
you make it,” goes only so far in developing critical
and analytical reading skills. My students deserve
to be explicitly taught the distinctive practices of
En glish studies in a way that adds learning to ap-
prenticeship by offering meta- level language and
thinking beyond literary terms and the like.
n recent years, professional influ-
ences on all sides have pressed me to
put my students in the driver’s seat,
making them more active in their
own learning, giving them more voice and choice
in their work, and developing skills that will ben-
efit them well beyond my classroom. And I’ve done
pretty well, I think— I’ve increased the emphasis
on research; created flexible, problem- based assign-
ments with multimodal products; improved the bal-
ance between writing and literature. But the better
I felt about how my writing instruction addressed
21st- century skills, the worse I felt about my litera-
ture instruction. My students came to understand
texts and explain the meaning they found there, but I
knew something was missing. The skills they gained
in using textual details to make meaning seemed to
start after that key first step: deciding which textual
elements were notable. I had to admit that most of
the time, I gathered (or pointed the way to) the raw
materials— passages, images, and patterns— and
then my students constructed meaning from them.
But that’s not enough; if I’m committed to teaching
the skills of literary study in addition to the content,
I have to go all the way.
Students’ .
1. Nicole Corneau December 10, 2015
Making Meaning Professor Stearns
Literacy Plan
Introduction
My comprehensive plan for teaching literacy in a Fourth Grade Classroom involves a
strengths-based teaching approach in which every unique student has opportunities to
demonstrate their knowledge and make personal connections to reading and writing. I will
involve hands-on activities and student choice to ensure that students are engaged in literacy
instruction. I believe that literacy development hinges on a child’s confidence and ability to
understand the way which words and sentences combine to convey meaning and information.
Nine and ten year old students are at a crucial time in their education where they are becoming
self-critical, saying things like, “It’s boring” and “I can’t do it” (Northeast Foundation for Child
Development). To respond to these developmental needs I will focus heavily on building
confidence and helping students find the joy in reading and writing. I will use a holistic and
interdisciplinary approach to teaching literacy in which I connect learning across all subjects,
including reading, writing, science and social studies. I will scaffold literacy skills first through
modeling in the Reading and Writing Workshop, then support students in developing skills
independently, tracking progress from one lesson to the next. By employing this “I do it, we do
it, you do it” approach, I will meet my students needs by making sure that no one is forced to
attempt a skill or activity before they feel ready to do so. Finally, I will assess student progress
through both formative and summative assessments, and will provide opportunities for each
student to demonstrate their knowledge by adapting assessments to each child’s unique needs. I
will use these assessments to guide my teaching. As Fletcher and Portalupi (2001) state,
assessment should be used “to make informed decisions about future instruction” (pg. 103). By
allowing each student to effectively express their knowledge, I will gauge what each student is
able to do and alter instruction accordingly.
Instructional Environment
My literacy classroom will be a welcoming and enriching space where students are
exposed to many different texts and modes of learning and have comfortable areas for both
independent work and collaboration with peers. Research has shown that the physical layout of a
literacy classroom can have significant impacts on supporting students comfort and confidence in
literacy (Reutzel and Clark, 2011). My classroom will have a clear, accessible, and organized
layout where students can move about and easily locate any materials they may need. Smooth
transitions from desks to the rug and to meeting areas will save time, and having students aware
of exactly where they should be will eliminate waiting time and disciplinary issues. I will have
the center of my literacy classroom be a carpet space with a set of smaller carpet circles around
the edge of the rug. A small rocking chair for myself and a large pad of brainstorm paper will be
at the front of the carpet near the whiteboard or chalkboard, where all students will be able to see
me and what I am writing. A word wall will also be displayed near my chair during units. Each
student will have their own carpet circle where they are assigned to sit. I will assign seats
2. thoughtfully and place children next to classmates who they can be productive with and in an
area that students can clearly see what’s going on. I will make sure that students with special
learning needs or who need extra support are seated closest to my chair in the circle. Nine and
ten year olds can grow very competitive but have also reached an age where they can
successfully collaborate on schoolwork (NFCD, 2005). A safe, noncompetitive classroom
environment allows children to take risks in their writing, a skill essential for growth (Fletcher
and Portalupi, 2001).Because of this, I will ensure that my classroom is an environment where
students support, rather than compete with, their peers.
For small group instruction and conferencing, I will have a half circle table located
towards the back of the classroom where I can meet with four or five students or individuals.
This table will be separated from students sitting on the rug so that small groups will not be
distracted by what the rest of the class is doing. Students’ desks will be in learning communities
of four in the center of the classroom, and the meeting rug and classroom library will occupy one
corner of the class. Next to this rug, on one wall, will be a large shelf of non-text materials that
students need for literacy. I will have bins holding clipboards, writing utensils, paper, student
journals, art supplies, blank graphic organizers, student writing portfolios, and “phones” – pieces
of PVC pipe which students can speak into to hear their own reading. Clipboards will be used
when students do work together on the rug or if they need to move around the classroom during
projects. Portfolios and Journals will be clearly labeled with student names and used habitually
throughout the year to collect students’ exemplary work. Since fourth graders can struggle with
confidence and require positive affirmation (NFCD, 2005), journals and portfolios will be a great
tool to help students build self-esteem as writers.
In addition to these supplementary materials I will have an extensive, enriching, and
easy-to-access classroom library which will be the center of my literacy instruction. As Ruetzel
and Clark (2011) assert, “The hub of an effective literacy classroom is the classroom library”.
My library will be a place where every student can find a book that meets their needs, catering to
both their personal reading level and interests. The classroom library will be composed of four
parts: A section of “book bins” with personalized “just right” books that each student can use
during independent reading time, a regular set of books organized into fiction and nonfiction, a
reference section with dictionaries, thesauruses, and other helpful books, and a “Wonder Center”
table based on the given unit of study we are working on. The Book Bins will be organized in a
row with each student’s name on it and will have four or five books that a student has chosen
from the library and had approved by me as a book that is not too easy or too challenging. In a
Fourth Grade classroom, students will be at all different levels, with some reading long chapter
books and others on shorter easy-readers. The general library will be split into nonfiction shelves
and fiction shelves, and organized by the authors’ last name. I will organize the books in this
way because this is how libraries are often organized in middle schools and high schools, and I
want students to be familiar with this format so that they are ready for the future. I will include
books covering a wide variety of topics, and get to know my students’ interests so that I can find
books which are relevant to their lives. I will include books from a diverse variety of authors and
which include stories about all types of family structures and cultures. If a student in my class is
going through a unique or emotional situation, I will include fiction stories which deal with this
3. topic or subtly include a book on the topic in my student’s book bin that week. My nonfiction
texts will cover a variety of topics, from science, to history, to sports, to engineering, and they
will be relevant to student’s learning in other classes.
The Wonder Center will be a holistic, cross-curricular display which incorporates literacy,
hands-on “artifacts”, and technology in a topic of study that my class is focusing on.
Interdisciplinary units will be a key component of my literacy plan because I believe that
reading, writing, and research can support students’ understanding of science, history, and even
math. The Wonder Center will be home to four computers which will be lined up against the wall
and situated next to the Wonder Center display table. An example Wonder Center could be based
on a science unit about Plate Tectonics and Physical Geography, a Next Generation Science
Standard for Fourth Grade (NGSS, 2012). I would have on display several nonfiction texts, at
varying levels of difficulty about this subject. There would also be a physical diorama of an
ocean floor or mountain range that students can touch and manipulate, and a “Question Bin” with
small scrap paper that students can write on to pose questions about plate tectonics.
Developmentally, nine-year-olds “want factual explanations and enjoy scientific exploration”
(NFCD, 2005). I will monitor the questions that students put in the bin and use them as a kind of
formative assessment or way to gauge student interest. Finally, there will be a list of websites
and games having to do with physical geography that students can explore on the computers
during down time. The Wonder Center will expose students to explore multi-modal literacy,
while allowing students who are more engaged through visual and sensory learning can have an
opportunity to increase their understanding.
Instructional Strategies and Content
1. Word Work
One area of study which I will focus on in the Fourth Grade Classroom is word work,
which involves spelling, phonics, and vocabulary instruction. Nine-year-olds “love language and
word play” (NFCD, 2005), so this content area will not only be important for the development of
reading and writing skills but to student’s enjoyment of literacy as well. Word work in fourth
grade will involve students learning how to spell and encode and decode more difficult words
with various letter sounds and phrases (Templeton & Gehssman, 2014). Spelling skills will allow
students to not only use more sophisticated words in their own writing, but to understand higher
level texts with longer and more difficult words. Students at this point will also be learning how
to manipulate the words that they already know, changing tenses of words or understanding how
one root word can be changed to form a new family of words. For example, we may do a study
on the root word “com”, which means “with”, and study how that word can be expanded into a
family of words like community, communal, communicate, common, ect. Since fourth grade
students will have many sight words at this point in literacy, and will have mastered most basic
phonetical skills, they will be able to move into a higher level exploration of spelling and word
play. A Fourth Grade word work unit will focus on more than simply how words are spelled, but
how words work – how they are related, how they can be broken apart and altered, and how their
meaning can be changed with different tenses or prefixes and suffixes.
4. Vocabulary is another large part of the word work content area, and is essential to the
development of both reading and writing skills. When students learn advanced and sophisticated
vocabulary, they will be able to make their writing more accurate and descriptive, and they will
be able to understand new vocabulary words in texts. Fourth-graders will also be learning
domain-specific vocabulary words which link to other units of study. The Common Core calls
for fourth graders to “Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to inform or explain
about a topic” (Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts). Vocabulary units will
also allow me to cater to student needs by studying vocabulary that is interesting to students
while still meeting state standards. For example, if many of my students have a passion for
sports, I may do a vocabulary unit on “Descriptive Adjectives about Athletes”, such as “agile”,
“deft”, or “flexible”.
To teach word work units, I will use several key strategies including word sorts, word
walls, and Mini-Lessons. Word sorts will be used to help students group words by either
common sounds or spellings within the words or group words by categories based on their
definitions. Word sorts will be conducted over several days, beginning with a whole class
investigation of the words and progressing to an individual sort or spelling test. This type of
gradual, several day sort will be used to ensure that students understand and can talk about the
words that they are studying before trying to sort the words independently. Word walls will be
used to display families and groups of words in a unit. For word walls, I will use pictures in
addition to words to help my visually-oriented students or English Language Learners. I will also
employ technology to teach word studies, using digital, interactive word walls or inviting
students to research families of words on computers. These computer-based strategies will keep
students engaged and interested in word study while promoting their digital literacy skills.
Finally, I will use some of my Writer’s Workshop mini lessons to teach vocabulary instruction as
it applies to students’ writing. For example, I may devote a Writer’s Workshop to using
descriptive language and show students in a mini lesson how to replace a word like “tired” with
“exhausted” to improve their writing.
2. Writing
My writing instruction will focus on many content areas of study, but hold a special
emphasis on informative and descriptive writing pieces. As Fletcher and Portalupi state, writing
is a “bundle of skills”, and my students will need to combine many skills and techniques to
create sophisticated writing pieces. The skills I will be teaching include pre-writing and
planning, selecting a topic, conducting research, writing stories, vocabulary use, sentence and
paragraph structure, creating introductions and conclusions, using dialogue and character
development, discussing opinions, and supporting statements with evidence. Students will write
fictional stories which are interesting, descriptive, and use many different literary tools. All of
students’ creative writing will be on topics of their choice. My literacy instruction for fourth
grade will also focus heavily on research, informational and creative writing, and
interdisciplinary learning. It is especially important to me to teach literacy skills that will begin
to scaffold the king of critical thinking they will need in their secondary education. During
writing time, I will teach students about the process of choosing a topic, collecting information
5. or planning out a story, writing a piece, then revising and editing. Whenever possible, I will
assign students writing projects which connect to another area of study or connect to student
choice. For example, fourth grade students are called by the Common Core to conduct short
research projects and write reports (CCSS, ELA). If I was doing a science unit on marine life, I
could allow students to choose a marine animal to conduct a project on. I would also invite
students to present their research and reports to the class to begin to scaffold their public
speaking skills and fluency. During this unit, The Wonder Center which I described in my
classroom layout will be a key component of tying together interdisciplinary learning, perhaps
with photos of marine mammals and stuffed animals.
For writing instruction, my main instructional strategy will be Writer’s Workshop. My
Writer’s Workshops will be hinged on the principle of Gradual Release of Responsibility – the “I
do it, we do it, you do it” format. I will also incorporate student choice into the workshop at
every opportunity. As Fletcher and Portalupi state, “student choice is the crucial fuel that drives a
healthy workshop” (2001, pg. 23). These strategies are developmentally responsive and allows
the teacher to give varying levels of support or independence based on students’ abilities
(Templeton & Gehssman, 2014). I will scaffold skills that students can keep in their literacy
“toolkit” for the rest of their education and critical thinking skills that they can apply to all
subjects. For each new concept I introduce, I will model a skill through an interactive workshop,
provide students with opportunities to practice the skill collaboratively or with assistance from
me, then have students practice the skill independently. This strategy allows me to differentiate
instruction for students who may need extra support. While students are working independently,
I can pull some students aside for more explicit modeling or guided practice, and assign further
extensions of a skill to students who are finished with work early. I will use discovery circles for
reading nonfiction texts, book clubs for fiction texts, and frequent peer editing for writing
instruction. I think that collaboration with peers allows students to hear unique perspectives they
may not have otherwise thought of, or accept constructive criticism in a friendly, low-pressure
environment.
During Writer’s Workshop, I will begin with a mini lesson where I explain a clear learning
target, such as “Today, we will edit our writing pieces to look for grammatical and spelling
mistakes”. I will begin mini lessons by recapping what we have already learned about a topic and
asking students what they know already or can predict about how to use this skill. I will also
pose a question like, “Why do we need to edit our writing?” so that students understand how this
skill will support their overall literacy ability. In the mini lesson, I will model the skill out loud
for students, asking questions as I go, then do a hands-on, collaborative activity practicing the
skill as a group. For editing, for example, I may give present a paragraph on the board with
several errors, and ask students to pair up and come to the board and edit one of the mistakes.
Following the mini lesson, I will allow students to practice the skill independently in their
learning communities or work with a partner depending on the topic of the lesson. During this
time, I will be monitoring the engagement and understanding of the class and conferencing with
individual students. Finally, I will conclude my writing time with a share when a few students
can present their work to the class. Share time is not only key to developing students’ confidence
6. and public speaking skills, but will also serve as a type of assessment for me at the end of a
Workshop (Fletcher and Portalupi, 2004).
3. Reading Fluency and Comprehension
In Fourth Grade, my reading instruction will be broken into two sections, reading fluency
and reading comprehension. Fluency is students’ ability to read quickly and accurately, and read
out-loud with expression. There are only two strategies which are generally used to teach
fluency, which are modeling and practice. To read more quickly, students simply need to
practice independent reading time, and to read out-loud quickly, students need to read out-loud
often to peers and teachers. Comprehension is another component of reading instruction which
involves students being able to follow a story in a fictional text and understand what is going on,
or comprehend and synthesize the information provided in a non-fiction text. My units of study
within comprehension will involve following plots, understanding characters and dialogue,
analyzing fiction texts for greater meaning, navigating non-fiction text features, and gathering
facts from non-fiction texts.
Reader’s Workshop will be my main tool for reading instruction, and will begin with either a
mini lesson or a read aloud. Mini-lessons may involve skills like using a glossary in a nonfiction
text, where I would model the skill then invite students to explore glossaries independently. For
read-alouds, I will often use guided and interactive read-alouds so that I can teach
comprehension skills. During the read-aloud, I will model a skill for students, such as making
predictions, and keep it interactive by asking questions throughout the reading. I will then allow
students to discuss the read aloud in pairs or guide the class through another story as they
practice the skill as a group. Finally, I will conclude Reader’s Workshop with independent
reading time where students can practice the comprehension skill we have worked on.
Independent reading time is extremely important since frequent practice is the most effective tool
for reading development (Gehsmann &Templeton, 2011). For some reading blocks, I will split
students into book clubs and discovery circles and provide discussion questions will improve
their comprehension. Developmentally, nine and ten year olds are beginning to be less selfish
and able to be good listeners as well as speakers (Northeast Foundation for Child Development,
2005). Group conversations will not only support students’ understanding of the text, but build
their communication and verbal skills.
In Fourth Grade, it is important that students begin to understand nonfiction texts and how to
draw information from them. When teaching nonfiction texts, I will use strategies like graphic
organizers and concept maps to support students’ ability to pull important facts from a book or
article. It is also important that students gain a wider range of tier two vocabulary words to
support both their writing and comprehension of non-fiction books. I will focus read-alouds on
vocabulary instruction, often vocabulary that has to do with another unit of study. I will support
students’ visual and multimodal literacy by studying news sources, online resources, and other
video and print sources. I will incorporate technology into my lessons very thoughtfully and use
it to increase student engagement or expose students to new types of texts (i.e. online blogs and
news sources). In addition to scientific nonfiction, I will incorporate historical fiction into my
Reading Units so that students can understand history while still being engaged in a fictional
7. story. I plan to expose students to many types of text that may not always include books. For
example, if I were working on a history unit of the Civil Rights Movement, I may use a Reader’s
Workshop to analyze a speech from a famous leader and pick out key vocabulary within that
speech to study. Overall, my students will develop literary skills which will help them to analyze
texts and think critically.
Assessment
For my assessment of literacy, I will use a combination of formative and summative
assessments which test not only for performance and standards-based skills, but also my own
learning targets for students. I will work to create assessments which are accessible to all types
of learners, and offer projects, presentations, and other assignments which can demonstrate
understanding in a less formal way. High-stakes, formal tests can cause anxiety for students and
are only one specific way of showing knowledge. Nine and ten year olds can be prone to anxiety
and worrying, so I want to emphasize formative assessment and help students to track their own
progress in a stress-free way (NFCC, 2005). I will find creative ways to test for student’s
proficiency in the Common Core Standards and keep careful track of student progress to guide
my instruction and planning.
My formative assessment plan will include observation, written notes, student self-
assessment, group discussions, and a wide variety of projects and presentations. I will be
constantly assessing if students are engaged during group projects, and monitor the types of
questions students ask of me and one another. I will frequently ask questions during lessons the
gauge how much understanding has gone on. For students who are English Language Learners I
will provide accommodations in assessment, such as extra time to work on a test or project or
allowing them to answer quiz questions in their native language. For students who may have
learning disabilities, or trouble with writing, I will provide them with opportunities to do a
different version of an assignment or verbally explain their knowledge to me in a conference.
Conferencing “put kids into an active stance” (Fletcher and Portalupi 2001), allowing the
students to take control over their own learning and express their thoughts. I will provide varied
assessments that include art, public speaking, writing, making posters and displays, performance,
or verbal descriptions. By offering many different modes of assessment, I will allow students
who may not excel on a traditional test to have a window to express their learning.
One example of an important Common Core Standard for Grade Four is the following:
“Students will write opinion pieces on topics of texts, supporting a point of view with reasons
and information” (Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts and Literacy). The
key here is that students can not only state their opinion, but that they understand how to back up
a statement with examples and evidence. I would provide students choice in an opinion writing
assignment, and work on the topic for several mini lessons. To assess students for this standard, I
would rely heavily on conferencing and collaboration. During conferences, I would ask students,
“What is your opinion, and why is this your opinion? What reasons do you have for stating this
opinion?” This would allow students to explain their understanding of providing evidence and
support. I could also ask students to explain their opinion piece to a partner and discuss their
supports, monitoring dialogue and checking to see if students are making the connection between
8. offering an opinion and backing it up with information. Of course, a summative assessment
would be a graded opinion writing piece, but I would use the aforementioned formative
assessment techniques to monitor students and make sure that they are proficient in the skill
before assignment a summative writing piece.
Read-Alouds
For my Fourth Grade Literacy Plan, I will use nonfiction and informational texts as well as
longer fiction chapter books for instructional read-alouds. Read-alouds will focus either on
reading strategies, such as making inferences or navigating nonfiction text features, or on
vocabulary instruction. I will select books which are relevant to students’ lives and to other
content areas. I will read books which include diverse ways of life and expose students to other
cultures or styles of writing. Fourth Graders are called by the Next Generation Science Standards
to work on engineering and the scientific process. Therefore, I may select a book like The New
Way Things Work by David McCauly. This book has a host of engineering domain-specific
vocabulary as well as interesting pictures and graphics. This read-aloud could be coupled with an
engineering project which students conduct in science class.
Another book which I may use for a read-aloud is a fiction story that can be used both as a
mentor text and a connection to another unit of study. Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt by
Deborah Hopkinson is a historical fiction novel about a young girl living in a planation as a slave
who creates a quilt mapping the Underground Railroad so that she can be re-united with her
family. The story will be engaging to young readers since it is told through the eyes of a child.
Students like to read books about children like them, since they can relate to the characters. This
story can be used to model character development for young authors, since it has wonderful
descriptions of Clara’s thoughts and feelings. The story could also be linked to an
interdisciplinary unit about history and the abolition movement.
Another, more advanced, novel which could be used in a fourth grade classroom is
Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White. Since this is a chapter book, I would most likely have students
do some of the reading independently and some together as a class through reader’s theater or
myself reading out loud to them. This book is full of compelling characters and interesting
dialogue, so I could model reading out-loud with expression and have students practice this skill.
The story also serves as a mentor text showing students how they may use humor in their stories.
The story is also about the life of a child on a farm, a topic which may be relevant to my
students’ lives based on where I am teaching. When introducing chapter books, I will constantly
try to provide students with stories that are about children like them or other topics which they
find interesting.
9. Works Cited
Ray Reutzel & Sarah Clark. 2011. Organizing Literacy Classrooms for Effective Instruction
– a Survival Guide. The Reading Teacher. 65 – (2).
Templeton, S. & Gehsmann, K. (2014). Teaching Reading and Writing: the Developmental
Approach. Boston: Pearson.
Ralph Fletcher & JoAnn Portalupi. 2001. Writer’s Workshop – The Essential Guide. New
Hampshire. Heineman.
Child Development Pamphlets. 2005. Northeast Foundation for Child Development.
Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts.
10. CONTENT STRATEGIES ASSESSMENT CONNECTIONS
Reading Fluency Read-alouds
Modeling
Independent/Group
Reading Practice
Reader’s Theater
Listening for fluent/
expressive reading
Read alouds that
connect to students’
lives
Writing Writer’s Workshop
Mini Lessons
Peer/Individual
Editing
Sharing
Student Choice
Discovery Circles
Conferencing
Standards-based
assessment of
student writing
Journals and
Portfolios
Self-assessment
Projects
Observation
Research-based
science writing
Historical writing
Wonder Center
Word Work Word Walls
Word Sorts
Embedded
vocabulary
instruction
Read-alouds
Students’
vocabulary use in
writing
Independent sorts
Science and other
subject domain-
specific vocabulary
Comprehension Reader’s Workshop
Modeling
Read-alouds
Book Clubs
Discovery Circles
Technology (Visual
literacy)
Reading
conferences
Comprehension
assessments
(graphic
organizers, story
maps)
Observation of
discovery circles
and student
discussions
Learning science
and history through
nonfiction texts