a. Explain how your instruction engaged students in developing an essential literacy strategy and related skills. [The central focus of this learning segment is retelling by using key details and evidence. I chose The Dinosaur Chase based on my students personal interests to demonstrate this skill. My instruction engaged students in developing an essential literacy strategy and related skills. I began my instruction by motivating the students by personalizing the information. I began with an example of retelling my weekend, at 39 seconds into clip 1. I retold my weekend to the students using sequencing vocabulary and details. This grabbed their attention and they were able to connect the importance of sequencing with retelling. This demonstrated …show more content…
At one point, for instance 4 minutes 3 seconds into clip 1, the class was getting a bit noisy and I tried to talk over them. Instead, I should have tried a method the teacher uses, such as clapping or closing the lights. It is important to never try to talk over the class or compete with them. At 2 minutes and 38 seconds in clip 2, I began to distribute the graphic organizers and send the students back to their groups to work with their partner. At this point, I noticed I was a bit unorganized and this could have gone smoother. When I was distributing the papers the class was getting chatty and impatient. For future lessons, I plan to do this differently. Perhaps, I could have a paper monitor hand out the papers or could have the students line up and take one. I will also work on giving perfectly clear directions to ensure all of my students are on task and understand. Next time, I will ask a student to repeat my instructions after I have given them to ensure they were listening and are ready to move on. For example, in clip 1 at 2 minutes and 19 seconds, I asked, “Did everyone hear what he read for us?” Next time, I will ask a student to repeat what was actually said. Another thing I would do is work a little bit more with the weekend motivation I began my lesson with. After I retold the class my weekend, I could have worked a little bit more with that example at about 40 seconds into clip 1. Next time, I will ask the class to turn and talk quickly to their partner and retell them their own weekends in order using details. This gives the students a chance to interact with their peers while retelling and personalizing the information. Also, I would enforce sequencing vocabulary a bit more in the responses on the graphic organizer. The organizer was broken up into columns labeled beginning, middle, and end. In the columns I feel it would be better if there was more
For this assignment, I completed a survey to assess my school’s literacy program by using a survey that was adapted from by Patty, Maschoff, & Ransom (1996) to analyze the instructional program and the school’s infrastructure. To be able to answer my survey, I needed to go colleagues of mine in the English Department and to my administration to help with these questions. Being a math teacher, we hardly ever discuss the literacy and the students’ acquisition of it in our department meeting during staff development days. Since I am not truly current with literacy acquisition in education, I am hoping to understand more from this process so I can help all my students. I want them to be able to read texts related to math and find information that will be useful to them during the year.
“Literacy is a bridge from misery to hope. It is a tool for daily life in modern society. It is a bulwark against poverty, and a building block of development, an essential complement to investments in roads, dams, clinics and factories. Literacy is a platform for democratization, and a vehicle for the promotion of cultural and national identity. Especially for girls and women, it is an agent of family health and nutrition. For everyone, everywhere, literacy is, along with education in general, a basic human right.... Literacy is, finally, the road to human progress and the means through which every man,
English Language Learners (ELL) require thoughtful and careful instruction for both reading and writing education. Both of these skills are necessary for a bright future and to be a functioning citizen in Canada. Those that do not possess considerable literacy levels will be effectively 'locked out' from so much knowledge, information and ideas that are part of the culture of society (Christie 1990, 20). Having a low level of literacy usually means acquiring an unskilled job. The relationship between literacy levels and poverty is something that should not be ignored (Gibbons, 2002). Developing literacy skills in ELLs is a daunting task and especially with students that have not developed those skills in their first language originally. Through the Curriculum Cycle and proper scaffolding of writing strategies, this paper will provide a lesson plan that will help develop an ELL's writing skills. It will include many different tools that will help students gain an understanding and confidence of the narrative writing form.
Literacy embraces reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Integrating all of these into a literacy program is key. Teachers must provide endless and ongoing opportunities for their student to read, write, listen, and speak.
The seven pillars of effective reading instruction are an important base to an effective and engaging classroom. Teachers, who are able to apply each of these pillars to everyday learning in the classroom, reach their students and provide instruction in meaningful and approachable ways. Each of these pillars provides important ideas and information that work together to create an effective learning environment in the literacy classroom. By accessing and including each of these pillars in my classroom environment, curriculum and instructions, students benefit from the more effective reading instruction possible.
A comprehensive approach to literacy instruction is when reading and writing are integrated. This happens by connecting reading, writing, comprehension, and good children’s literature. A comprehensive approach to literacy should focus on the many different aspects of reading and writing in order to improve literacy instruction. This includes teachers supporting a comprehensive literacy instructional program by providing developmentally appropriate activities for children. Comprehensive literacy approaches incorporate meaning based skills for children by providing them with the environment needed for literacy experiences. This includes having a print rich classroom where children are exposed to charts, schedules, play related print, and
Using Not Your Typical Dragon and interactive discussion as a pedagogical scaffold (Serafini, 2014) enables educators to extend children’s vocabulary and share their emerging ideas. Discussing the features throughout the process of reading the story a second time consists at the beginning, middle and end, this enables educators to further extent on the theme or chosen area (Callow, 2016). The use of prodigious language throughout the story encourages curiosity, inviting the children to point out unfamiliar words and discussing their meanings, and also facilitates further extension on their
...unit, the rest of this course and beyond I will need to utilise my personal experiences in literacy development and continue to develop my skills. This will be vital in providing my future students with the grounding in literacy they deserve.
As a teacher, you need to encourage all attempts at reading, writing, speaking, and allowing children to experience the different functions and use of literacy activity (The Access Center, n.d.). Moreover, it is crucial for educators to understand phonological awareness and phonics; know what constitutes good children’s literature and how to use it; know children who need additional assistance with beginning reading and writing (Cunningham et al, 2004 as cited in McLachlan et al, 2013, p. 112). Educators also need to plan effective activities to assist children experience reading aloud, listening to other children read aloud, listening to tape recordings, and videotapes so children have opportunities to integrate and extend their literacy knowledge (The Access Center, n.d.). Morrow (1990 as cited in The Access Center, n.d.) notes that classroom with greater teacher facilitation promote literacy behaviours, so it is educators’ role to provide literacy rich
Every child deserves a positive, safe, nurturing, and stimulating learning environment where they will grow academically, socially, emotionally, and physically. My role as an educator is to provide my students with this type of environment as well as an education that will help them succeed academically and become life long learners. It is the responsibility of a literacy educator to provide students with this type of environment, but also to provide instruction that will help students become successful readers and writers. There are numerous programs and philosophies about literacy and reading. Through years of experience and research, one begins to develop their own creative approach on teaching these skills. After looking at different programs and seeing the positive and negatives of each, an integrated and balanced approach of literacy seems to be the best way to teach the differing needs of each student.
Being literate defines who I am, and forms an integral part of my life. From the practical to the creative, it aids, and enables me to perform in the tasks that modern society dictates. I shall explore the many aspects of my life that are affected by literacy. Through this, understanding in greater depth what it means for me, to be literate.
... for teachers to choose materials that will hook students and motivate them to engage in their own learning. Teachers should provide multiple learning opportunities in which stu¬dents can experience success and can begin to build confidence in their ability to read, write, and think at higher level. By connecting strategies for learning, such as searching, compre¬hending, interpreting, composing, and teaching content knowledge, students are given the opportunity to succeed in their education. These elements include: fundamental skills such as phonemic awareness, phonemic decoding, and other word analysis skills that support word reading accuracy; text reading fluency; strategies for building vocabulary; strategies for understanding and using the specific textual features that distinguish different genres; and self-regulated use of reading comprehension strategies.
This video involves the quiet voice, classwork only, only talking to the person in your group, asking and offering help, and humility in collaborative learning. In my classroom, on the first day of the school, I set the ground rules about talking and let my students know up front when it is okay or not okay to talk. Be sure to give them specific guidelines about talking times. I separate the class to "my time" and "your time". During "my time", when I am doing the lesson instruction, giving directions, and addressing the class as a whole group, students should be focused on me, listening, and taking notes as needed. "Your time" refers to student-centered time. During group work, class activities, and class assignments, students are allowed
After finishing the teaching part of the lesson, I realized that not everything goes according to plan. For example, in our lesson plan, we had the explain portion detailed and outlined to teach students the technical terms of what they were seeing in the stations and other activities and make it a collaborative effort within groups to work with the vocabulary words. However, the teaching of the plan was not well executed. Also, I learned that teaching a topic does not have to be boring or just full of worksheets. Fun, engaging lab stations and interactive activities can fulfill the standards and requirements just as well, if not better, than basic worksheets and PowerPoint lectures. Lastly, I realized that lesson planning and teaching require a great deal of effort and work, but it is all worth it when a light bulb goes off in a students’ head and they learn something new and are excited to be learning and extend their science
During my lesson, I used two instructional strategies. I used engagement and then collaborative learning. During my lesson, I didn’t have to correct any behaviors so this lets me know my students were focused on learning and engaged while I was teaching. My lesson was designed to be as engaging as possible and at the end several students said they enjoyed the lesson and they were able to tell me which way to move for one less, one more, ten less, and ten more. The use of collaborative learning promoting a lot of discussion which helped the students learn from others and work together to reach their learning goals. The learning activities used during the lesson were successful in facilitating student learning because the students’ successfully