1 / 22

But I Am N ot an English Teacher!

But I Am N ot an English Teacher!. Content A rea Literacy GSSD Coaches Cindy Smith & Andrea Hnatiuk. What is Literacy?. Quick Write. Moss, C., & Brookhart , M. (2012). Learning targets: Helping students aim for understanding in today’s lesson. Alexandria: ASCD.

paulos
Download Presentation

But I Am N ot an English Teacher!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. But I Am Not an English Teacher! Content Area Literacy GSSD Coaches Cindy Smith & Andrea Hnatiuk

  2. What is Literacy? Quick Write

  3. Moss, C., & Brookhart, M. (2012). Learning targets: Helping students aim for understanding in today’s lesson. Alexandria: ASCD.

  4. Why do students have difficulty reading academic texts? Commit and Toss

  5. “The need to guide adolescents to advanced stages of literacy is not necessarily the result of any teaching or learning failure in the preschool or primary years; rather, it is a necessary next step in normal reading development.” • -McCombs et al., 2005, pp. 2-3 as cited in Buehl, D. (2011)

  6. Basic Literacy • Intermediate Literacy • Discipline Literacy Model of Disciplinary Literacy

  7. What does the curriculum say about literacy?

  8. Big Question! Why is literacy important in my subject area and What does it look like?

  9. Literacy Receptive Expressive Read View Listen Repre-sent Speak Write Create a subject specific graphic organizer using these headings

  10. Article Study

  11. Gradual Release of Responsibility Buehl, 2011

  12. Pros? Cons? What students will benefit? When to use it? Ease of use? Carousel Graffiti Activity

  13. “I have a rain barrel that is 2 metres high, and has a diameter of 1.2 metres. How much water will it hold?” Think Aloud

  14. All too often, it is assumed that symbolic representation is the only way to communicate mathematically. The more flexible students are in using a variety of representations to explain and work with the mathematics being learned, the deeper students’ understanding becomes.

  15. Frontloading Vocabulary

  16. It is estimated that a high school student’s working vocabulary weighs in around 40,000 words -Stahl and Nagy, 2006 • Vocabulary is an important factor in academic success. -Short & Fitzsimmmons, 2007

  17. Means teaching the origins of words, the meaning of prefixes and suffixes • Ex: Poly = “many”. Polygon, polynomial, polydactyly, polyester, etc. • Saves time, because learners aren’t just memorizing words, they are understanding how words work • Helps students make connections to prior knowledge and across curriculum and subjects Teaching “Generative Vocabulary”

  18. Classroom Instruction That Works – Effect Size Effective Classroom Strategies

  19. Effect Size is a unit of measure used with meta-analysis that expresses the increase or decrease in student achievement Cohen simplified the range of effect sizes Small: 0.20 to 0.49 Medium: 0.50 to 0.79 Large: 0.80 and above Effect Size Effective Classroom Strategies

  20. Summarizing and Note Taking Effective Classroom Strategies

  21. Understanding Vocabulary, Scholastic • Literature Review • GSSD Content Area Literacy For More Information

  22. 3-2-1 3 – Important points 2 – Learning activities you will try 1 – Question you have Closure GSSD Content Area Literacy

More Related