Connecting Classroom Activities to the New Literacy Standards Presented by Andrea Mosenson Queens College, CUNY
What does it mean to be literate in today’s world?
Foundational Literacy Skills Reading Writing Speaking Language Listening
Information Literacy Access Search Select Collect Evaluate Analyze Synthesize Manage Summarize Organize
Media Literacy Evaluate media to address a topic Decode media to understand its direct and indirect meanings Produce a media product that clearly conveys a message
Digital & Technology Literacy Select & use tools productively Use and manipulate technology responsibly and ethically Use as a tool to research, organize, communicate, and evaluate information
Why Integrate Literacy in FACS? 1.Being literate in today’s high-tech global world is crucial for success. 2. Recognize and assess the literacy skills taught within the FACS area.
Why Integrate Literacy in FACS? 3. Common Core State Standards ( ) Standards focus on: Foundational literacy skills 21 st century literacy is embedded
Common Core State Standards in ELA Section written for “Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects” in Grades 6-12 Master standards in reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language Goal: College & Career ready by end of high school
21 st Century Literacy Skills Model Information Literacy Media Literacy Digital & Technology Literacy Foundational Literacy Lifelong Literacy Skills
21 st Century Literacy Skills Assessment Framework Aligned with Common Core Standards into a more user friendly framework. List of student outcomes in four literacy areas: Used to assess student performance in literacy over a period of time.
Today’s Focus: Foundational Literacy Instructional literacy strategies in content area. Research-based to improve students’ literacy. Taught through explicit instruction: Teach-Model-Practice-Routine Used before, during or after a learning activity.
Shades of Meaning The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug. ~Mark Twain
Shades of Meaning GOOD Fair Excellent Nice Splendid Grand Commendable
Shades of Meaning GOOD Fair Excellent Splendid Grand Commendable Subtle Strong
Shades of Meaning Activity Subtle Strong
Word Art Builds vocabulary by creating visual definitions C itamin A D
Word ArtBroil
Word Sorts Provide a list of words to sort. Arrange words in related categories. Think about the relationship between and among a set of words.
Word Sort Labels Culture Shopping Family Nutrition Teamwork Recipes Society Friendships Community Wellness Peers
Word Sort Labels Recipes Shopping Nutrition Wellness Family Society Friendships Community Culture Teamwork Peers
Word Sort Activity
Shades of Meaning Activity Subtle Strong
Shades of Meaning Activity Small Large Mince Dice Julienne Chop
Pattern Guides Used before or after a learning activity. Helps students see relationships between concepts or ideas.
Pattern Guides Vitamin C Helps body resist infections Vitamin D Builds strong bones & teeth
K-W-L Charts Best used to introduce a new topic or unit. Mirrors the thinking processes used in scientific inquiry. Used before learning to activate prior knowledge. Used after learning to assess what students learned.
K-W-L Charts
Graphic Organizers Provide students with two avenues to learn: Verbal – text Visual – placement of information Chose one that reflects information being taught. Plan activities where students use information: Discussion, presentation, project…
Graphic Organizers
Tossed Terms Use to review terms or content before a quiz/test. Can easily differentiate cubes to meet a variety of learning needs.
Tossed Terms Describe Justify Compare Identify Explain Contrast
Read-Alouds Use to deliver important content Pique students’ interest in a topic
Read-Alouds Pique student interest. Read with enthusiasm. Maintain students’ engagement. Help students figure out confusing concepts and terminology. Hold a discussion after reading book to get students to think beyond the story/text.
Read-Aloud Activity
Student Questions for Purposeful Learning Designed to gain students’ interest. Ask questions about material. Motivated to pay attention.
Student Questions for Purposeful Learning Fast food and its consequences have become inescapable. ~Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser
Cooperative Learning Strategies Students learn better when working together toward a common goal. Think-Pair-Share Think-Pair-Square Jigsaw Cooperative group
Color Wheel Activity
Carousel Brainstorming Activate prior knowledge or use as review. Post questions around the room. Students work in groups to write answers.