12 th grade expository reading and writing course

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1 Secondary Literacy Branch 12 th Grade Expository Reading and Writing Course

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12 th Grade Expository Reading and Writing Course. An LAUSD Senior High School English Proficiency. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 12 th  Grade  Expository Reading and  Writing Course

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Secondary Literacy Branch

12th Grade

Expository Reading and

Writing Course

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Secondary Literacy Branch

An LAUSD Senior High School English ProficiencyEnglish Proficiency Number This School All County High

SchoolsAll California High

Schools

Total Freshmen 80

Exempt from EPT 4 5% 27% 36%

Scored 151 or Above on EPT

12 15% 16% 18%

Demonstrated Proficiency Prior to Enrollment

0 0% 1% 0%

Proficient in English 16 20% 43% 54%

Not Proficient in English

64 80% 57% 46%

The Early Assessment Program (EAP) is a collaborative effort among the State Board of Education (SBE), the California Department of Education (CDE) and the California State University (CSU). The program was established to provide opportunities for students to measure their readiness for college-level English and mathematics in their junior year of high school, and to facilitate opportunities for them to improve their skills during their senior year.

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What is Academic Literacy?

The inseparable skills of critical reading, writing, listening and thinking depend upon students’ ability to postpone judgment and tolerate ambiguity as they honor the dance between passionate assertion and patient inquiry.

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College and university students should be able to engage in the following:

Exhibit curiosity (80%) Experiment with new ideas (79%) See other points of view (77%) Challenge their own beliefs (77%) Engage in intellectual discussions (74%) Ask provocative questions (73%) Generate hypotheses (72%) Exhibit respect for other viewpoints (71%) Read with awareness of self and others (68%)

Broad Intellectual Properties

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Classroom Behaviors that Facilitate Students’ Learning

CSU Faculty members noted that studentsshould be able to do the following:

Ask questions for clarification Be attentive in class Come to class prepared Complete assignments on time Contribute to class discussions

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Why is developing a literate identity important?

Reading teacher and researcher Jeff Wilhelm points out that “many at-risk students are particularly alienated by school until teachers value what they already know…and help them put those skills to work” (2001, p.34)

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Key Principles of ERWC1. The integration of interactive reading and

writing processes;2. A rhetorical approach to texts that fosters

critical thinking;3. Materials and themes that engage student

interest;4. Classroom activities designed to model and

foster successful practices of fluent readers and writers.

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Key Principles of ERWC

5. Research-based methodologies with a consistent relationship between theory and practice.

6. Built-in flexibility to allow teachers to respond to varied students’ needs and instructional contexts.

7. Alignment with California English Language Arts Content Standards.

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What is this module teaching?

Ways of reading Ways of considering language Ways of thinking Ways of writing Academic habits of mind!

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“The greatest enemy of understanding is coverage. As long as you are determined to cover everything, you usually insure that most kids are not going to understand. You’ve got to take enough time to get kids deeply involved in something so they can think about it in lots of different ways and apply it—not just at school, but at home and on the street, and so on.”

-Howard Gardener

How Long Should this Take?

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Why is modeling and sharing your expertise important?

As literacy teachers and researchers Ivey & Baker state, “Good instruction in reading comprehension… requires the expertise of the best reader in the classroom: the teacher” (2004, p.37).

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How do you cultivate a sense of safety and community in the classroom?

Struggling readers and writers are often inclined to hide their confusion, since admitting confusion is often tied to feelings of inadequacy or shame.

Learning should be largely a social, collaborative experience where learners feel empowered to negotiate tasks, articulate and share ideas and respond to others’ reactions to improve thinking and deepen understanding.

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Classroom Configurations “Building Literacy Through Classroom Classroom Discussion” Mary Adler & Eija Rougle

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Secondary Literacy Branch

Classroom Configurations “Building Literacy Through Classroom Classroom Discussion” Mary Adler & Eija Rougle

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The Assignment Template

Reading Rhetorically Connecting Reading to Writing Writing Rhetorically

The Assignment Template may be downloaded at: hhtp://www.calstate.edu/eap/englishcourse/

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Why an Assignment Template?

Provide a consistent format for diverse assignment sequences.

Provide a menu of recommended and theoretically sound pedagogical practices.

Make clear connections to California Language Arts Standards and English Placement Test (EPT) tasks.

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Reading Rhetorically

Prereading– Getting ready to read– Surveying the text– Making Predictions and

asking questions– Introducing key

vocabulary Reading

– First reading– Looking closely at

language

Reading (continued)– Rereading the text

– Analyzing stylistic choices

– Considering the structure of the text

Post-reading Activities– Summarizing and

responding

– Thinking critically

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Rhetorical Reading

“The process of reading is not just the interpretation of a text, but the interpretation of another person’s worldview as presented by a text.”

—Doug Brent

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Connecting Reading to Writing

Writing to Learn– Students have already been annotating,

answering questions, making notes.

Using the Words of Others– “Works Cited” entries– In-text citations

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Writing Rhetorically

Prewriting– Reading the assignment– Getting ready to write – Formulating a working

thesis

Writing– Composing a draft– Organizing the essay– Developing the content

Revising and Editing– Revising the draft– Editing the draft– Reflecting on the writing

Evaluating and Responding

– Grading holistically– Responding to student

writing– Using portfolios

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Rhetorical Writing

The process of writing is an individual’s presentation of an interpretation—a

“world view”—to an audience of readers.

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Rhetorical Writing

Aristotle defines RHETORIC as discovering (and using) the available means of persuasion in a given situation.

Today we use the term to refer to all the techniques a writer or speaker might use to influence readers or listeners and modify their understanding of a subject.

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“Three Ways to Persuade”

ETHOS: the writer’s (or speaker’s) character or image.

LOGOS: logical arguments PATHOS: audience emotions (appeals)

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Sample Assignments

Quick Writes to access prior knowledge Surveys of textual features Predictions about content and context Vocabulary previews and self-assessments Reciprocal reading and teaching activities,

including summarizing, questioning, predicting, and clarifying

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Sample Assignments Responding orally or in writing to critical

response questions Annotating and re-reading texts Highlighting textual features Analyzing stylistics choices Mapping text structures Analyzing logical, emotional, and ethical

appeals Peer response activities

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The Flip Test

Flip through the chapter assigned to your group. Take note of anything that catches your eye. Zero in on something that you think might be

useful, interesting, productive, or provocative in the classroom.

Discuss these items in your group. Prepare to point out one or two of them.

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Kenneth Burke

“Imagine you enter a parlor. You come in late. When you arrive, others have long preceded you, and they are engaged in a heated discussion, a discussion too heated for them to pause and tell you exactly what it is about. In fact, the discussion had already begun long before any of them got there, so that no one present is qualified to retrace for you all the steps that had gone before. You listen for a while, until you decide that you have caught the tenor of the argument; then you put in your oar.”

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Kenneth Burke

“Someone answers; you answer him; another comes to your defense; another aligns himself against you, to either the embarrassment or gratification of your opponent, depending upon the quality of your ally’s assistance. However, the discussion is interminable. The hour grows late, you must depart. And you do depart, with the discussion still vigorously in progress.”