Attached is a menu of
learning objectives, categorized by each domain of the language arts. Teachers are encouraged to use this menu as a
resource for identifying objectives for
their daily and long-term instruction.
Each of these objectives is focused upon student learning and framed in
concrete, measurable terms. Objectives
should be posted for students and explained at the initiation of each lesson;
in addition, instruction during the lesson should be threaded back to the
objective to aid student acquisition of learning. For your added convenience, a menu of
strategies for reading, writing, revision, and publishing is also attached.
A MENU OF LEARNING OBJECTIVES FOR ENGLISH CLASSROOMS
Reading
Objectives:
Students will engage in daily, meaningful reading tasks in
English class and/or at home. The tasks
will be based upon the following objectives:
- Students will be able to use strategies before, during, and after reading to aid in the construction and enhancement of meaning
- Students will be able to respond in discussions and in writing, using personal, literal, interpretative, and evaluative stances, to works of fiction and/or non-fiction.
- Students will be able to identify and explain the function of essential short story elements in the writer’s craft (i.e. character, setting, conflict, plot, climax, resolution, theme, tone, point of view).
- Students will be able to identify types of drama (i.e. comedy, tragedy) and to explain the function of essential dramatic elements and/or devices in the writer’s craft (i.e. soliloquy, dialogue, aside, act, scene, stage cues).
- Students will be able to identify and explain the significance of the essential literary elements of novels (i.e. character, setting, conflict, plot, climax, resolution, theme, tone, and point of view)
- Students will be able to identify and explain the significance of the essential elements of the writer’s craft in given poems (i.e. poetic structures such as the lyric, the sonnet, the free verse form; sound devices such as rhyme, rhythm, and alliteration; imagery including the visual, auditory, olfactory, and tactile word images that are created; figures of speech such as simile, metaphor, personification, symbolism).
- Students will be able to participate in discussions and draft writing which demonstrates an understanding of diverse cultural perspectives.
- Students will be able to participate in discussions and draft writing which demonstrates an understanding of personalities, trends, and beliefs that have shaped American history and culture.
- Students will be able to demonstrate literal and inferential comprehension of works of non-fiction (i.e. newspaper and magazine articles) through participation in discussion and writing activities.
- Students will be able to compare and contrast, in writing and through discussion, the literary elements and essential concepts of the works they are presently reading with those they have previously read or viewed.
- Students will be able to explore, discuss, write about a similar topic or theme in two distinct disciplines (i.e. the hero in literature and the hero in history)
- Students will be able to read and explore for enrichment works from various genre (novels, plays, poems, essays).
- Students will be able to effectively access resources in the library/media center to complete at least one of the above objectives.
Writing Objectives:
Students will engage in daily, meaningful formal and/or
informal writing tasks in English class and/or at home. The tasks will be based upon the following
objectives:
- Students will be able to engage in informal writing assignments (i.e. reader response, free writing, focused free writing, prediction, response journals, dialectical notebook entries, and other pieces of writing that they do not take through the entire writing process).
- Students will be able to engage in formal writing assignments that require utilization of all stages of the writing process.
- Students will be able to choose and use a relevant pre-writing strategy that will help them to prepare for the assignment.
- Students will be able to write several rough drafts of a paper to revise clarity and depth of content or to edit style and mechanics.
- Students will be able to engage in revision in the following areas:
- language, information, style, voice and structure appropriate to the purpose and selected audience
- clear, understandable, and accurate language
- incorporation of sentence variety (simple, compound, complex)
- incorporation of varied sentence beginnings (introductory prepositional phrases, participial phrases, adverbial clauses, adjectival phrases)
- fluent and precise transitions between sentences, ideas, and paragraphs
- appropriate organization and order of words, sentences and paragraphs within an essay
i.
specificity
and relevance of topic
ii.
introduction that conveys the subject and purpose
through a precise and well-maintained, tightly focused thesis statement
iii.
unified and coherent body that contains appropriate and
adequate detail
iv.
conclusion that summarizes, restates the topic, or goes
further to make a final statement on the topic
- addition of details and support
- deletion of unnecessary words, phrases, sentences, sections
- use of teacher and/or peer feedback to improve the piece
- complete sentences (avoiding fragments, comma splices, and run-ons)
- subject verb agreement
- effective use of active and passive voice
- parallel structure
- pronoun antecedent agreement
- verb tense consistency
- capitalization
- proper MLA documentation (in-text citations and works cited)
- punctuation
i.
end punctuation
ii.
commas, colons, and semi-colons
iii.
periods in abbreviations
iv.
apostrophes
v.
quotation marks, commas, and periods in direct
quotations
- Students will be able to engage in teacher and/or peer conferences during any or all stages of the writing process.
- Students will be able to evaluate their own writing according to established criteria and rubrics.
- Students will be able to maintain neatly organized writing portfolios for use in tracking their growth as maturing writers.
- Students will be able to publish their works in various genres and for various audiences and purposes.
Throughout their high school years, students will improve
their ability to achieve all of the following objectives with increasing ease
and sophistication. In meeting the
objectives listed below, students will use language appropriate for the
classroom.
- Students will be able to read orally with expression indicative of comprehension and tone.
- Students will be able to respond orally to written works, grounding their ideas in the text.
- Students will be able to ask and answer questions logically and effectively.
- Students will be able to engage critically and constructively in oral exchanges of ideas (i.e. class discussions, peer group assignments, panel discussions).
- Students will be able to support a position in discussion or in formal debate.
- Students will be able to confer with peers about given topics/activities.
- Students will be able to offer constructive feedback.
- Students will be able to participate actively and effectively in cooperative groups while assuming the roles of facilitator, recorder, presenter, and motivator.
- Students will be able to deliver a clear, coherent oral presentation using information and diction suitable for subject, purpose, and audience.
- Students will be able to participate in both sides of an interview process.
- Students will be able to listen attentively.
- Students will be able to understand spoken instructions and give spoken instructions to others.
- Students will be able to identify major concepts and ideas in speeches, discussions, audio and video presentations.
- Students will be able to show respect for the diverse dialects, traditions, and opinions of their classmates.
Each year, students will demonstrate
their ability to meet at least three of the objectives listed below.
1.
Students will be able to respond in discussions and in
writing to a news report in the electronic or print media.
2.
Students will be able to cite evidence of personal
opinion or propaganda in articles which are presented as factual.
3.
Students will be able to view and write a critical
review of a television show.
4.
Students will be able to demonstrate understanding of
character, conflict, and theme of a film by responding in writing or discussion
with support.
5. Students will be able compare or contrast
written text with its cinematic rendering by responding in writing or
discussion.
6. Students
will be able cite differences in perspective or content in one specific news
event as reported in various forms of media.
7. Students
will be able to view and respond personally in discussion and writing to an
educational public television production.
8. Students
will be able to analyze media stereotypes in class discussions and in written
reports.
9. Students
will be able to discuss and write about the effects of media devices and
techniques (i.e. camera angles, fades, music)
10. Students
will be able to compose a story in various media (i.e. print, video, play)
11. Students
will be able to produce a documentary.
12. Students
will be able to write a report analyzing and evaluating advertising in
newspapers, magazines, radio, and/or television.
13. Students
will be able to use computers and all available technology to enhance their
communication skills.
14. Students
will be able to effectively utilize the school library media centers resources
to meet at least one of the above objectives.
RECOMMENDED LITERATURE/READING STRATEGIES
Pre-Reading
Strategies:
ü Relating
prior knowledge and personal experience to new texts
ü Free
writing about an important idea/theme/essential question in the work
ü Webbing
an important idea/theme/word (semantic mapping)
ü Completing
an anticipation guide
ü Discussing
a related work, theme, idea
ü Completing
and discussing questionnaires in cooperative groups
ü Filling
in the first two columns of a K-W-L chart
ü Assessing
what the student already knows about the topic
ü Listing
predictions
ü Setting
purposes for reading (perhaps with a mini-lesson introducing a new concept,
term, or strategy)
ü Analyzing
the title and/or illustrations
ü Reviewing
the footnotes, headings, and/or other peripherals
ü Creating
story impressions
During-Reading
Strategies:
ü Maintaining
reader response journals
ü Using
fix-up strategies (i.e. re-reading, reading ahead, using context clues)
ü Creating
and completing literature maps
ü Summarizing
at critical points
ü Assessing
predictions
ü Visualizing
and verbalizing what they are imagining
ü Engaging
in the think-aloud technique
ü Creating
questions
ü Making
inferences
ü Recognizing
cause and effect
ü Distinguishing
fact from opinion
ü Using
resources to address difficult and pertinent vocabulary
ü Participating
in a guided reading
ü Constructing
a plot line
ü Sequencing
the main events in the work
ü Completing
meaningful learning guides or interactive reading guides
ü Answering
text/teacher questions
ü Determining
a main idea and/or key literary elements
Post-Reading
Strategies:
ü Re-visiting
one or more of the pre-reading and/or during-reading strategies
ü Sharing,
discussing, evaluating their reader response entries orally
ü Participating
in student-centered discussions
ü Completing
Venn diagrams to compare and contrast
ü Filling
in the last column of a K-W-L chart
ü Completing
a book chart comparing two or more works, themes, conflicts, symbols
ü Summarizing
and paraphrasing
ü Outlining
the main idea, supporting details, and/or key literary elements
ü Rewriting
the work from another point of view, in a different tone, or in another setting
or genre
ü Debating
whether or not the author attained his or her purpose
ü Imitating
the author’s style in an original student-written work
ü Writing
a sequel or a new ending
ü Sending
a letter to the author
ü Writing
a book review
ü Completing
essay tests
ü Setting
a different purpose and re-reading the work
ü Dramatizing
a scene from the work
ü Interviewing
the main character
ü Creating
a related work of art, a musical composition, dance, or other project
ü Engaging
in further reading/research
ü Presenting
an interpretative reading of a portion of the work
ü Rewriting
the story for a younger audience
ü Participating
in a related mock trial
RECOMMENDED WRITING STRATEGIES
Pre-Writing
Strategies:
Ø Activating
prior knowledge
Ø Analyzing
the required task
Ø Brainstorming
Ø Free
writing
Ø Mulling
over ideas
Ø Engaging
in ideas with teachers or peers
Ø Generating
a purpose
Ø Considering
a form
Ø Identifying
an audience and its traits
Ø Consulting
resources
Ø Gathering
information
Ø Outlining
Ø Webbing
Ø Clustering
Ø Using
graphic organizers
Ø Rehearsing
Ø Writing
thoughts as quickly as possible without concern for correctness until the final
stages of the process
Ø Ignoring
spelling, usage, or other proofreading or revision problems until the final
stages of the process
Ø Watching
the teacher monitor the process of the drafting via the chalkboard, a
flipchart, or an overhead projector
Ø Engaging
in guided writing in which the teacher leads the students through a directed
writing activity
Ø Using
pre-writing and other strategies when writer’s block occurs
Ø Realizing
that pauses are a natural part of the drafting process
Ø Consulting
the teacher when necessary
Ø Using
the computer to write the first draft
Revision
Strategies:
Ø Revising
the piece using their own individual criteria
Ø Revising
the piece according to curricular requirements
Ø Reading
the piece silently aloud
Ø Re-seeing
the piece from another perspective (i.e. a different audience, point of view,
genre/form)
Ø Adding,
deleting, changing words and phrases, sentences, ideas, and paragraphs
Ø Drawing
lines, crossing out, inserting carets and arrows
Ø Cutting,
pasting, stapling, using post-it notes
Ø Using
computer commands to help revise the piece
Ø Engaging
in peer and/or teacher conferences, after first revisiting the piece personally
Ø Checking
rubrics to determine if the piece meets established criteria
Ø Utilizing
ideas from mini-lessons
Ø Engaging
in meta cognitive think-aloud, which illustrate thinking during the revision
process
Ø Anticipating
and answering the readers’ questions
Proofreading
Strategies:
Ø Focusing
on one or two personal areas of proofreading goals
Ø Reading
the paper silently and aloud
Ø Using
commercial, teacher-generated, or student-generated checklists
Ø Ascertaining
whether or not the relevant rubric includes specific required proofreading
areas
Ø Consulting
with editing partners, peer editing groups, and/or the teacher
Ø Ensuring
that papers show command of the appropriate conventions of paragraph structure,
sentence construction, grammar, usage, punctuation, capitalization, and
spelling
Ø Using
the computer to make changes/corrections
Publishing:
Ø Classmates/peers
Ø Parents
and other relatives
Ø Other
students and teachers
Ø Displays
in classrooms, libraries, hallways, offices
Ø School
and district publications
Ø Local
newspapers
Ø Magazines
Ø Other
professional publications
Ø Local
and national contests
Ø Elementary
school students
Ø Pen
pals
Ø Government
officials
No comments:
Post a Comment