The 20092010 Language Arts Standards - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 50
About This Presentation
Title:

The 20092010 Language Arts Standards

Description:

Subject Area. 01. = Language Arts. 06. = Math. 05. = Science. The Number System .1. Standard ... What is the subject in the independent clause? What is the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:72
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 51
Provided by: jcsch
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The 20092010 Language Arts Standards


1
The 2009-2010 Language Arts Standards
  • Grades 6-8

2
(No Transcript)
3
The Number System
  • Standards may use the following abbreviations for
    Latin terms
  • e.g. means for example, possibly those listed may
    be included on assessment
  • i.e. means specifically and ONLY those listed
    will be assessed

4
The Number System
  • Terminology
  • GLE - Grade Level Expectations (Grades K-8)
  • CLE - Course Level Expectation (Grades 9-12)
  • Checks for Understanding
  • SPI State Performance Indicators

5
The Number System
Subject Area
Grade Level
Standard
Objective
06
01.
.1
.1
6
The Number System
Subject Area
01. Language Arts 06. Math 05. Science
01.
7
The Number System
Standards Language Arts 01. .1 Language .2
Communication .3 Writing .4 Research .5
Logic .6 Informational Text .7 Media .8
Literature
Standard
.1
8
Standard 1 - Language
  • This strand covers grammar, mechanics,
    vocabulary, and sentence structure. In the
    primary grades the Language Arts emphasis is on
    reading including employing a variety of
    strategies to decode words and expand vocabulary.
    The emphasis is one expanding language through
    vocabulary growth. 

9
Standard 2- Communication
  • This strand builds speaking and listening skills
    in both formal and informal situations. Beginning
    at middle grades, skills of group and team
    participation are included. It is important that
    students are more active learners with all of the
    noise and movement of talking and collaborating.
    There should be cooperative, collaborate
    activities developing the classroom as an
    interdependent community. All students should
    communicate and problem solve on a daily basis.

10
Standard 3- Writing
  • This strand includes instruction in generating,
    drafting, organizing, and proofreading writing in
    a variety of modes and for a variety of
    audiences. Students should have more
    responsibility for their work goal setting,
    record keeping, monitoring, sharing, exhibiting,
    and evaluating. They also need more choices of
    writing topics. The rigor in this strand will
    require the students to have legible handwriting
    with correct letter formation.

11
Standard 4- Research
  • This strand instructs in conducting research,
    attributing sources appropriately, and evaluating
    the reliability of resources. Students must have
    more inductive hands-on learning experiences and
    more in-depth studies of a smaller number of
    topics to provide them internalization of the
    inquiry method. Students should be provided
    opportunities to pick partners and research
    projects and have a variety of places to gain
    knowledge using community resources as well as
    the library.

12
Standard 5- Logic
  • This strand trains students to think reasonably,
    follow logical trains of thoughts, avoid faulty
    reasoning, and weigh evidence. Students need to
    spend less time in rote memorization of facts and
    details, and more time using higher-order
    thinking skills. The goal is to develop their
    ability to think logically and to use those
    skills daily. They must apply comprehension using
    strategies that activate prior knowledge and
    provide after-reading applications.

13
Standard 6- Informational Text
  • One of the GLEs for this standard in primary
    grades is that students will recognize that a
    variety of graphics support informational texts. 
    Kindergartens GLE  just states that they should
    recognize that illustrations support
    informational texts. This strand emphasizes the
    methods necessary to comprehend the
    organizational structures and graphics employed
    in informational text. Students should be engaged
    in reading real text whole books, primary
    sources, and nonfiction materials.

14
Standard 7- Media
  • One of the GLEs for the primary grades is that
    the students will recognize the ability of media
    to inform, persuade, and entertain. They should
    experience and respond to a variety of media
    focusing on the ways in which the functions and
    techniques of a variety of media contribute to
    the message they attempt to convey. Teachers will
    experience more diverse roles such as coaching,
    demonstrating, and modeling.

15
Standard 8- Literature
  • This strand acquaints students with a wide range
    of literary types and diverse content, including
    both the conventions of the literary genres and
    the themes / concepts reflecting the human
    condition. Teacher should be read aloud good
    literature to students and give them more choice
    in their own reading materials. Leveled texts are
    also critically important. We should measure
    success of reading by the students reading
    habits, attitudes and comprehension.

16
The Number System
Objective
.1
The specific objective listed in the curriculum
17
Blooms Taxonomy
There is a new format of Bloom's Taxonomy Old
BloomsKnowledge Comprehension Application
Analysis SynthesisEvaluation
New BloomsRememberingUnderstandingApplyingAna
lyzingEvaluatingCreating
18
2008 Blooms Taxonomy
  • Remembering Can the student recall or remember
    the information?
  • Assessment  define, duplicate, list, memorize,
    recall, repeat, reproduce state

19
2008 Blooms Taxonomy
  • Understanding Can the student explain ideas or
    concepts?
  • Assessment  classify, describe, discuss,
    explain, identify, locate, recognize, report,
    select, translate, paraphrase

20
2008 Blooms Taxonomy
  • Applying Can the student use the information in
    a new way?
  • Assessment  choose, demonstrate, dramatize,
    employ, illustrate, interpret, operate, schedule,
    sketch, solve, use, write

21
2008 Blooms Taxonomy
  • Analyzing Can the student distinguish between
    the different parts?
  • Assessment appraise, compare, contrast,
    criticize, differentiate, discriminate,
    distinguish, examine, experiment, question, test

22
2008 Blooms Taxonomy
  • Evaluating can the student justify a stand or
    decision?
  • Assessment appraise, argue, defend, judge,
    select, support, value, evaluate

23
2008 Blooms Taxonomy
  • Creating Can the student create new product or
    point of view?
  • Assessment assemble, construct, create, design,
    develop, formulate, write

24
2008 Blooms Taxonomy
  • Note the verbs used in the GLE/CLE and their
    checks for understanding with the new Blooms
    terminology. These are correlated with levels
    III-VI of Blooms. 
  • The SPI's use verbs at levels I and II. That is
    because is difficult to use the upper levels in a
    multiple-choice format on a standardized test.
  • Do not limit your instruction to SPI's, because
    that would focus only on the lower levels of
    thinking skills. You must always have in mind the
    GLE/CLE and Checks for Understanding as you
    construct lessons to ensure high-level thinking. 

25
Whats New?
  • Coding the Changes
  • Grade 6-8 Activities
  • Dynamic Curriculum
  • Whats On the CD?

26
Coding the Changes
27
Grade 6-8 Activities
  • Sentence Puzzle
  • Say What?
  • Sentence Dictation
  • Readers Theater (I Have A Dream)
  • Civil War Reliability Sort
  • Propaganda Techniques
  • ABCs of Immigrants Reflections
  • The Immigrants Experience

28
Sentence Puzzle
  • Grade Level Expectations
  • GLE 0801.1.1 Demonstrate control of Standard
    English through the use of grammar, usage, and
    mechanics.
  • GLE 0801.1.3 Understand and use correctly a
    variety of sentence structures.
  •  
  • State Performance Indicators
  • SPI 0801.1.1 Identify the correct use of nouns
    (i.e., common/proper, singular/plural,
    possessives, direct/indirect objects, predicate
    nouns).
  • SPI 0801.1.2 Identify the correct use of verbs
    (i.e., action/linking, regular/irregular,
    agreement, perfect tenses, verb phrases) within
    context.
  • SPI 0801.1.3 Identify the correct use of
    adjectives (i.e., common/proper,
    comparative/superlative, adjective clauses) and
    adverbs (i.e., comparative/superlative) within
    context.
  • SPI 0701.1.5 Identify the correct use of
    prepositional phrases (place correctly according
    to the words they modify within the sentence)
    within context.

29
Sentence Puzzle
30
Complete the following tasks
  •  List the words which must be capitalized.
  • What punctuation does this sentence need?
  • Identify/List the prepositional phrases in the
    sentence.
  • Which part of this sentence contains a dependent
    clause?
  • What kind of dependent clause is it?
  • What is the subject in the independent clause?
  • What is the verb in the independent clause?
  • What kind of verb is it?
  • What is the word story functioning as in the
    sentence?

31
Additional Reading
  •  The Watsons Go to Birmingham 1963, Christopher
    Paul Curtis
  •  
  •  
  •  

32
Say What?
  • GLE 0601.1.1 Demonstrate control of Standard
    English through the use of grammar, usage, and
    mechanics (punctuation, capitalization, and
    spelling).
  • GLE 0601.1.3 Understand and use correctly a
    variety of sentence structures.
  • 0601.1.3 Use capitalization correctly (e.g.,
    proper adjectives, within quotations).  
  • 0601.1.4 Demonstrate the correct use of commas
    (e.g., after introductory words, to set off
    appositives and interrupters, before a
    coordinating conjunction joining independent
    clauses to form compound sentences), colons
    (e.g., in business letters, preceding a list of
    items), semicolons (e.g., to combine sentences),
    quotation marks (e.g., with explanatory material
    within the quote, proper use with end marks), and
    apostrophes (to form singular and plural
    possessives).  
  •  
  • State Performance Indicators
  • SPI 0601.1.6 Choose the correct use of quotation
    marks, commas (i.e., in direct
  • quotations, with explanatory material within the
    quote, proper use with end marks) and colons
    (i.e., in business letters, preceding a list of
    items).
  • SPI 0701.1.6 Identify the correct use of commas
    (i.e., compound sentences, coordinating
    conjunctions, introductory words, appositives,
    interrupters) within context.

33
Write dialogue to accompany your picture on the
Post-It Note/chart paper with markers.
  •  Your team must
  •  Write one sentence using quotations marks with
    the speaker at the beginning of the sentence.
  •  Write one sentence using quotations marks with
    the speaker at the end of the sentence.
  •  Write one sentence using quotations marks with
    the speaker at the middle of the sentence.
  •  One quotation must end with a question mark.
  •  One sentence must include a hyphen, title,
    appositive, colon or semicolon.

No Cards?
34
Sentence Dictation
  • GLE 0801.1.1 Demonstrate control of Standard
    English through the use of grammar, usage, and
    mechanics (punctuation, capitalization, and
    spelling).
  •  
  • State Performance Indicators
  • SPI 0801.1.6 Identify the correct use of commas
    within context
  • SPI 0801.1.10 Identify the correct use of
    appositives/appositives phrases and
    infinitive/infinitive phrases within context.
  • SPI 0801.1.13 Form singular and plural
    possessives using apostrophes correctly.

35
Sentence Dictation
My father, the athletic director, coaches girls
basketball every day during the winter.
36
Readers Theater (I Have A Dream)
  • GLE 0801.2.1 Demonstrate critical listening
    skills essential for comprehension, evaluation,
    problem solving, and task completion.
  • GLE 0801.2.5 Understand strategies for expressing
    ideas clearly and effectively in a variety of
    oral contexts.
  • GLE 0801.2.4 Deliver effective oral presentations
  • GLE 0801.2.7 Participate in work teams and group
    discussions.
  •  
  • State Performance Indicators
  • SPI 0801.2.1 Identify the purpose of a speech.
  • SPI 0801.2.2 Identify the targeted audience of a
    speech.
  • SPI 0801.2.4 Determine the most effective methods
    of engaging an audience during an oral
    presentation.

37
I Have A Dream
  • Discussion
  • Methods of engaging audience.
  • Most persuasive part
  • Emphasized phrases

38
Civil War Reliability Sort
  • GLE 0801.4.1 Define and narrow a problem or
    research topic.
  • GLE 0801.4.3 Make distinctions about the
    credibility, reliability, consistency, strengths,
    and limitations of resources, including
    information gathered from Web sites.
  • SPI 0801.4.2 Identify levels of reliability among
    resources (e.g.,
  • eyewitness account, newspaper account,
    supermarket tabloid account, Internet source).
  • SPI 0801.4.3 Determine the most appropriate
    research source for a given research topic.
  • SPI 0801.4.4 Distinguish between primary (i.e.,
    interviews, letters, diaries, newspapers,
    autobiographies, personal narratives) and
    secondary (i.e., reference books, periodicals,
    Internet, biographies, informational texts)
    sources.

39
Civil War Reliability Sort
40
Propaganda Techniques
  • GLE 0801.5.4 Analyze written and oral
    communication for persuasive devices.
  • GLE 0801.5.5 identify and analyze premises,
    including false premises.
  •  
  • SPI 0801.5.4 Identify examples of persuasive
    devices (i.e., bandwagon, loaded words,
    testimonial, name-calling, plain folks, snob
    appeal).
  • SPI 0801.5.8 Identify instances of bias and
    stereotyping in print and non-print.

Examples
definitions
41
ABCs of Immigrants Reflections
  • GLE 0601.8.1 Read and comprehend a variety of
    works from various forms of literature.
  • GLE 0701.8.5 Identify and analyze common literary
    terms (e.g. personification, conflict, theme)
  •  
  • SPI 0601.8.1 Distinguish among various literary
    genres (e.g., fiction, literary drama,
    nonfiction, poetry)
  • SPI 0601.8.8 Identify examples of sound devices
    (i.e. accent, alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhyme,
    and repetition)
  • SPI 0801.8.12 Recognize and identify words within
    a context that reveal particular time periods and
    cultures.

42
ABCs of Immigrants Reflections
MORE
43
ABCs of Immigrants Reflections
44
The Immigrants Experience
  • GLE 0601.8.1 Read and comprehend a variety of
    works from various forms of literature.
  • GLE 0801.8.2 Understand the characteristics of
    various literary genres (e.g. poetry, novel,
    biography, short story, essay, drama)
  • SPI 0601.8.1 Distinguish among various literary
    genres (e.g. fiction, drama, nonfiction, poetry)
  • SPI 0601.8.2 Identify the setting and conflict of
    a passage.
  • SPI 0801.8.10 Identify the kind (s) of conflict
    present in a literary plot (i.e. person vs.
    person, person vs. self, person vs. environment.
    person vs. technology)

45
Readers Theater
  • Dreaming of America An Ellis Island Story

The Story
46
The Dynamic Curriculum
47
The Dynamic Curriculum
Ctrl
F

This symbol identifies a Tennessee Diploma
Project 2008 Standards Awareness Resource
48
Standards SPI Correlation Teams
  • Grade 6
  • Grade 7
  • Grade 8
  • Team records date time for self-selected
    in-service.

Prentice Hall Textbook CD?

Ctrl
F
49
Whats Next?
  • Pacing Guide Development
  • Review SPIs to determine which you would include
    in each 9 week grading period.

50
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com