Transcript
Page 1: Integrating Literacy in the Content Areas

Integrating Literacy in the Content Areas

Laurie GregoryOctober 25, 2013

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What do the Common Core Literacy Standards say students should do?

• Read complex texts closely• Make evidence-based claims• Support claims with details• Write effectively• Do research

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How often do you integrate literacy?

• Every day• Every week• Every month• Every unit• Every quarter• Every year• Not often at all

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Do a Close Reading

• Do a close reading of the introduction to “Foregrounding the Disciplines in Secondary Literacy Teaching and Learning: A Call for Change” by Elizabeth Birr Moje

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Discussion

• Re-read the first two paragraphs.• What type of text is this?

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Discussion

• What is the author’s thesis?• What is disciplinary literacy?

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Discussion

• Re-read paragraphs 3-5.• What are the three reasons the author gives

for stating her thesis?• How is she going to structure the rest of the

piece to support her thesis?

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What is close reading?• Engaging with a text of sufficient complexity directly • Examining meaning thoroughly and methodically• Reading and rereading• Understanding the central ideas and key supporting details• Reflecting on:• the meanings of individual words and sentences• the order in which sentences unfold • the development of ideas over the course of the text

• Ultimately arriving at an understanding of the text as a whole (PARCC, 2011, p.7)

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How to Support Students

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Basic Lesson StructureBeginner Intermediate Advanced

1. The teacher reads the text out loud to students without stopping to give them a sense of the overall plot or main idea.

1. The students read the text silently one time through to get a sense of the overall plot or main idea.

1. The student reads the text silently one time through to get a sense of the overall plot or main idea.

2. The teacher re-reads small chunks of the text at a time and asks discussion questions. The students may work in pairs first, but answers are shared with the whole group.

2. Teacher re-reads small chunks of the text out loud and asks discussion questions. Students may discuss the questions as a whole group, in pairs, or small groups.

2. The student re-reads small chunks of the text at a time, stopping to make notes, underline key points, and ask himself questions.

3. The students and teacher develop a written response to a prompt together.

3. The students write a written response to a prompt independently.

3. The student writes a response to a prompt and provides evidence from the text in his answer.

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Text Dependent QuestionsRequire students to…• Cite evidence• Determine the central idea• Analyze how the author structures the text and

develops ideas/claims• Determine the meanings of words and phrases• Determine the point of view or purpose

(From the Common Core Standards)

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Think for a minute about the students currently enrolled in your class. It is possible that a good number of them could be so inspired by you and the learning that takes place in your course that they decide to pursue a college major and career in your content area.

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How will these students use literacy skills in college and/or a

career in your content area? What does literacy look like in your

content area?

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For History or Social Studies

• Primary or Secondary Source Document• Complex set of ideas or events, possibly an

argument• Unique, complex structure• Integrates charts, data, etc.• Academic Vocabulary

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For Science, Health, FACS, and Technical Subjects

• Explains a complex process or experiment or makes claims with evidence

• Outlines a complex procedure for students to follow (i.e. lab)

• Symbols, key domain-specific terms and concepts• Complex structure and relationships between

concepts,• Includes data, charts, tables, etc.• Academic Vocabulary

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Your Tasks:

• Design a protocol for close reading and evidence based writing in your content area.

• Create a calendar of what is currently being done to integrate reading and writing in your content area.

• Explore some of the resources available on engageny.org.

• Create a lesson that involves close reading and evidence-based writing.


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