Broward County Public Schools Florida Reading Endorsement Alignment Matrix Competencies 1-5 Updated October 22, 2012

Similar documents
Program Matrix - Reading English 6-12 (DOE Code 398) University of Florida. Reading

Florida Reading Endorsement Alignment Matrix Competency 1

RED 3313 Language and Literacy Development course syllabus Dr. Nancy Marshall Associate Professor Reading and Elementary Education

English Language and Applied Linguistics. Module Descriptions 2017/18

CLASSIFICATION OF PROGRAM Critical Elements Analysis 1. High Priority Items Phonemic Awareness Instruction

California Department of Education English Language Development Standards for Grade 8

Publisher Citations. Program Description. Primary Supporting Y N Universal Access: Teacher s Editions Adjust on the Fly all grades:

Fisk Street Primary School

CDE: 1st Grade Reading, Writing, and Communicating Page 2 of 27

Criterion Met? Primary Supporting Y N Reading Street Comprehensive. Publisher Citations

Large Kindergarten Centers Icons

Stages of Literacy Ros Lugg

ELA/ELD Standards Correlation Matrix for ELD Materials Grade 1 Reading

Tier 2 Literacy: Matching Instruction & Intervention to Student Needs

RICHLAND SCHOOL DISTRICT ONE BALANCED LITERACY PLATFORM

MYP Language A Course Outline Year 3

Books Effective Literacy Y5-8 Learning Through Talk Y4-8 Switch onto Spelling Spelling Under Scrutiny

Chapter 5. The Components of Language and Reading Instruction

NAME: East Carolina University PSYC Developmental Psychology Dr. Eppler & Dr. Ironsmith

Scholastic Leveled Bookroom

Loveland Schools Literacy Framework K-6

SLINGERLAND: A Multisensory Structured Language Instructional Approach

1. READING ENGAGEMENT 2. ORAL READING FLUENCY

Correspondence between the DRDP (2015) and the California Preschool Learning Foundations. Foundations (PLF) in Language and Literacy

21st Century Community Learning Center

Phonemic Awareness. Jennifer Gondek Instructional Specialist for Inclusive Education TST BOCES

The Oregon Literacy Framework of September 2009 as it Applies to grades K-3

Kings Local. School District s. Literacy Framework

Building Fluency of Sight Words

1 st Quarter (September, October, November) August/September Strand Topic Standard Notes Reading for Literature

Grade 4. Common Core Adoption Process. (Unpacked Standards)

Arizona s English Language Arts Standards th Grade ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION HIGH ACADEMIC STANDARDS FOR STUDENTS

Mercer County Schools

Dyslexia/dyslexic, 3, 9, 24, 97, 187, 189, 206, 217, , , 367, , , 397,

Answer Key To Geometry Houghton Mifflin Company

A Critique of Running Records

Organizing Comprehensive Literacy Assessment: How to Get Started

LITERACY, AND COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

Tests For Geometry Houghton Mifflin Company

Understanding and Supporting Dyslexia Godstone Village School. January 2017

South Carolina English Language Arts

Candidates must achieve a grade of at least C2 level in each examination in order to achieve the overall qualification at C2 Level.

EQuIP Review Feedback

Taught Throughout the Year Foundational Skills Reading Writing Language RF.1.2 Demonstrate understanding of spoken words,

5. UPPER INTERMEDIATE

Philosophy of Literacy Education. Becoming literate is a complex step by step process that begins at birth. The National

Effect of Word Complexity on L2 Vocabulary Learning

Reynolds School District Literacy Framework

Workshop 5 Teaching Writing as a Process

GOLD Objectives for Development & Learning: Birth Through Third Grade

Test Blueprint. Grade 3 Reading English Standards of Learning

Grade 5: Module 3A: Overview

Linguistics. Undergraduate. Departmental Honors. Graduate. Faculty. Linguistics 1

1. READING ENGAGEMENT 2. ORAL READING FLUENCY

C a l i f o r n i a N o n c r e d i t a n d A d u l t E d u c a t i o n. E n g l i s h a s a S e c o n d L a n g u a g e M o d e l

Language Acquisition Chart

Dickinson ISD ELAR Year at a Glance 3rd Grade- 1st Nine Weeks

The Effect of Close Reading on Reading Comprehension. Scores of Fifth Grade Students with Specific Learning Disabilities.

Literacy THE KEYS TO SUCCESS. Tips for Elementary School Parents (grades K-2)

PAGE(S) WHERE TAUGHT If sub mission ins not a book, cite appropriate location(s))

Case Study of Struggling Readers

Curriculum and Assessment Guide (CAG) Elementary California Treasures First Grade

Intensive Writing Class

Finding the Sweet Spot: The Intersection of Interests and Meaningful Challenges

All Kinds of Minds. Web-site: To Contact NY Student Success Center. or

YMCA SCHOOL AGE CHILD CARE PROGRAM PLAN

L2 studies demonstrate the importance of word recognition skills in reading (Baker,

K-12 Math & ELA Updates. Education Committee August 8, 2017

Controlled vocabulary

Hacker, J. Increasing oral reading fluency with elementary English language learners (2008)

Ekapeli (in Finnish), GraphoGame (internationally)

First Grade Curriculum Highlights: In alignment with the Common Core Standards

Comprehension Recognize plot features of fairy tales, folk tales, fables, and myths.

Characteristics of the Text Genre Realistic fi ction Text Structure

Treasures Triumphs Practice Grade 4

Houghton Mifflin Reading Correlation to the Common Core Standards for English Language Arts (Grade1)

Characteristics of the Text Genre Informational Text Text Structure

have to be modeled) or isolated words. Output of the system is a grapheme-tophoneme conversion system which takes as its input the spelling of words,

Reading Horizons. A Look At Linguistic Readers. Nicholas P. Criscuolo APRIL Volume 10, Issue Article 5

Foreign Languages. Foreign Languages, General

Opportunities for Writing Title Key Stage 1 Key Stage 2 Narrative

Arts, Literature and Communication (500.A1)

Loughton School s curriculum evening. 28 th February 2017

ISD 2184, Luverne Public Schools. xcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcv. Local Literacy Plan bnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbn

Get Your Hands On These Multisensory Reading Strategies

Program in Linguistics. Academic Year Assessment Report

Mandarin Lexical Tone Recognition: The Gating Paradigm

Coast Academies Writing Framework Step 4. 1 of 7

Jack Jilly can play. 1. Can Jack play? 2. Can Jilly play? 3. Jack can play. 4. Jilly can play. 5. Play, Jack, play! 6. Play, Jilly, play!

CEFR Overall Illustrative English Proficiency Scales

ENGBG1 ENGBL1 Campus Linguistics. Meeting 2. Chapter 7 (Morphology) and chapter 9 (Syntax) Pia Sundqvist

Michigan GLCE Kindergarten Grade Level Content Expectations

I m Not Stupid : How Assessment Drives (In)Appropriate Reading Instruction

Holy Family Catholic Primary School SPELLING POLICY

TABE 9&10. Revised 8/2013- with reference to College and Career Readiness Standards

DIBELS Next BENCHMARK ASSESSMENTS

Nancy Hennessy M.Ed. 1

English Language Arts Missouri Learning Standards Grade-Level Expectations

(Musselwhite, 2008) classrooms.

Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes, Platinum 2000 Correlated to Nebraska Reading/Writing Standards (Grade 10)

Transcription:

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Competency 1 Competency 1: Teachers will develop substantive understanding of six components of reading as a process: comprehension, oral language, phonological awareness, phonics, fluency, and vocabulary. Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator 10455877 1.A.1 Performance Indicator A: Comprehension Understand that building oral and written language facilitates comprehension. Week 5: Video: Prior Knowledge and Text Structure" Reflection Journal 10455877 1.A.2 (1.E.1, 1.E.2) *2.1.b. Understand the importance of learning syntax, semantics, pragmatics, vocabulary, and text structures required for comprehension of formal written language of school, often called academic language. Week 5: Video: Prior Knowledge and Text Structure" s 10455877 1.A.3 (1.E.2) Understand the impact of text upon reading comprehension (e.g., genre, readability, coherence, text structure, and text complexity). Week 7: The Cunningham, Moore Cunningham, and Moore (2000) selection (pp. 191-224) Video: Key Strategies 10455877 1.A.4 Understand how the interaction of reader characteristics, motivation, purpose of reading, and text elements impacts comprehension and student engagement. Week 5: Video: Prior Knowledge & Text Structure" Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 1

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator 10455877 1.A.5 (1.E.3) Identify cognitive targets (e.g., locate/recall; integrate/interpret; critique/evaluate) and the role of cognitive development in the construction of meaning of literary and informational texts. Week 6 : Video: Prior Knowledge and Content Structure 10455877 1.A.6 (1.E.4)Understand reading as a process of constructing meaning from a wide variety of print and digital texts and for a variety of purposes. Week 6 : Video: Prior Knowledge and Content Structure" Reflection Journal 10455877 1.A.7 Understand the reading demands posed by domain specific texts. Week 6 : Video: Prior Knowledge and Content 10455877 1.A.8 Understand that effective comprehension processes rely on well developed language, strong inference making, background knowledge, comprehension monitoring and selfcorrecting. Week 6 : Video: Prior Knowledge and Content Reflection Journal 10455877 1.A.9 Understand how English language learners linguistic and cultural background will influence their comprehension. Week 8: pp. 257-261; 267-268; 280-281 and Literature Instruction for English Language Learners Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 2

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator What Does Research Tell Us Abo in a Second Language? 10455877 1.A.10 (3.2) Understand the role of formal and informal assessment of comprehension in making instructional decisions to meet individual student needs. Video: Week 8 "Making the Proce Visible to Students" Video: Prior Knowledge and Content Reflection Journal 10455877 1.B.1 Performance Indicator B: Oral Language Understand how the students development of phonology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics relates to comprehending written language. Week 2 : Burns- Balanced Readin and Writing pp. 1-14 - Spelling 10455877 1.B.2 Understand the differences between social and academic language. Week 7: The Cunningham, Moore- Cunningham, and Moore (2000) Spelling selection (pp. 191-224) Video: Key Strategies 10455877 1.B.3 Understand that writing enhances the development of oral language. Week 5: Video: Prior Knowledge and Text Structure" 10455877 1.B.4 Understand that the variation in students oral language exposure and development requires differentiated Week 7: The Cunningham, Moore Cunningham, and Moore (2000) Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 3

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator instruction. selection (pp. 191-224) Video: Key Strategies 10455877 1.B.5 Recognize the importance of English language learners home languages, and their significance for learning to read English. Week 5: Video: Prior Knowledge and Text Structure" 10455877 1.B.6 (3.2) Understand the role of formal and informal oral language assessment to make instructional decisions to meet individual student needs. Week 3: Video: "Print in a Child's World" "Phonemic and Phonological Awareness" 10455877 1.C.1 Performance Indicator C: Phonological Awareness (1.A.1) Understand phonology as it relates to language development and reading achievement (e.g., phonological processing, phonemic awareness skills, phonemic analysis and synthesis). Week 3 Phonemic Awareness an Teaching Phonics pp. 15-62 Summary 10455877 1.C.2 Recognize the phonological continuum beginning with sensitivity to large and concrete units of sound (i.e., words & syllables) and progressing to small and abstract units of sound (onset-rimes and phonemes). Week 3 Phonemic Awareness an Teaching Phonics pp. 15-62 Summary Videos Skylight 10455877 1.C.3 Understand that writing, in conjunction with phonological awareness, enhances reading development. Week 3 Phonemic Awareness an Teaching Phonics pp. 15-62 Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 4

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator 1.C.4 10455877 (1.A.2., 5.10)Distinguish both phonological and phonemic differences in language and their applications in written and oral discourse patterns (e.g., language & dialect differences). Summary Videos Skylight Week 3 Phonemic Awareness an Teaching Phonics pp. 15-62 Summary Skylight Videos 10455877 1.C.5 Understand how similarities and differences in sound production between English and other languages affect English language learners reading development in English. Week 8: 280-281 and Literature Instruction for English Language Learners What Does Research Tell Us Abo in a Second Language? Reflection Journal 10455877 1.C.6 (3.2) Understand the role of formal and informal phonological awareness assessment to make instructional decisions to meet individual student needs. Video: Week 8 "Making the Proce Visible to Students" Week 3: Video : "Print in a Child's World 10455877 1.D.1 Performance Indicator D: Phonics (1.B.1) Understand that phonological units (words, syllables, onset-rimes, and phonemes) map onto orthographic units (words, rimes, letters) in alphabetic languages. Week 2: Article: Phonics: It's Different from Cipher Knowledge What does a "balanced approach" to reading instruction mean? Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 5

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator 10455877 1.D.2 Understand sound-spelling patterns and phonics (grapheme-phoneme correspondence rules). Video 3: Phonemic and Phonological Awareness" 10455877 1.D.3 (1.B.2 was apply) Understand structural analysis of words. Video 3: Phonemic and Phonological Awareness" 10455877 1.D.4 Understand that both oral language and writing can be used to enhance phonics instruction. Unit Summary and Reflection Content Writing to Read: Evidence for How Writing Can Improve, by Steve Graham and Michael Hebert, A Carnegie Report for Alliance for Excellent Education, 2010. 10455877 1.D.5 Understand the role of formal and informal phonics assessment to make instructional decisions to meet individual student needs. Unit Summary and Reflection Content Best Practices with Struggling Readers, by Richard Allington (Ch. 4 from Best Practices In Instruction 4 th ed, Lesley Morrow and Linda Gambrell, editors, Guildford Press: New York (2011). Oral Instruction by Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 6

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator Timothy Rasinski, Just Read, Florida paper, Stuart Greenberg, Exec Director (undated) 10455877 1.E.1 Performance Indicator E: Fluency (1.C.1, 1.C.2) Understand that the components of reading fluency are accuracy, expression, and rate which impact reading endurance and comprehension. Week 4 Fluency Burns, B. (1999). The mindful school: How to teach balanced reading and writing. pp. 63-85 Video Intro to Phonics 10455877 1.E.2 Understand that effective readers demonstrate flexibility by adjusting their reading rate to accommodate the kinds of texts they are reading in order to facilitate comprehension. Week 4 Fluency Burns, B. (1999). The mindful school: How to teach balanced reading and writing. pp. 63-85 10455877 1.E.3 Understand the relationships among fluency, word recognition, and comprehension. Week 4 Fluency Burns, B. (1999). The mindful school: How to teach balanced reading and writing. pp. 63-85 Video Intro to Phonics 10455877 1.E.4 Understand that both oral language and writing enhance fluency instruction. Week 4 Fluency Burns, B. (1999). The mindful school: How to teach balanced reading and writing. pp. 63-85 Video Intro to Phonics - Spelling 10455877 1.E.5 (3.2) Understand the role of formal and informal fluency Oral Instruction by Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 7

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator assessment to make instructional decisions to meet individual student needs. Timothy Rasinski, Just Read, Florida paper, Stuart Greenberg, Exec Director (undated) 10455877 10455877 1.F.1 1.F.2 Performance Indicator F: Vocabulary Understand the goal of receptive and expressive vocabulary instruction is the application of a student s understanding of word meanings to multiple oral and written contexts. (1.D.1) Understand morphology as it relates to vocabulary development (e.g., morphemes, inflectional and derivational morphemes, morphemic analysis). Week 5: pp. 183-205 Increasing Vocabulary Video 5 Teaching New Vocabula and Writing in Elementary Classrooms: Research Based K-4 Instruction pp. 23-126 & pp. 145-146 Video - Vocabulary Week 5: Video Analyzing Words: 10455877 1.F.3 (1.D.2) Identify principles of semantics as they relate to vocabulary development (e.g., antonyms, synonyms, figurative language, etc.). Week 5: pp. 183-205 Increasing Vocabulary 10455877 1.F.4 Understand the domain specific vocabulary demands of academic language. Week 5: pp. 183-205 Increasing Vocabulary and Writing in Elementary Classrooms: Research Based K-4 Instruction Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 8

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator pp. 191-224 10455877 1.F.5 Understand that writing can be used to enhance vocabulary instruction. Week 5: Video- Teaching New Vocabulary 10455877 1.F.6 (3.2) Understand the role of formal and informal vocabulary assessment to make instructional decisions to meet individual student needs. Week 5: pp. 183-205 Increasing Vocabulary 10455877 1.G.1 Performance Indicator G: Integration of the Components (1.F.1) Identify language characteristics related to social and academic language Burns, B. (1999). The mindful school: How to teach balanced reading and writing. - Comprehension 10455877 10455877 1.G.2 1.G.3 (1.F.2) Identify phonemic, semantic, and syntactic variability between English and other languages. (1.F.3., 1.F.4) Understand the interdependence between each of the reading components and their effect upon reading as a process for native speakers of English and English language learners. Video: Key Strategies and More Strategies Video: Key Strategies And More Strategies Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 9

Florida Endorsement Alignment Matrix Name of IndicatoSpecific Indicator 10455877 1.G.4 (1.F.5)Understand the impact of oral language, writing, and an information intensive environment upon reading development. Video: Key Strategies and More Strategies - Comprehension 10455877 1.G.5 Understand the importance of comprehension monitoring and self correcting to increase reading proficiency. Video: Key Strategies and More Strategies - Comprehension 10455877 1.G.6 (3.2) Understand the role of formal and informal reading assessment to make instructional decisions to meet individual student needs. Video Module 6 Assessing Ability Broward County Public Schools, Division of Instruction and Interventions, Department Updated 10-22-12 10