Thursday, June 26, 2014

Technology Application Standards!!


I will teach High school (12th Grade) English.
§110.34. English Language Arts and Reading, English IV (One Credit), Beginning with School Year 2009-2010.
(a) Introduction.

(1) The English Language Arts and Reading Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) are organized into the following strands: Reading, where students read and understand a wide variety of literary and informational texts; Writing, where students compose a variety of written texts with a clear controlling idea, coherent organization, and sufficient detail; Research, where students are expected to know how to locate a range of relevant sources and evaluate, synthesize, and present ideas and information; Listening and Speaking, where students listen and respond to the ideas of others while contributing their own ideas in conversations and in groups; and Oral and Written Conventions, where students learn how to use the oral and written conventions of the English language in speaking and writing. The standards are cumulative--students will continue to address earlier standards as needed while they attend to standards for their grade. In English IV, students will engage in activities that build on their prior knowledge and skills in order to strengthen their reading, writing, and oral language skills. Students should read and write on a daily basis.
(2) For students whose first language is not English, the students' native language serves as a foundation for English language acquisition.
(A) English language learners (ELLs) are acquiring English, learning content in English, and learning to read simultaneously. For this reason, it is imperative that reading instruction should be comprehensive and that students receive instruction in phonemic awareness, phonics, decoding, and word attack skills while simultaneously being taught academic vocabulary and comprehension skills and strategies. Reading instruction that enhances ELL's ability to decode unfamiliar words and to make sense of those words in context will expedite their ability to make sense of what they read and learn from reading. Additionally, developing fluency, spelling, and grammatical conventions of academic language must be done in meaningful contexts and not in isolation.
(B) For ELLs, comprehension of texts requires additional scaffolds to support comprehensible input. ELL students should use the knowledge of their first language (e.g., cognates) to further vocabulary development. Vocabulary needs to be taught in the context of connected discourse so that language is meaningful. ELLs must learn how rhetorical devices in English differ from those in their native language. At the same time English learners are learning in English, the focus is on academic English, concepts, and the language structures specific to the content.
(C) During initial stages of English development, ELLs are expected to meet standards in a second language that many monolingual English speakers find difficult to meet in their native language. However, English language learners' abilities to meet these standards will be influenced by their proficiency in English. While English language learners can analyze, synthesize, and evaluate, their level of English proficiency may impede their ability to demonstrate this knowledge during the initial stages of English language acquisition. It is also critical to understand that ELLs with no previous or with interrupted schooling will require explicit and strategic support as they acquire English and learn to learn in English simultaneously.
(3) To meet Public Education Goal 1 of the Texas Education Code, §4.002, which states, "The students in the public education system will demonstrate exemplary performance in the reading and writing of the English language," students will accomplish the essential knowledge, skills, and student expectations in English IV as described in subsection (b) of this section.
(4) To meet Texas Education Code, §28.002(h), which states, "... each school district shall foster the continuation of the tradition of teaching United States and Texas history and the free enterprise system in regular subject matter and in reading courses and in the adoption of textbooks," students will be provided oral and written narratives as well as other informational texts that can help them to become thoughtful, active citizens who appreciate the basic democratic values of our state and nation.

(Source: Texas Education Agency at http://www.tea.state.tx.us/)
           
            There are many ways that you can utilize this TEKS for a 12th grade English class.  One of those ways is to have a book for the class to read and have a student read out loud so that they can comprehend what’s being read.  I can give the students a quiz or a test about that same book that I gave them to read out loud during class, so that they can comprehend and be taught academic vocabulary and comprehension skills.  I will teach the students Shakespeare and tell my students to do a project to write a poem about what they think that Shakespeare is trying to teach or to tell them, so that way they can comprehend and gain skills like new strategies to learn different things.
            I believe that the most important TEKS is “(1) The English Language Arts and Reading Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) are organized into the following strands: Reading, where students read and understand a wide variety of literary and informational texts; Writing, where students compose a variety of written texts with a clear controlling idea, coherent organization, and sufficient detail; Research, where students are expected to know how to locate a range of relevant sources and evaluate, synthesize, and present ideas and information; Listening and Speaking, where students listen and respond to the ideas of others while contributing their own ideas in conversations and in groups; and Oral and Written Convention, where students learn how to use the oral and written conventions of the English language in speaking and writing.  The standards are cumulative- students will continue to address earlier standards as needed while they attend to standards for their grade.  In English IV, students will engage in activities that build on their prior knowledge and skills in order to strengthen their reading, writing, and oral language skills.  Students should read and write on a daily basis”.  And the way that I would cover this selection in my classroom is to have my students write a daily journal about their thoughts for that day, have them write poems about what they read in the book that I gave them to read out loud during class.  There are many more things that can be done.     

2 comments:

  1. I agree with you that students should have the opportunity to write everyday and be able to express orally what they have learned or written. One of the English teachers that I work with at the high school conducts a mini book club with her students. These students discuss the chapters that they are reading from their novel. Elements of the story are discussed so that critical thinking skills are used.They discuss why certain characters did something, or what was the meaning behind the plot.

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  2. That's actually not a bad idea to try and start to do when I start teaching. Thank you for the idea.

    Colby Hajec

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