All About Literacy
Planning, planning, planning
Social and Cultural Aspects of Literacy
Critical Literacy
Instructional Components
Reading and Writing
Spelling and Vocabulary
100

reading, writing, viewing, representing, listening, speaking

What are the 6 dimensions of language arts?
100
  • Alberta Program of Studies

  • Students’ Funds of Knowledge

  • Social and Cultural Considerations

  • Theoretical Beliefs and Knowledge

  • Your Own Beliefs and Values 

What are considerations for planning?

100

Language that

  • occurs when there are contextual embedded supports for language delivery

  • face-to-face (including non-verbal communication)

  • up to 2 years

What are Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills? BICS

100

A dimension of critical literacy:

questioning everyday assumptions, routines, and things taken for granted (like typical family structures or gender roles) to see them through new lenses, revealing underlying biases and power structures

What is disrupting the commonplace?

100

Read aloud, shared reading, guided reading, independent reading

What are the four major reading strategies?

100

Children 

  • Notice environmental print

  • Show interest in books

  • Pretend to read

  • Use picture cues and predictable pattern books to retell stories

What is emergent reading?

100

The recognition that words are made up of a variety of sound units and is a key predictor of reading achievement in grade 1

What is phonological awareness?

200

The ability to understand and create meaning from texts that combine different modes of communication, such as words, images, sound, and movement

What is multimodal literacy?

200

The part of the lesson plan where you describe how to manage, distribute and collect materials

What is material management?

200

Language that

  • context reduced academic situations

  • linguistic cues and knowledge of language required

  • 5 to 7 years longer beyond BICS

What is Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency?

CALP
200

A dimension of critical literacy:

It involves seeing how the same topic can be viewed differently and how one's own background affects interpretation, making texts richer and challenging the status quo.

Asking whose voices are present or missing and how different perspectives shape a text, moving beyond a single narrative.

What is considering multiple viewpoints?

200

A collaborative teaching strategy where a teacher and students create a text together, with the teacher guiding the process while strategically inviting students to physically write letters, words, or phrases, sharing the "pen" to teach writing skills, spelling, and conventions in real-time

What is shared writing?

200

It helps children acquire:

  • Positive attitudes towards books and reading

  • The understanding that written language is meaningful

  • The language of various genres of text

  • An understanding of what fluid, proficient reading sounds like and looks like

  • Knowledge of the content of the texts that they might not be able to access on their own if the text is beyond their independent level

What is read aloud?

200

The stage of invented spelling:

hikt (for hiked)


What is the phonetic stage?

300

The rich resources from their lives outside of school, such as navigating social systems, practical skills, and cultural practices, that students use to enhance academic learning

What are funds of knowledge?

300

Modifying content, process , and/or product

What is differentiation?

300
  • Views literacy as related to identity – it is a social undertaking learned through social interaction

  • Literacy is for communication. People negotiate and develop shared meanings within their communication.

  • Children learn among themselves and with the support of more knowledgeable others

  • Children are active in their meaning making

  • Literacy is both cognitive and social

What is the Social Constructivist Model of Learning?

300

A dimension of critical literacy:

Using critical understanding to question privilege, injustice, and inspire real-world change, transforming understanding into action.

What is Taking Action & Promoting Social Justice? 

300

Engaging tasks (writing, drawing, discussing) that prompt readers to connect personally with a text, exploring their own feelings, experiences, and interpretations, making meaning co-created between reader and text rather than just passively absorbing author intent

What are reader response activities?

300

Determining what you think will happen in the text. Use the title, text and illustrations to help you.

What is making a prediction?

300

Putting a name or label on words that are encountered in print; encompasses the use of multiple cues to identify unfamiliar words

What is word identification?

400

Recent advances in technology and a greater understanding of neurobiology have allowed researchers and practitioners who work with typical and struggling readers to understand how reading develops in the brain and the skills that contribute to proficient reading

What is the science of reading?

400

The part of the lesson plan where you 

- introduce the learning goals and I know, I understand and I can statements. 

- Draw out/build on funds of knowledge.

- Set expectations. 

-Describe what will happen in this lesson and how long it will take.

What is the lesson introduction?

400

1) Situated Practice 

    -immersion, interests, backgrounds and experiences, community, needs

2) Overt Instruction

    -scaffolding, funds of knowledge, support

3) Critical Framing 

    -contextualize, relations of power

4) Transformed Practice 

    -transfer, critical reflection, assessment

What are the four components of multiliteracies?

400

A dimension of critical literacy:

Examining power relations, social systems, and how texts represent (or misrepresent) societal structures and inequalities.

What is Focusing on Sociopolitical Issues?

400

A hands-on, student-centered approach to teaching spelling, phonics, and vocabulary simultaneously

What is word study?

400

Form, function, audience

What are three requirements for any writing piece?

400

Most common: ack, ake, all, ale, an, ame, ain, and, ap, ash, at, ate, aw, ay, eat, ell, est, ice, ick, ight, ill, ide, ill, in, ine, ing, ip, ink, it, ock, op, oke, ore, ot, uck, ug, unk and ump

What are phonograms (word families, rimes)?

500
  • Term defined by the New London Group in 1996

  • Looks at literacy in everyday life (vernacular literacy)

  • Defines literacy as more than just reading and writing at school

  • Belief that literacy is situational

What is multiliteracies theory?

500

The part of the lesson plan where you describe how you will track your assessment. Teachers use a variety of methods including checklists, anecdotal notes, Work handed in and comments added to a teacher spreadsheet, photographs or video. 

Use the learning goals to create a tracking sheet of student achievement.

What is the assessment tracking and recording section?

500

The notion that learning happens by connecting new information to existing mental structures (schemata) in our long-term memory, acting like mental frameworks or "slots" that organize knowledge about concepts, events, or situations, helping students understand, interpret, and remember new material more effectively by building on what they already know. 

What is schema theory?

500

Code Breaker (decoding text) 

Text Participant/Meaning Maker (making sense through prior knowledge) 

Text User (understanding text purpose and structure)

Text Analyst/Critic (interrogating bias, power, and social issues)

What are the four roles of the reader?

500

It involves students sharing an experience (like a field trip or a story), dictating it to a teacher who writes it down verbatim, and then using that unique text for reading, vocabulary, phonics, and comprehension activities.

What is the language experience approach?

500
  1. Ideas

  2. Organization

  3. Voice

  4. Word choice

  5. Sentence fluency

  6. Conventions

  7. Presentation

What are traits of writing?

500

Two letters that are combined to make a single sound (one phoneme)

Can be either consonants or vowels

What are digraphs?

M
e
n
u