Feedback
Academic Language
Types of Questions
Instructional management
Anticipatory Sets
100

This type of feedback tells the student what they did right or wrong

Descriptive

100

Overall purpose of language used in a lesson

Language funcion

100

Directs students' attention to the lesson or material covered

Focus question

100

Hook, activating strategy, check for understanding, link

Anticipatory Set

100

How the learner will perform the desired behavior

Condition

200

This type of feedback does not encourage the student

Negative

200

Parts of Academic Language

Function, Demand, Vocabulary

200

Gives hints, clues, aids

Prompting question

200

Getting students interested in the lesson

Hook

200

How much or what the quality is in the lesson plan

Criteria

300

Feedback tells how poorly or how well a student performed

Evaluative

300

Students using language from the standard

disclosure

300

Questions that help clarify a response

Probing Question

300

Moving from one activity to another

Transition

300

This is what the student will be able to do specifically

Behavior

400

Feedback directly related to what the student is focused on

Congruency

400

Academic language includes

oral and written language used in instruction (content area)

400

Analyzing, Evaluating and Creating Skills

Higher order questions

400

Bringing the lesson to an end, including EQ, student summary of learning, and forecasting

Closure

400

must be written using user friendly language

I can statement

500

Feedback not specific to the lesson

Incongruent

500

What is academic language

Language that a school uses for content and classroom

500

Remembering, Understanding, and Applying Skills

Low order questions

500

provokes deep thought about the content being taught---application of learning, connections that allow students to transfer to new learning and/or situations, promote discussions

Essential question

500

Criteria includes

qualitative and quantitative