The Interesting Connection between Literacy and Behavior in Children
WHY ADOLESCENT LITERACY MATTERS NOW
Use Formative Assessment to Differentiate Instruction
DIFFERENTIATED LITERACY INSTRUCTION: I, WE, YOU
How to Differentiate a Performance Assessment
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The Findings

Younger children having difficulty in reading comprehension and literacy end up showing problematic behaviors in their future years, compared to those who have better reading comprehension in the same situation.

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Freedom

Adolescents are classified by the World Health Organization as any young person between the ages of 10 and 19. During those 9 years, a child grows into a young adult and begins to develop the opinions, passions, and causes that make up their identity.

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Put Tools in Kids Hands

The ultimate differentiation tool that is used are the stations where students learn at their own pace independently.

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Teacher focused, modeling, direct/explicit instruction, think aloud

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Student Choice

Offer multiple response formats and performance mediums such as, written, oral, graphic.

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The Findings 2

These children already exhibited significant signs and levels of anxiety, oppositional behaviors, and social problems.

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Freedom 2

This is also the time where individuals gravitate towards a political ideology. This is significant because, in this 21st-century world, the way adolescents form these opinions relies so much on digesting printed text and information.

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Tools

Interactive Whiteboards, Remote Clickers

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We

Whole-group, small-group, collaborative

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Personal Relevance

Allow students to include their own relevant personal experiences to a topic. For example, discuss experiences of prejudice in a task related to Martin Luther King Jr.

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The Findings 3

There is cause and effect of literacy to children’s development in their behavior and social skills.

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Economy and Livelihood

Adolescent literacy plays an enormous role in obtaining employment opportunities, especially in our country’s increasingly knowledge-based economy.

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Tools 2

Digital video cameras, mobile devices

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Do

Independent use by student

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Pace and Structure

Provide students with flexibility in the amount of time allowed to complete the task and offer a variety of structures and supports to students. For example, provide a study carrel for an easily distracted student.

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Theories

One theory cites atypical neurological development as the culprit in the children’s challenges to understand and comprehend reading.

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Economy and Livelihood 2

This is because as children grow, they also begin to compare themselves and their literacy skills to others in their class. This can lead to social comparisons that can bring negative emotions to light such as anxiety, depression, and aggression.

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How to Make it Work

Maintain Rigor, Make Connections, Give Independence, Give kids a real audience

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Teacher Responsibility

Starts strong and big, grows smaller and less

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Complexity of Resources

Provide resources and materials with a range of complexity. For example, texts at different reading levels.

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Theory 2

Another theory is that those students who have a difficulty with reading might just become angry or frustrated with their schooling and thus act out

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Behavior

These negative emotions can also take their toll on their future professional life. Adolescents with poor literacy skills are known to be “more likely to drop out of school and to have unstable work patterns, low job skills, and delinquent behavior in adulthood”.

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How to Make it Work 2

Have a Back Up plan, Relax, Curate students' online destinations

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Student Responsibility

Starts small, grows bigger as teacher gives them more independence

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Transfer of Knowledge and Skills

Offer variation in requiring transference of knowledge and skill to novel, complex situations. For example, some students might measure a simpler three-dimensional object, like a see-saw, while more advanced students measure a complex object, like a climbing structure on a playground.