11-11-14 issues from last week review: teaching speaking grammar break (adj/adv) etc, chapter 7:...

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11-11- 14 •Issues from last week •Review: Teaching Speaking •Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

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Page 1: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

11-11-14

•Issues from last week

•Review: Teaching Speaking

•Grammar Break (Adj/Adv)

•ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study

Agenda:

Page 2: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Your questions:

How do we know when to “give up” on a student?

Why do schools spend class time reading orally – for the entire class time?

What tips can we learn for interning?

How do you student teach with a teacher whose teaching style is much different from your own?

With observing, I noticed my teacher was very lenient with du dates when it came to writing assignments. However, I feel if she wasn’t, no one would turn their assignments in. How would you ameliorate this situation?

Page 3: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

I Learning GoalsSC ELA Content Standard(s): Benchmark(s):  Indicator(s): What will your students know and be able to do at the end of this lesson? II Student Background Knowledge and ExperienceWhat prior knowledge and skills do students need in order to be successful in reaching the goals of this lesson?How do you know if students have the knowledge and skills they need to be successful?How will you use or accommodate the diverse experiences that your students bring to class (considering gender, race/ethnicity, English language proficiency, economic status, exceptionalities, skill level, and learning styles)? III Instructional ProceduresContent summary, including concepts and essential understandings: Teaching methods: Student grouping: Reading strategies for selected print and nonprint texts:Interdisciplinary strategies: IV Resources and MaterialsWritten Texts: Oral Media: Visual Media: Instructional technologies: V Instructional ActivitiesLesson sequence, including important questions to ask students Time AllottedOpening: Main activities: Closing: VI Assessment/EvaluationHow will you know if each student has met the learning goals? Will students be asked for a personal response? If so, how will you use these responses? Attach assessments and assessment criteria.  VII AdaptationsModifications: Note if lesson objective or significant content needs to be changed.Accommodations: Note if other components of the lesson need to be changed.

Page 4: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Standard: Generic skill

Benchmark: The skill as it shows up in this lesson or unit

Indicator: Specific performance that shows mastery of the skill

Standards, Benchmarks, and Indicators

Standard: CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.11-12.1 Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text, including determining where the text

leaves matters uncertain.

Benchmark: TSW accurately summarize selected passages of Beowulf and correctly answer inference-based questions about the text.

Indicator: TSW score at least 90% correct on the Beowulf quiz.

Page 5: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Standard: CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.1.D Establish and maintain a formal style and objective tone while attending to the norms and conventions of the discipline in which they are writing.

Benchmark: TSW establish and maintain an appropriate tone and follow relevant conventions in an essay on Julius Caesar.

Indicator: TSW will achieve a score of 3 or higher in the “Disciplinary Conventions” category on the rubric for the Julius Caesar essay.

Standard: CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.SL.11-12.1.C Propel conversations by posing and responding to questions that probe reasoning and evidence; ensure a hearing for a full range of positions on a topic or issue; clarify, verify, or challenge ideas and conclusions; and promote divergent and creative perspectives.

Benchmark: TSW participate appropriately in small-group and whole-class discussions of King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.”

Indicator: TSW achieve passing scores on informal assessments of participation in discussions of King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.”

Page 6: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Standard: CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.L.11-12.1 Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking.

Benchmark: TSW follow conventions of standard English grammar and usage in all written work handed in for this unit.

Indicator: TSW will have no major deductions for grammar/usage on written answers to study questions, and will achieve a score of 3 or higher in the “Grammar/Syntax” category on the rubric for the final paper.

Questions on Standards / Benchmarks / Indicators?

Page 7: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Call-and-response vs. Dialog

Page 8: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

General principles for teaching speaking skills:

•Safe, inviting classroom

•Culture of learning

•Culture of practice and “it’s OK to mess up”

•Lots of low-stakes practice

•Lots of modeling

•Adequate rehearsal time

•Clear expectations

•Respect, attention, applause for everyone

Page 9: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Adjectives & Adverbs

Adjective – modifies noun or pronounTells what kind:blue dogs, bright light

Points out which:this paper, that pen

Tells how many:many people, two ideas

Pronouns as adjectives:these times, which one

Nouns as adjectives:barn dance, police car

Verb(al)s as adjectives:sleeping dogs, flying fish

Adverb – modifies verb, adjective, or adverbTypically tells…how (drives carefully),when (arrives early),where (walks everywhere),how often (naps daily), orto what extent (almost forgot,

very excited,really well)

Nouns as adverbs:leave Monday,spoke yesterday

“count” words: few people, many times

“amount” words: less humanity,

much time

Page 10: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Adjectives & Adverbs

Syntax: adjectives & adverbs typically modify the nearest word possible

The little red wagon with old wheels that are falling off has disappeared.

( )( )

The little red wagon with tiny wheels that I got as a child has disappeared.( )

Sitting on the sea wall, I watched the ship disappearing beyond the horizon.( ) ( )

Sitting on the sea wall can be dangerous.

Sitting on the sea wall, the ship disappeared beyond the horizon.

Sitting on the sea wall can be dangerous.

Sitting on the sea wall, the ship disappeared beyond the horizon.

Page 11: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Adjectives & Adverbs

Articles: a, an, the

Definite: the, this, these, those Indefinite: a, an, some, any

Compound words as adjectives require hyphens:

Her boy-catching eyelashes are luxurious.

The boy catching butterflies is out in the back yard.

Participle: looks like a verb; acts like an adjective

The marching band refused to yield.

A rolling stone gathers no moss.

Gerund: looks like a verb; acts like a noun

I like dreaming.

Running is my favorite sport.

Page 12: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Edit these sentences (from papers by graduate student English majors):

After threatening a pop-quiz, they finally participated.

There are less than 10 African American students in the entire student body.

She only got through the vocabulary in 55 minutes.

Adjectives & Adverbs

I observed less than thirty students to one teacher.

When discussing our field experience, there were many differing opinions.Each new group of students possessed a very unique feel.

She told an incredible amount of stories.

Next, students began work on their five paragraph essays.

The side of the room with the least errors won the competition.

After walking past this, the room feels a little bare.

The teacher used a variety of learning strategies.

All kids can’t learn just using one way.

Just about each diagonal row had three desks in it.

I will not be able to pay attention to every MP3 playing student in the room.

Page 13: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Another teacher was assisting, however, this teacher did not do much.

Bonus Practice: Commas & Semicolons

When the bell rang; however, it became clear that the other kids would be interested in discussion.

This desk arrangement was however short-lived.

A student walked my colleague and I upstairs to the classroom.

Double Bonus: Mystery Issue

There are a few exceptions to this pattern, however.

A tardy student’s entry is disruptive enough in and of itself; the lesson should not stop to accommodate the needs of the delinquent student.

Each hallway is lettered and has its own color-coding; however, at this point I did not know that.

Each class began with brief announcements by the teacher; although, second period had announcements over the school PA system.

There is one student in each class who prefers to hear themselves talk.

Page 14: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Language Study

It’s the study of craft: how we use diction, syntax, and punctuation to accomplish goals.

Grammar, vocabulary, and conventions are not simply issues of correctness, but are issues of rhetoric – choices that help or hurt the speaker/writer with respect to accomplishing goals.

Knowledge of language provides access to power; lack of knowledge prevents access to power.

Larger vocabulary can lead to greater precision of expression and greater understanding.

Page 15: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Vocabulary Study…

• should be ongoing – all the time, in every lesson, whenever a word comes into question.

• should be fun. (Word of the day. Word histories. Weird words. Puns and other word humor.)

• should be relevant and useful: words related to whatever is currently being studied, not big words memorized in isolation.

• should go beyond individual words when possible: stems, word families.

• should include aural element (i.e., pronunciation).

Page 16: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Which words?

Tier 1:everyday speech

Tier 2:academic speech

Tier 3:domain-specific terms

Page 17: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:
Page 18: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Grammar Study…

• seems to work better when taught in context rather than in isolation.

• can be prescriptive or descriptive: what people should do or what people actually do

Page 19: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Classroom Practices

• Sentence combining

• Sentence imitating

• Sentence unscrambling/recombining

• Sentence expanding

• Sentence templates

• Considering alternative choices

• Playing with punctuation

Page 20: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

Questions about Burke’s Ideas?

Grammar questions?

Unit Plan questions?

Briefly describe your unit plan; let us know about any parts on which you might need help.

Page 21: 11-11-14 Issues from last week Review: Teaching Speaking Grammar Break (Adj/Adv) ETC, Chapter 7: Language Study Agenda:

For next time, read and respond to ETC, ch. 8.