BHS ELA Instructional Guide
This interactive map is a product of Canyons School District. Open and start reading right away!
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 1
Table of Contents
p. 3
p. 17
What’s New and Updated?
State ELA Resources
p. 4
p. 18
Best Practices in ELA
Digital Tools to Support ELA
ELA Resources
p. 8
p. 19
Writing Framework
Disciplinary Literacy
p. 15
p. 21
Standards for Classroom Novel Use
Close Reading Routine
p. 16
p. 23
Book Approval Process
Special Education Supports
p. 28
p. 31
Assessment Calendar
Aspire Overview
Assessments
p. 29
p. 34
NWEA MAP Reading Screener
ACT Connections
p. 46
Year at a Glance
p. 47
Units 1-4
ELA9
p. 59
Approved Texts and Sample Themes
p. 64
Advanced Learners Extensions
p. 68
Year at a Glance
p. 69
Units 1-4
ELA10
p. 81
Approved Texts and Sample Themes
p. 86
Advanced Learners Extension
p. 90
Year at a Glance
ELA11
p. 91
Units 1-4
p. 102
Approved Texts and Sample Themes
p. 108
Year at a Glance
ELA12
p. 109
Units 1-4
p. 120
Approved Texts and Sample Themes
p. 126
Journalism
ELA Electives
p. 136
Speech and Debate
p. 148
Creative Writing
p. 156
Mythology
p. 164
Utah State ELA Standards
Utah State Supplemental Standards for ELA
p. 164
State of Utah ELA Core Guides:
Grades 9-10
Grades 11-12
p. 165
Vertical Alignment of Standards
Standards
p. 180
Unpacked 9-10 Standards
p. 219
Unpacked 11-12 Standards
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 2
What’s New and Updated?
Feature
Description
Page
This section has been revised to refect current research. It also includes links to learn more and for resources in how to implement each. This page now includes links to district policy and state law in regards to classroom novels. With the passing of state standards for Journalism, Debate, Mythology, and Creative Writing, new instructional guides have been written for these courses. You can fnd them after ELA 12. The Aspire Blueprints have been updated to refect the state blueprints. The standards alignment has been removed because they no longer align with the current state standards. If you would like to view the previous versions, you can fnd them linked: English Performance Descriptors and Reading Performance Descriptors. This section has been added to support teaching connections between ELA and the ACT Assessment. Updated in 2024 to align with new ELA standards. The order of the units in ELA 9, 10, 11, and 12 have been rearranged based on teacher feedback. This page highlights several digital tools that are especially useful for Secondary ELA teachers. This will link out to guides and ideas for use as is applicable. Added to the Unpacked Standards is academic language that has been identifed by the state for the standard. Added to the Unpacked Standards are strategies that teachers can use to support the teaching and learning of the standard. All novels approved for your grade (as of 5/15/24) and short stories found in Mirrors and Windows can be found in the Approved Texts and Sample Themes after the Units for your grade. The offcial state standards and supplemental standards for ELA and the core guides have been linked in the table of contents and in the State ELA Resources Page.
Best Practices in ELA
4
Standards for Classroom Novel Use
15
New Instructional Guides for ELA Electives
122-156
Aspire Overview
29
ACT Connections
32
Each course
Unit Order Change
State ELA Resources This is a new page that links to the state-created resources.
17
Digital Tools to Support ELA
18
Unpacked Standards: Academic Language Unpacked Standards: Strategies for Teaching Standards
Each standard
Approved Texts and Sample Themes
Each course
2 & 26
State Standards and Core Guides
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 3
Best Practices in ELA
READING Utilize Diverse Texts
Plan instruction around texts that are at grade level, developmentally appropriate, and are culturally relevant in a broader context. ● Encourage students to analyze texts from different angles. Discuss how characters’ backgrounds, experiences, and cultural contexts shape their viewpoints. ● Provide daily opportunities to read from a variety of sources. ● Provide daily opportunities to read texts of a variety of lengths.
Mirrors, Windows, and Sliding Glass Doors by Rudine Sims Bishop
Culturally Responsive Teaching Rubric, Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
Resource: Accessing Complex Texts Resource: Text Complexity
Student Choice Create an environment to encourage students’ intrinsic motivation in reading, there are two keys. Students are more motivated when they
Motivating Students with Book Choice from Edutopia
Student Choice is the Key to Turning Students Into Readers, by Jenni Aberli, International Literacy Association “Literature Circles: How Educators Can Make this Small Group Exercise Work Better in Classrooms” from Harvard Graduate School of Education Improving Adolescent Literacy: Effective Classroom and Intervention Practices from What Works Clearinghouse (see recommendation #2) “Does Your Comprehension Strategy Instruction Have this Key Element?” by Tim Shanahan “The Skill, Will, and Thrill of Reading Comprehension” by Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey
value what they are doing and when they believe they have a chance for success. Use text sets and literature circles to increase student choice.
Explicit Reading Instruction
Instruct students on specifc reading strategies, such as predicting, summarizing, visualizing, questioning, and making inferences. Model these strategies, provide guided practice, and offer opportunities for independent application across different genres and types of texts.
Active Reading Techniques
● Pre-Reading: Activate prior knowledge and set purpose for reading through activities like predicting and discussing key concepts. ● Guided Reading and Think-Alouds: Model fuent reading and comprehension strategies, pausing to ask questions and clarify misunderstandings.
Teaching High School Students Active Reading Skills by Sunaina Sharma, Edutopia
Active Reading Strategies, Or Reading for Writing, Vanderbilt University
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 4
● Active Reading Strategies: Encourage students to annotate, ask questions, and make connections while reading to deepen understanding. ● Discussion and Collaborative Learning:
The Skill, Will, and Thrill of Reading Comprehension, Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey, ASCD
Active Reading Techniques (cont’d)
Resource: Writing Text Dependent Questions
Foster discussion and critical thinking through small group and whole class discussions.
● Post-Reading Refection and Extension Activities: Synthesize understanding and extend learning through writing responses and engaging in projects.
WRITING
A Culture of Writers
Foster a dynamic writing environment that sustains a positive writing culture and empowers students as writers. Write daily in a variety of formats, and for a variety of purposes. Use low stakes writing to write about content to navigate ideas, build upon learning and comprehension, and to communicate thinking. Provide frequent during-writing feedback and targeted instruction based on formative data.
The Writing Habit Writingto Learn
See the CSD Writing Framework, linked image below, to learn more and to see strategies for each pillar of the Writing Framework.
Writing Feedback
Writingas Process Specifc strategy instruction on the characteristics and components of good writing via modeling, explanation, and guided practice. Writing Modes Use technology and emerging technologies to support writing processes, practices, and products. Mentor Texts Select writing that exemplifes specifc literary techniques, genres, or styles, providing students with models to analyze and emulate in their own writing.
By studying mentor texts, students can gain insight into effective writing strategies, deepen their understanding of literary conventions, and improve their skills through guided practice and refection.
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 5
SPEAKING AND LISTENING Structured Academic Discussion
Teachers will provide students with opportunities to discuss in order to express learning, gain knowledge, engage with text, demonstrate growth, and communicate with the world around them. Teachers will develop opportunities for all students ● to speak daily, ● for a range of purposes, ● Audiences, ● and lengths of time.
Structured Academic Discussion (link to resource in guide)
Structured Academic Discussion (cont’d)
Active Listening Explicitly teach and practice active listening skills. This can involve activities such as listening to podcasts, TED Talks, or audio recordings of speeches, and then discussing the main points, arguments, and techniques used by the speakers. Provide student strategies for active listening, such as making eye contact, nodding, summarizing key points, and asking relevant questions.
“Practices that Support Listening” by Katie Alford, excerpt from English Journal
Refective Listening, University of New South Wales, Sydney
Explicitly Teaching Listening in the ELA Curriculum: Why and How by Katie Alford, McKendree University
Authentic Communication
Provide opportunities for students to engage in authentic, real-world communication tasks both inside and outside the classroom. This could involve interacting with guest speakers, conducting interviews, participating in community service projects, or communicating with peers from different cultural backgrounds through pen-pal exchanges or virtual collaborations. These tasks help students apply their speaking and listening skills in meaningful contexts and develop intercultural competence. Incorporate performance tasks that assess students' ability to apply skills in authentic performance e contexts. Create varied assessment types that measure different aspects of student learning. This could include formative assessments such as quizzes, exit tickets, and writing prompts for ongoing feedback and adjustment of instruction. Summative assessments like essays, projects, and presentations allow students to demonstrate their understanding over longer periods and in more comprehensive ways.
Strategies for Supporting Students’ Speaking and Listening Skills by Lisa Schultz, Edutopia
The Profound Effects of Language in Both ELA and Math, Timothy Shanahan and Jeff Zwiers, UnboundED
Speaking of Speaking by John Larmer, ASCD
Assessment Authentic Assessment
Authentic Assessment: Where to Start by Joanna Dolgin, Kim Kelly, and Sarvenaz Zelkha, NCTE
Assessing Applied Skills by Joe DiMartino and Andrea Castaneda, ASCD
The Case for Refective Assessment by Lauryn H. Evans
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 6
Incorporate refective assessment practices where students critically evaluate their own work and learning process. Encourage students to assess their strengths and areas for improvement, set goals for future growth,
and refect on how they have applied language skills in authentic contexts.
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 7
Canyons School District Secondary Writing Framework
Writing Pillars
Description
Supporting Research
Foster a dynamic writing environment that sustains a positive writing culture and empowers students as writers. Write daily in a variety of formats, and for a variety of purposes. Write about content to navigate ideas, build upon learning and comprehension, and to communicate thinking. Provide frequent during-writing feedback and targeted instruction based on formative data. Specific strategy instruction on the characteristics and components of good writing via modeling, explanation, and guided practice.
What Works Clearinghouse: Teaching Secondary Students to Write Effectively NCTE Statement Principles 2.2, 3.1 Habits of Mind A Path to Better Writing: Evidence-Based Practices in The Classroom, 361-362 NCTE Statement Principles 2.1, 2.3, 2.4, 3.4 Utah State Standards: Writing Strand Grade Bands 6, 7-8, 9-10, 11-12 A Path to Better Writing: Evidence-Based Practices in The Classroom, 360-361 NCTE Statement Principle 3.4 A Path to Better Writing: Evidence-Based Practices in The Classroom, 361 Hattie, J. (2023). Writing Programs. In Visible Learning: The sequel (pp. 271–274). NCTE Statement Principle 3.1, 3.3 A Path to Better Writing: Evidence-Based Practices in The Classroom, 362-363 Hattie, J. (2023). Writing Programs. In Visible Learning: The sequel (pp. 271–274). NCTE Statement Principle 3.1 Framework for Success “Developing Flexible Writing Processes” (pages 7-8) Implementing the Writing Process Framework for Success "Developing Knowledge of Conventions" (page 9) Framework for Success "Developing Critical Thinking" (page 11) A Path to Better Writing: Evidence-Based Practices in The Classroom, 363 Hattie, J. (2023). Writing Programs. In Visible Learning: The sequel (pp. 271–274).
1. Create and maintain a supportive writing environment
2. Write extensively
3. Engage students in writing to learn and low-stakes writing
4. Facilitate as students compose
5. Teach critical skills, processes, and knowledge
NCTE Statement Principle 1.1, 2.3 Framework for Success "Developing Knowledge of Conventions" (page 9) A Path to Better Writing: Evidence-Based Practices in The Classroom, 364
Use technology and emerging technologies to support writing processes, practices, and products.
6. Utilize next generation writing modes
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 8
1. Create and Maintain a Supportive Writing Environment
Foster a dynamic writing environment that sustains a positive writing culture and empowers students as writers. Students need a supportive writing environment in order to take risks and improve as writers.
Description:
Rationale:
Resources:
Best Practices
Critical Components
● Focus on amplifying the effective moves. ● Re-establish student writing identity and momentum. Begin to see themselves as writers again. (Gallagher) ● Honor student voice in writing. ● Accentuate the positive. Eliminate the negative. ● Collaborate in writing with students ● Allow students to see your writing process in all variations versus only the best draft ● Use think-alouds with students while writing so they can your decision-making process ● Stop frequently and make explicit the choices writers make to create an effect for an intended audience. ● Focus on how diction, tone, and punctuation can change meaning. ● Ask the following: What am I trying to say? Have I said it?
Create and maintain an asset-based approach to student writing.
Write alongside students and allow yourself to be vulnerable in modeling the writing process and decisions writers make.
Approach writing as problem-solving.
Notes/Ideas:
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 9
2. Write Extensively
Description:
Write daily in a variety of formats and for a variety of purposes.
To build consistency in students' writing, increase writing fuency, and expose students to a variety of purposes and audiences.
Rationale:
Resources:
Tips for Using Daily Writing Prompts from Write the World
Best Practices
Critical Components
Journals - Composition Notebook 1. Part of the daily classroom routine 2. Generative writing is the focus 3. Gradual release - be explicit at frst with structure 4. Multiple ways to use the journal: starter, free writes, notes, prewriting, drafting, revision, interactive 5. Add in scaffolding for SPED and ML to lighten the writing load for students who need the support, but still maintain value in the notebook 6. Use to help students refect on their learning and writing 7. Ungraded or minimal grading
Focus on consistency instead of intensity Engage real world writing for a variety of purposes
Students write more than can be read, or graded
Notes/Ideas:
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 10
3. Engage Students in Writing to Learn and Low-stakes Writing
Write about content to navigate ideas, build upon learning and comprehension, and to communicate thinking. Writing to learn encourages students to develop critical thinking skills by exploring ideas rather than focusing on a structure or product.
Description:
Rationale:
Resources:
Best Practices
Critical Components
Integrate writing in conjunction with:
● Activating background knowledge ● Honoring funds of knowledge ● Building vocabulary ● Exploring Ideas and Concepts ● Annotating for a purpose ● Analysis and evaluation
pre-reading
during reading
● Refection ● Metacognitive practices ● Synthesizing learning
after reading
Notes/Ideas:
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 11
4. Facilitate as Students Compose
Provide frequent during-writing feedback and targeted instruction based on formative data. Writing is a process and students should get feedback in order to improve throughout the process. “The work of a writing teacher is response and encouragement.” Kelly Gallagher
Description:
Rationale:
Resources:
Best Practices
Critical Components
● Student’s asking for feedback for a specifc purpose ● Peer writing groups ● Students who receive feedback through classroom discussion improve their outcomes (Hattie .82 effect size) ● Review student work while they are engaged in the writing process to gather formative data ● Allow time for students to practice during class and to engage in a feedback cycle about their writing decisions ● Best drafts are for grading; feedback needs to be given before grading. ● Limit comments to one or two suggestions that might help the student make the writing better.
Regularly engage in student writing conferences
Ensure students receive feedback in the midst of drafting
Feedback on a best draft is limited.
Notes/Ideas:
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 12
5. Teach Critical Skills, Processes, and Knowledge
Specifc strategy instruction on the characteristics and components of good writing via modeling, explanation, and guided practice.
Description:
Rationale:
Writers learn a process in one genre that is largely transferable to other genres.
Resources:
Best Practices
Critical Components
● Tap into prior knowledge ● Provide students with a step-by-step structure for engaging the writing process ● Use collaborative writing strategies with students ● Model by writing with students ● “Read, Analyze, Imitate. If students can identify strategies, they can begin to use them.” Kelly Gallagher ○ Read the mentor text ○ Analyze the writing moves ○ Try the moves in your own writing
Scaffold writing using learning progressions
Provide mentor texts for students to model their writing after
Notes/Ideas:
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 13
6. Utilize Next Generation Writing Modes
Use technology and emerging technologies to support writing processes, practices, and products. To address inequalities in digital technologies and competencies, continuing curricular innovation in the ELA curriculum at all levels of K–12 education is needed. - NCTE Position Statement: Media Education in English Language Arts.
Description:
Rationale:
Resources:
Best Practices
Critical Components
● Be explicit in teaching and studying the writing modality based on mentor texts ● Focus on writing for a real audience and authentic purpose ● Show how writers are transferring a similar structure from one writing skill to a new genre or format ● Engage the writing process through to production ● Look for ways to use modes of writing that go beyond substitution, but instead allow for augmentation, modifcation, and/or redefnition.
Experiment with different modes of writing, beyond traditional writing formats, for real audiences and purposes.
Notes/Ideas:
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 14
Standards for Classroom Novel Use To build a foundation for college and career readiness, students must read widely and deeply from a broad range of high-quality, increasingly challenging literary and informational texts. Through extensive reading of stories, dramas, poems, and myths from diverse cultures and time periods, students gain literary and cultural knowledge as well as familiarity with various text structures and elements. Novels act a mirrors, window, and sliding-glass doors where students can “celebrate both our differences and our similarities, because together they are what makes us all human” (Bishop, 2015) As stated in District Policy 600.02 - Instructional Materials, any book taught in its entirety will need to be approved through the Fiction and Nonfction Book Approval Process (Exhibit 5) and listed in the Book Approval Database. All instructional materials (including teacher-selected materials) need to follow the Instructional Materials Selection Criteria. If your novel will address controversial topics, follow Policy 600.16—Study of Controversial Issues. Instructional materials that have sensitive materials are not not allowed to be taught in Utah Schools per state law (House Bill 29 and related codes cited in the bill). Guiding questions 1. What standards am I teaching? How does this novel support those standards? 2. What are the needs of the students in my class? How will I scaffold this novel to meet those needs? Purpose of novels in classroom instruction District Policy and StateLaw
3. What background knowledge do students need in order to access this novel? 4. What will students be doing to show their thinking during the reading of this novel?
Implementation and Alignment to
Meets Standard
Does Not Meet Standard
Scopeand Sequence
A variety of text types and complexities are used in class with appropriate tasks. Actively reading using strategies, e.g., ● Annotating the text ● Citing textual evidence ● Note-taking (Cornell notes, guided notes, etc.)
Diffcult texts not appropriately scaffolded.
Low-level texts not matched to diffcult task.
Students follow along as the teacher reads without an accompanying active task.
Students listening to tape without accompanying active task. Students reading silently without accompanying active task.
Use of text is focused on standards. Short sections selected for close reading.
Students demonstrate their thinking through academic discussion and writing in a variety of ways. Teachers require students to use textual evidence to support academic discussion and writing, demonstrating a varying degree of depth of knowledge. Class time used to actively read sections for whole-class activities. Other sections assigned as outside reading. Limited sections of audio used to support active reading (eg., a few minutes of listening followed by independent reading, followed by partner discussion).
No close readings of the novel performed.
Understanding of the novel demonstrated through an end of novel test focusing on recall. Discussions and writing focus on the events of the novel, not pulling evidence to support larger ideas.
Depth of knowledge 1 or 2.
Considerable class time spent to read or listen to the novel in order to read the entire novel in class.
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 15
Book Approval Process
As stated in District Policy 600.02 - Instructional Materials, any book taught in its entirety will need to be approved by the district committee (600.03-3.4 Supplemental Instructional Materials).
Criteria for novel approval: ● Text Complexity
○ Quantitative text complexity ○ Qualitative text complexity ○ Task and reader complexity ● Curriculum map and standards alignment ● Community appropriateness
Process for novel approval: 1. Teacher submits rationale ensuring that the novel meets the requirements for approval based on text complexity rubrics (qualitative, quantitative, task and reader), map alignment, support of the standards, and community appropriateness. 2. The district Book Selection Committee will review the book and application for approval. The committee consists of district personnel, teachers, administrators, and parents from each feeder system. 3. The committee will either approve or deny the application and rationale will be written on the application. The book will be added to the database.* A novel may be re-submitted after consideration of use and change to the original submission. To add a novel that has been approved for another grade or system, parts of previously approved novel rationales may be used. ● Concerns about materials should be communicated to the school’s administrator. ● Questions about the approval process should be directed to the Instructional Supports Department.
*The database was frst created in 2017.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Link
QRCode
novels.canyonsdistrict.org
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 16
ELA Resources from Utah State Department of Education
Utah State ELA Standards
Linked are the offcial state standards and supplemental standards.
Utah State Supplemental Standards for ELA
The core guides show correlation and connections between standards horizontally and vertically. They give academic language and activity suggestions, as well as learning progressions. Utah’s New English Language Arts Standards Overview is the slidedeck from the summer 2023 training on the new state standards. These best practices support implementation of the Utah English Language Arts Standards with the goal that students read, write, speak, and listen in every class session using grade-level texts and content. Includes additional articles for further reading. UEN is curating a hub for secondary ELA resources. Phase 1 is now live. You can fnd lesson plans and resources aligned to the state standards. *Please evaluate any resources you fnd before using in your classrooms. Over the course of the 23-24 school year, USBE sponsored webinars on topics for secondary ELA classes. The links will take you to a folder with the recording, presentation, and any other additional materials shared by the presenters.
Standards & Core Guides
State of Utah ELA Core Guides: Grades 9-10
Grades 11-12
Utah's New English Language Arts Standards Overview
USBE’s Best Practices in ELA
Best Practices in ELA
UEN Secondary ELA Media Hub
UEN Secondary ELAMedia Hub
● Why You Should Teach Listening Explicitly - Katie Alford ● Besting the Grammar Beast - Deborah Dean ● Multimodal Writing & Research - Amber Jensen ● Reading with Purpose - Lauren Aimonette Liang ● Restoring Humanity to Striving Readers - Panel Discussion ● Indigenous America through Literature - Donna Sabis-Burns ● Developing Deep Knowledge - Naomi Watkins ● Let’s Talk about the Robot in the Room - Matthew Winters
23-24 Secondary ELA Webinars
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 17
DIGITAL TOOLS TO SUPPORT SECONDARY ELA
Note : Be sure to vet the content from these resources to ensure they are age-appropriate before incorporating them into your classroom instruction. Digital Tool Brief Description Resources Middle School ELA Resource Hub On this Canvas site, you can fnd grade level specifc resources; archived thematic units; professional learning screencasts, newsletters, and podcasts; a place to collaborate and solicit ideas from other grade level teachers in the district; and more.
Select the button below to learnmore about how you canuse the resources on this page.
High School ELA Sandbox
In UEN’s Secondary English Language Arts Hub, you can access high-quality teaching resources aligned to the Utah Secondary English Language Arts standards. CommonLit is a comprehensive literacy program with thousands of reading lessons, full-year ELA curriculum, benchmark assessments, and standards-based data for teachers. TeachingBooks is an ever-expanding database of digital resources about children's and young adult books and their authors and illustrators. The resource collection includes author and illustrator interviews, video book trailers, audio book readings, book discussion guides, and much more. School AI is an all-in-one AI-powered educational platform designed for K-12 students. Teachers can create custom Spaces, or chatbots, where students can interact with specifc areas of content. For example, they can initiate a conversation with a character from a book, historical fgure, and much more. Scrible (https://www.scrible.com/) is a research and writing platform that can be used to bookmark, annotate, organize, and share articles and webpages. The Utah State Board of Education has secured a statewide contract to provide Scrible Edu Pro to all Utah K-12 educators and students. Beanstack is a web and mobile app used to track independent reading time, and help build a culture of reading in school and at home. Beanstack makes it easier for you to help kids track reading, keep kids motivated to read, and provide feedback and insights into the reading habits at your school. Each Mini Moves for Writers video focuses on how to use one professional writing move that will enhance writing style, argumentation, voice, grammar, or organization. Check out just one to master a specifc move, or watch multiple videos to support your students’ writing practice. Go beyond the basics and learn about some of the other Canvas features that can make your and your students’ lives easier.
UEN Secondary ELA MediaHub
CommonLit
Teaching Books
School AI
Scrible
Beanstack
Mini Moves for Writers
Canvas Features
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 18
DISCIPLINARY LITERACY Specifc reading, writing, and communicating within a discipline.
Disciplinary literacy refers to the specifcs of reading, writing, and communicating in a discipline. It focuses on the ways of thinking, the skills, and the tools that are used by experts in the disciplines (Shanahan & Shanahan, 2012). Each discipline (e.g., science, math, history,
art, technology, etc.) has a specialized vocabulary and components that are unique to that discipline. Secondary students need to be taught what is unique about each discipline and the “nuanced differences in producing knowledge via written language across multiple disciplines” (Moje, 2007, p. 9). Content literacy strategies typically include ways to approach text in any discipline; these strategies help with comprehension but are not suffcient for an in-depth understanding of a particular discipline. Content literacy strategies include
predicting what the text might be about before reading, paraphrasing during reading, and summarizing after reading. However, in addition to these strategies, students must learn and use specifc strategies to comprehend complex text in the disciplines. For example, when reading historical documents, students need to contextualize information (When was it written? Who was the audience? What was going on in society at that time?); source the document (Who wrote it? For what purpose?); and corroborate conclusions (Do other documents written during that time have the same perspective and come to the same conclusions?).
English Language Arts
Mathematics
Social Studies
Science
● Story elements: who, what when, where, why ● Literal vs. implied meaning ● Themes Text structures ● Genres: i.e., poetry, essay, fiction
● Search for the “truth” and for errors ● Importance of each word and symbol ● Interpretation of information presented in unusual ways ● Mathematical modeling & problem solving
● Author’s perspective and bias; sourcing ● Time period: contextualization ● Corroboration of multiple perspectives and documents ● Rhetorical constructions
● Facts based on evidence ● Graphs, charts, formulas ● Corroboration and transformation ● Concepts such as data analysis, hypothesis,
observations, investigations
Literacy in the disciplines is crucial for several reasons. A secondary students’ ability to read complex texts is strongly predictive of their performance in college math and science courses (Alliance for Excellent Education, 2011). Yet students are reading less in high school than they did ffty years ago. The Common Core State Standards (CCSS) (National Governors Association Center for Best Practices, Council of Chief State School Offcers, 2010) emphasize close reading of complex text in the disciplines to build a foundation for college and career readiness. Adapted from Shanahan, shanahanonliteracy.com
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 19
Disciplinary Literacy in Literature
Disciplinary literacy is important because each discipline represents different cultures that: ● have different purposes and approaches to knowledge ● use different methods to gain information ● depend on different kinds of evidence ● write different kinds of text ● read with those differences in mind
To create artifcial worlds that provide insight into the human condition.
Purpose
Truth is irrelevant.
Belief
Use of story and poetry to interpret the human condition.
Methods
Is an interpretation of meaning based on textual clues?
Evidence
Poems, short stories, novels, plays; critiques; most emphasizing character, plot, rising action, climax, theme, literary devices. Read in accordance with a particular literary tradition (e.g. close reading, reader response scholarly reading, using a particular interpretive lens/poststructural). ● Imagery (description, metaphor, simile); ● Figuration (symbolism, irony, satire); ● Rhetorical strategies and patterns (parallelism, understatement, exaggeration, repetition, allusion); ● Problems of point of view (narrators); ● Aesthetic choices; ● Character, setting and plot development
Texts
Approach to Reading
Text Characterizations
All in service of theme(s) author wants to develop
Words describing emotions, states of mind, the senses e.g. paroxysm, “ the insane joy of the hunt, when as I climb the rock, my face contorted, gasping, shouting voluptuously senseless words
Vocabulary
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 20
CLOSE READING ROUTINE Effect Size 0.75
Critical Actions for Educators
Close reading is an instructional routine in which students critically examine a complex text, through repeated readings, annotations, collaborative conversations and text dependent questions. Close reading invites students to examine the key ideas and details, craft and structure, and integration of knowledge and ideas. These close readings of complex text must also include consideration of the author’s purpose, how ideas connect to other texts, and how readers synthesize and consolidate information to formulate opinions. The primary objective of a close reading is to afford students with the opportunity to assimilate new textual information with their existing background knowledge and prior experiences to expand their schema. The challenge is in not becoming so focused on background knowledge and prior experiences, but that we spend time pressing for textual evidence.
—-------------------------- ● Select the purpose for the close read (i.e. standard/concept) ● Choose an appropriate SHORT Complex Text ● Write text dependent questions ● Provide purpose for annotation ● Provide purpose for repeated readings ● Plan for structured classroom discussion by
A second purpose of a close reading is to build the necessary habits of readers when they engage with a complex piece of text. These include building stamina and persistence when confronted by a reading that isn’t easily consumed. In addition, students need to build the habit of considering their own background knowledge when there isn’t someone prompting them to do so.
creating space, writing sentence frames, and word banks.
A third purpose is to take new knowledge and apply it to a performance task that might include a written prompt, a rich classroom discussion (i.e, socratic seminar, philosophical chair, debate) or an action (i.e. creating a brochure to encourage others to reduce plastic waste in the oceans).
Key Features of a Close Reading Routine Include
Short Complex Passages of Text Limited Front loading Repeated Readings Text-Dependent Questions
Annotations Structured Classroom Discussion Extension Performance Task
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 21
Close Reading Routine K-2: teacher reads aloud initially, annotates wholly or guides student annotation. Students may eventually read independently depending on text complexity/diffculty 3 - 12: students read independently and annotate with increased independence. Struggling readers may be read to or explored to text previously in small groups. Teacher Preparation Prior to Student’s First Read ● Select and pre-read a text worthy of multiple reads ● Read and plan for the purpose of the close read ● Prepare text dependent questions (TDQ) ● Prepare sentence frames for discussion and questioning First Read Teacher Roles Student Role Text Dependent Questions ● Explain the purpose and structure for reading and annotating the text ● Notice where students struggle ● Facilitate discussions with precision partners ● Provide questions/sentence frames ● Students read unfamiliar text for the frst time (access to text) ● Annotate confusing words and fnd main idea ● Discuss/share ● Write ● Retell or Summarize Key Ideas and Details - What does the text say? ● What is the main idea? ● What is the theme? ● What did you learn? ● Summarize the text Second Read Teacher Roles Student Role Text Dependent Questions ● Shared read ● Think aloud ● Pause to model thinking ● Demonstrate use of structural or context clues to gain meaning. Focus on craft and structure of text ● Facilitate discussions with precision partners ● Provide questions/sentence frames ● Track ● Active Listening ● Choral/Echo/Cloze/Dyad Read to provide access to text ● Annotate ● Discuss/Share ● Write Craft & Structure - How does the text work? Structure ● Compare/Contrast, Problem/Solution, Cause/Effect, Sequence, Descriptive Craft ● Literary devices: e.g. allegory, allusion, cliffhanger, imagery, irony, satire, time lapse
●
Unique structures: e.g. diary, journal, sayings, prologue & epilogue
ThirdRead
Teacher Roles
Student Role
Text Dependent Questions
●
●
Text dependent questions to prompt rereading and encourage the use of textual evidence in supporting answers Focus on integration of knowledge and ideas for students to describe and explain logical connections, reason with evidence, mood, or themes, opinions, intertextual connections, inferences and point of view. Facilitate discussions with precision partners Provide questions/sentence frames Provides format for fnal response and facilitates students with scaffolds for success as students write about the text. Scaffolds may include summary in foursquare, short constructed response, paragraph frame
Re-read for logical connections, reason with evidence, mood, or themes, opinions, intertextual connections, inferences and point of view
Integration of Knowledge and Ideas - What does the text mean?
●
●
Glean deeper meanings, subjective, speculative, debate and disagreement, alternative points of view, author’s purpose and inferences
● ●
Annotate text evidence Discuss/share/write
●
●
Performance Task or Written Application
●
Students write responses to teacher provided prompt using evidence from text and appropriate grammar
Integration of Knowledge and Ideas - What does the text inspire you to do? ● Debate, conduct an experiment, research, socratic seminar, philosophical chairs
●
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 22
Secondary ELA & Special Education Implementation Tools & Resources Special Education Website (Weebly)
Special Education is used to support students through Individualized Education Plans in order to access the General Education Core Standards. ELA: THe Utah Core Standards for ELA Practice : are included to provide a reference of your grade-level standards in Reading Literature and Information texts, Language Conventions, Writing, and Speaking and Listening. These standards are included in grade-level bands (6, 7-8,9-10, 11-12 ) and offer a focus for instruction to help ensure that students gain adequate mastery of a range of skills and applications. Utah Core Standards Alignment and IEP goals . Standards based IEP goals are written with the use of the core standards. Case managers align students' current abilities on the continuum of standards and address the needs required to close the educational gap. Reasonable individual gains are considered when writing a one year IEP goal. Special Education teachers may use off-grade level core standards in order to close identifed educational gaps. Within each strand are standards. A standard represents a fundamental element of learning that is expected. While some standards within a strand may be more comprehensive than others, all standards are necessary for mastery. Essential Elements The Essential Elements (EEs) are “specifc statements and skills linked to the grade-level expectations identifed in college-and-career-readiness standards” (Dynamic Learning Maps [DLM] DLM ). They are the “big rocks” of the Utah Core Standards. Each Essential Element has a respective learning map with linkage levels that identify basic skills within the standard to set an appropriate challenge for students with signifcant cognitive disabilities, no matter their ability level. General education teachers, in conjunction with special education teachers, must consider which scaffolds are needed to differentiate, accommodate, or modify the learning for all students in order to master core standards. Differentiation of Instruction Typically, differentiation of instruction is the process of teaching in a way to meet the needs of students with differing abilities in the same class. One way to do this is by providing several different avenues by which all students can learn the same material. In differentiating instruction, teachers plan out and implement a variety of approaches to content, process, and product. Differentiated instruction is used to meet the needs of student differences in
Critical Actions for Educators .………………………... ● Determine that your IEP is aligned to Utah Core Standards: Present Levels, Goals, Services
● Use Reading Inventory to determine possible
placement in Read 180/System 44
● Collaborate to best support students
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 23
readiness, interests, and learning needs. Differentiation is something you do for ALL STUDENTS, and something you build into your lesson in your planning. Differentiation is good teaching. Accommodations Accommodations are intended to reduce or eliminate the effects of a student's disability. Accommodations do not decrease learning expectations and are noted on a student's Individualized Educational Plan (IEP). Examples of accommodations include reading words out loud, extra time for completion of standardized tests, etc. Modifcations are adaptations that change what students learn and are used with students who require more support or adjustments than accommodations can provide. Whereas accommodations level the playing feld, modifcations change the playing feld. Modifcation DO change the expectations for learning. Modifcations DO reduce the requirements of the task. Students would be expected to learn priority standards vs all standards. (Iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu) Modifcations are required by law. In summary, differentiation is planned curriculum that takes into consideration the individual needs or interests of the child, or as Carol Ann Tomlinson puts it, “Differentiation means tailoring instruction to meet individual needs.”[3] Where accommodation is about how instruction is delivered and modifcation is about what a child will learn , differentiation focus on how a child will demonstrate learning . Supported Programs for Special Education Accommodations are required by law. Modifcations
Critical Actions for Educators .………………………... ● Connect with your Achievement Coach for support.
Resource/ABS
ABS/ACC
Essential Elements
ELA: Accommodated General Ed. program
ELA: Accommodated General Ed. program Reading: Read 180/System 44
Teaching to Standards: English Language Arts (MSOnly)
Reading: Read 180/System 44
News2You
Unique Learning System (HSOnly)
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 24
Accommodations vs. Modifcations
Accommodation
Modifcation
● Visual cues ● Audio books ● Close-captions on videos ● Access to exemplars ● Peer modeling ● Precision partnering ● Books and materials with large print ● Pre-teaching skills ● Speech-to-text software ● Orally dictate responses (scribe or digital recorder) ● Sentence frames for paragraph writing ● Oral response in lieu of written ● Preferential seating ● Testing in a separate location ● Extended time to complete a task ● Frequent breaks ● Shorter testing sessions ● Chunking task/assignments ● Reduction of options on multiple choice problems (out of two rather than four)
● Alternate assignment ● Lower-level text ● Fewer homework questions ● Shorter Report ● Accountable to alternate academic language (class discussion v colleagial discussion) ● Complete an alternate homework assignment ● Different test questions ● Different material ● Allowing outlining instead of writing essays ● Modifed grades based on the goals
For more information on Accommodations and Modifcations click here.
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 25
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 26
Assessments
The following pages contain the Utah State ELA standards. You will fnd:
1. Assessment Calendar 2. MAP Assessment 3. Aspire Testing 4. ACT Connections
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 27
High School Assessment Calendar 2024-25 * As of May 3, 2024
AUGUST
Aug19
Start of School Year
WIDA Screener Testing of new ML Students on Chromebooks
Aug19 – Ongoing
Aug 20 – Sept 25
New MAP Growth – Math (from NWEA) – All Grade 9 and 10 Students. New MAP Growth – Reading (from NWEA) - All Grade 9 and 10 Students. Note: MAP is a longer assessment than RI but provides data that can directly inform instruction, detailed student growth, and the ability to set individual student goals.
Aug 20 – Sept 25
SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER
Oct 22 – Nov 26
AAPPL testing for DUAL Immersion (DLI) classes ONLY.
Dec 4 – Jan 16
New MAP Growth – Math (from NWEA) – All Grade 9 Students (Grade 10 testing is a school-based decision). Finish before the end of 2nd quarter. New MAP Growth – Reading (from NWEA) – All Grade 9 Students (Grade 10 testing is a school-based decision). Finish before the end of the 2nd quarter. WIDA ACCESS Testing – All ML Students Grades 9-12. Seal of Biliteracy – Select Grade 11 and 12 Students. Finish make-ups by March 17th. ACT Testing – Grade 11 Students on Chromebooks. ACT Accommodated Testing for Grade 11 Students. Utah Aspire Plus – Grades 9 and 10 (Math, Reading, & Science). Finish make-ups by May 2nd. New MAP Growth – Math (from NWEA) – All Grade 9 and 10 Students. New MAP Growth – Reading (from NWEA) – All Grade 9 and 10 Students. Make-up ACT Testing – Grade 11 Students.
Dec 4 – Jan 16
JANUARY FEBRUARY
Jan7 –Mar 7
Mar 3 – 14
MARCH
Wed,Mar 12 Mar 12, 13, 14
Mar 19
Apr 1 –May 2
APRIL
Apr 1 –May 9
Apr 1 –May 9
Apr 7 – 11
Spring Recess
Apr 14 – May 2
World Language (Not DLI); AAPPL Measure (Level 2 & 3 WL, 1 section only per teacher).
Apr 15 to End-of-Year
Canyons Senior Exit Survey AP Testing (dates vary by test)
MAY
May 2025
May 30
End of School Year!
* Note: It is expected that district wide assessments are taken on student Chromebooks.
Last Updated August 13, 2024
High School ELA, Page 28
Made with FlippingBook Ebook Creator