Big Ideas
Big Ideas
- Oral texts include speeches, poems, plays, oral stories, and songs.
- Written texts include novels, articles, and short stories.
- Visual texts include posters, photographs, and other images.
- Digital texts include electronic forms of all of the above.
- Oral, written, and visual elements can be combined (e.g., in dramatic presentations, graphic novels, films, web pages, advertisements).
Content
Content
- narrative structures found in First Peoples texts(e.g., circular, iterative, cyclical)
- protocols related to ownership of First Peoples oral textsFirst Peoples stories often have protocols for when and where they can be shared, who owns them, and who can share them.
Strategies and processes
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reading strategies
There are many strategies that readers use when making sense of text. Students consider what strategies they need to use to “unpack” text. They employ strategies with increasing independence depending on the purpose, text, and context. Strategies include but may not be limited to predicting, inferring, questioning, paraphrasing, using context clues, using text features, visualizing, making connections, summarizing, identifying big ideas, synthesizing, and reflecting.
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oral language strategies
includes speaking with expression, connecting to listeners, asking questions to clarify, listening for specifics, summarizing, paraphrasing
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metacognitive strategies
- thinking about our own thinking, and reflecting on our processes and determining strengths and challenges
- Students employ metacognitive strategies to gain increasing independence in learning.
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writing processes
There are various writing processes depending on context. These may include determining audience and purpose, generating or gathering ideas, free-writing, making notes, drafting, revising, and/or editing. Writers often have very personalized processes when writing. Writing is an iterative process.
- language features
- elements of stylestylistic choices that make a specific writer distinguishable from others, including diction, vocabulary, sentence structure, and tone.
- exploration of voice
- point of view
- humour, irony, satire, wit
- perspective (e.g., persona)
- usageavoiding common usage errors (e.g., double negatives, mixed metaphors, malapropisms, and word misuse)and conventionscommon practices of standard punctuation, capitalization, quoting, and Canadian spelling
- literary elements and devicesTexts use various literary devices, including figurative language, according to purpose and audience.
- citation techniques
Curricular Competency
Curricular Competency
Comprehend and connect (reading, listening, viewing)
- navigational aids (e.g., table of contents, index, glossary, bibliography, hyperlinks, titles, headings and subheadings, prologue and epilogue, preface or foreword, captions, footnotes and endnotes)
- illustrations (e.g., inlays, sidebars, photographs, graphs, charts, timelines, maps)
Create and communicate (writing, speaking, representing)
- listening to and receptively responding to feedback
- responding to others’ work with constructive feedback
- being open-minded to divergent viewpoints and perspectives
- asking questions to promote discussion
- inviting others to share their ideas
- being willing to support personal perspectives
- being willing to shift perspective
- creatively and critically manipulating language for a desired effect
- using techniques such as adjusting diction and form according to audience needs and preferences, using verbs effectively, using repetition and substitution for effect, maintaining parallelism, adding modifiers, and varying sentence types
- Strategies associated with speaking skills may include the conscious use of emotion, pauses, inflection, silence, and emphasis according to context.
- Strategies associated with listening skills may include receptive body language, eye contact, paraphrasing building on others’ ideas, asking clarifying questions, and disagreeing respectfully.