Dimensions of language and literacy
Expresive dimensions: Speaking, writing, representing
Receptive: reading, listening, viewing
Multiliteracies
-Huge variety of ways to communicate these days.
-multimodal literacy: diff ways people can express themselves and read
How do people choose what and how they communicate
Access, understanding of certain modes, understanding what a situation demands, interests.
early literacy
the learning kids can make at home
4 basic assumptions of kids leaning of literacy (before)
Can’t learn anything themselves, kids needs and desire don’t really matter, kids are objects manipulated by teachers, writing and reading were autonomous skills.
which model of learning is associated to todays view on literacy
Vygotskys social constructivist model of learning.
4 basic assumptions of kids leaning of literacy (after)
-Kids agency will affect what they do and not do, they learn more among themselves, kids need to be provided with opportunities to have discussion with teachers and express their own opinion, literacy is social and cognitive.
How can an educator be more critically reflective
Critical litteracy
help learners interrogate all texts so that their understanding reflect social, political, power relations impeded in those texts and their readings of them.
Four ressources model
It explains that you should be able to do these 4 things:
-code breaker (reading letters)
-text participant: drawing inferences, comprehension
-text user: knowing where to find and read diff texts
-text analyst: critique and understand the perspectives.
How does cultural and linguistic diversity effect literacy
educators need to be culturally responsive
How does socio-economic status effect literacy
-educators make a diff in learners lives
-ensure that outreaching is culturally sensitive
How does gender effect literacy
teachers need to keep in mind the diversity and accommodate to their diff needs
Pedagogy of multiliteracies:
situated practice (experiencing)
Overt instruction (conceptualizing
Critical framing (analyzing
transformed practice (applying)
Cambourne’s conditions for learning
Immersion
Demonstration
Expectation
Responsibility
Use
Approximation
Response
Examples of instructional opportunities
-Read-aloud
-Shared reading
-reader response activity
-Guided writing
-Shared writing
-explorations
Instructional component consideration
Linguists describe language in 4 systems : cuing systems
Semantics, phonology, syntax, pragmatics
what is semantics
the meanings that are expressed in a language or code.
-vocabulary
-Kids learn by just talking to parents and listening to the world around them.
denotative meaning of a word vs connotative meaning
literal meaning vs figurative meaning
What is syntax
the way the language is organized, the way the words a put together to create meaning, the basic unit is the sentence.
what is pragmatics
the social aspects of language use in context
-it varies from social class, ethnic groups, regions (dialect)
-its about the implied meaning behind words and how people understand those words without ambiguity.
-The phone is ringing (not a fact, your asking someone to get it)
-those are the ‘rules’ of language use
-It involves getting to the point, ask questions, check for understanding, not talking too long, being clear.
Communicative competence
the ability to appropriately combine and use all aspects of language including non verbal communication
What are the 7 areas of communicative competence (Enhancing and evaluating oral communication in the primary grades)