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Chapter 1 8 Principles of Balanced Literacy Instruction

Chapter 1 8 Principles of Balanced Literacy Instruction. Chapter 1. Principle 1: Effective Teachers Understand How Students Learn. Sociolinguistics Sociocultural Theory Situated Learning Theory Critical Literacy Information Processing Interactive Models Transactive Theory

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Chapter 1 8 Principles of Balanced Literacy Instruction

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  1. Chapter 1 8 Principles of Balanced Literacy Instruction

  2. Chapter 1 Principle 1: Effective Teachers Understand How Students Learn • Sociolinguistics • Sociocultural Theory • Situated Learning Theory • Critical Literacy • Information Processing • Interactive Models • Transactive Theory • Strategic Behaviors • Behaviorism • Constructivism • Schema Theory • Inquiry Learning • Engagement Theory

  3. Chapter 1 Principle 2: Effective Teachers Support Students’ Use of the Cueing Systems • The Phonological System • The Syntactic System • The Semantic System • The Pragmatic System

  4. Chapter 1 Principle 3: Effective Teachers Create a Community of Learners • Safety • Respect • High Expectations • Risk Taking • Collaboration • Choice • Responsibility • Family and community Involvement

  5. Chapter 1 Principle 4: Effective Teachers Adopt a Balanced Approach to Instruction • Characteristics of a balanced approach • Components of a balanced approach • Common Core State Standards

  6. Chapter 1 Principle 5: Effective Teachers Scaffold Students’ Reading and Writing • Modeled Reading and Writing • Shared Reading and Writing • Interactive Reading and Writing • Guided Reading and Writing • Independent Reading and Writing

  7. Chapter 1 Principle 6: Effective Teachers Organize for Literacy Instruction • Basal Reading Programs • Literature Focus Units • Literature Circles • Reading and Writing Workshop • Nurturing English Learners

  8. Chapter 1 Principle 7: Effective Teachers Differentiate Instruction • Differentiating the Content • Differentiating the Process • Differentiating the Products

  9. Chapter 1 Principle 8: Effective Teachers Link Instruction and Assessment • 4 steps to link instruction and assessment • Planning • Monitoring • Evaluating • Reflecting • Classroom Assessment Tools • High Stakes Tests

  10. Chapter 1 How Effective Teachers Teach Reading and Writing • Teachers apply learning theories as they teach reading and writing. • Teachers create a community of learners in their classrooms. • Teachers adopt the balanced approach to literacy instruction. • Teachers differentiate instruction so all students can be successful. • Teachers link instruction and assessment.

  11. Chapter 2 The Reading Process • Stage 1: Prereading • Stage 2: Reading • Stage 3: Responding • Stage 4: Exploring • Stage 5: Applying

  12. Chapter 2 How Effective Teachers Teach the Reading and Writing Process • Teachers use the reading process—prereading, reading, responding, exploring, and applying—to ensure that students comprehend books they read. • Teachers provide opportunities for students to use varied types of reading, including independent reading, guided reading, and interactive read-alouds. • Teachers teach students how to use the writing process—prewriting, drafting, revising, editing, and publishing—to write and refine their compositions. • Teachers teach students about the writer’s craft. Including the six traits. • Teachers integrate reading and writing because they’re reciprocal meaning-making processes.

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