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Culminating assignment

Students will choose an issue that affects a group of people, possibly people in their community (school, neighborhood, city, region, state, etc.) about which they could speak out. Students will plan, support, structure, and deliver a 4-5 minute extemporaneous speech to their peers on that issue in order to inspire change in their audience's beliefs or actions.

Instructional design of the unit

The structure of this English language arts (ELA) unit is made up of purposely sequenced/scaffolded Design Features (Bartholomae&Petrosky, 1986, 2002; Petrosky, 2006) which apprentice students to patterned, cyclical habits of thinking for the individual texts they study and for their studies across multiple texts. In Lesson 1, the teacher will introduce students to this unit's architecture, which graphically displays the specific work for each design feature as well as the overall sequence of work that they will do.

The unit's key design features:

  • a nominal theme or a genre study that focuses a unit of study on big ideas (e.g., Miseducation or Writing and Identity) reaching across all of the texts in the unit
  • purposely sequenced rigorous texts appropriate for the students, the nominal theme, and for inquiry studies
  • overarching questions that present the big ideas as inquiry questions to reach across and connect all of the texts under study (including the students' writing);
  • content that students will learn about while developing their habits of thinking as readers, writers, speakers in literary inquiry and reasoning
  • comprehension/sorting questions that allow students to get the gist of a text while sorting out characters, settings, flow of events or ideas
  • identifying difficulty tasks that ask students to locate and reread difficult passages to explain and work to untangle the difficulty
  • identifying significance tasks that ask students to reread to locate significant moments in a text and to explain why those moments are significant to the text
  • guiding questions to pose interpretive tasks for rereadings that take students deeply into discussions of and writings about the individual texts
  • writing tasks to invite students to write about texts and to write like the texts (both in the style of the selection and in imitation of an author's sentences and grammatical structures)
  • step back tasks regularly placed after key pieces of work (e.g., comprehension questions, identifying difficulty, identifying significance, and so on) that ask students to study their learning by analyzing what they learned and how they learned
  • retrospective assignments for capstone work with each text that encourages students' to do two things: (1) rethink/revise papers on the unit's big ideas or overarching questions as they progress through the unit and (2) revisit their studies of their learning by analyzing what they learned and how they learned
  • formative and summative assessments that focus on the habits of thinking and big ideas students studied and used in the unit

The unit's pedagogical rituals and routines

Many of the tasks represented in the Design Features require rereadings, as a key strategy for dealing with difficult texts, of the text or passages for particular purposes or with particular questions in mind. We suggest that students apprentice to the lesson tasks by using the unit's embedded rituals and routines. These rituals and routines, derived from research on cognitive apprenticeship, are designed to engage all students as learners in collaborative problem solving, promote writing to learn, make thinking visible, provide routines for note-taking and tracking learning, establish text-based norms for interpretive discussions and writings, and establish metacognitive reflection and articulation as a regular pattern in learning. These cyclical apprenticeship rituals and routines build community when used with authentic tasks through collaboration, coaching, the sharing of solutions, multiple occasions for practice, and the articulation of reflections (Brown, Collins,&Duguid, 1989). The key English language arts pedagogical routines that support students' learning are:

Questions & Answers

differentiate between demand and supply giving examples
Lambiv Reply
differentiated between demand and supply using examples
Lambiv
what is labour ?
Lambiv
how will I do?
Venny Reply
how is the graph works?I don't fully understand
Rezat Reply
information
Eliyee
devaluation
Eliyee
t
WARKISA
hi guys good evening to all
Lambiv
multiple choice question
Aster Reply
appreciation
Eliyee
explain perfect market
Lindiwe Reply
In economics, a perfect market refers to a theoretical construct where all participants have perfect information, goods are homogenous, there are no barriers to entry or exit, and prices are determined solely by supply and demand. It's an idealized model used for analysis,
Ezea
What is ceteris paribus?
Shukri Reply
other things being equal
AI-Robot
When MP₁ becomes negative, TP start to decline. Extuples Suppose that the short-run production function of certain cut-flower firm is given by: Q=4KL-0.6K2 - 0.112 • Where is quantity of cut flower produced, I is labour input and K is fixed capital input (K-5). Determine the average product of lab
Kelo
Extuples Suppose that the short-run production function of certain cut-flower firm is given by: Q=4KL-0.6K2 - 0.112 • Where is quantity of cut flower produced, I is labour input and K is fixed capital input (K-5). Determine the average product of labour (APL) and marginal product of labour (MPL)
Kelo
yes,thank you
Shukri
Can I ask you other question?
Shukri
what is monopoly mean?
Habtamu Reply
What is different between quantity demand and demand?
Shukri Reply
Quantity demanded refers to the specific amount of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at a give price and within a specific time period. Demand, on the other hand, is a broader concept that encompasses the entire relationship between price and quantity demanded
Ezea
ok
Shukri
how do you save a country economic situation when it's falling apart
Lilia Reply
what is the difference between economic growth and development
Fiker Reply
Economic growth as an increase in the production and consumption of goods and services within an economy.but Economic development as a broader concept that encompasses not only economic growth but also social & human well being.
Shukri
production function means
Jabir
What do you think is more important to focus on when considering inequality ?
Abdisa Reply
any question about economics?
Awais Reply
sir...I just want to ask one question... Define the term contract curve? if you are free please help me to find this answer 🙏
Asui
it is a curve that we get after connecting the pareto optimal combinations of two consumers after their mutually beneficial trade offs
Awais
thank you so much 👍 sir
Asui
In economics, the contract curve refers to the set of points in an Edgeworth box diagram where both parties involved in a trade cannot be made better off without making one of them worse off. It represents the Pareto efficient allocations of goods between two individuals or entities, where neither p
Cornelius
In economics, the contract curve refers to the set of points in an Edgeworth box diagram where both parties involved in a trade cannot be made better off without making one of them worse off. It represents the Pareto efficient allocations of goods between two individuals or entities,
Cornelius
Suppose a consumer consuming two commodities X and Y has The following utility function u=X0.4 Y0.6. If the price of the X and Y are 2 and 3 respectively and income Constraint is birr 50. A,Calculate quantities of x and y which maximize utility. B,Calculate value of Lagrange multiplier. C,Calculate quantities of X and Y consumed with a given price. D,alculate optimum level of output .
Feyisa Reply
Answer
Feyisa
c
Jabir
the market for lemon has 10 potential consumers, each having an individual demand curve p=101-10Qi, where p is price in dollar's per cup and Qi is the number of cups demanded per week by the i th consumer.Find the market demand curve using algebra. Draw an individual demand curve and the market dema
Gsbwnw Reply
suppose the production function is given by ( L, K)=L¼K¾.assuming capital is fixed find APL and MPL. consider the following short run production function:Q=6L²-0.4L³ a) find the value of L that maximizes output b)find the value of L that maximizes marginal product
Abdureman
types of unemployment
Yomi Reply
What is the difference between perfect competition and monopolistic competition?
Mohammed
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Source:  OpenStax, Selected lessons in persuasion. OpenStax CNX. Apr 07, 2008 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10520/1.2
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