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10-1-W-1
Page history
last edited
by Kida Upshaw 5 years, 6 months ago
Standard 1: Speaking and Listening
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Students will speak and listen effectively in a variety of situations including, but not limited to, responses to reading and writing.
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WRITING: Students will develop and apply effective communication skills through speaking and active listening to create individual and group projects and presentations. |
10.1.W.1 Students will give formal and informal presentations in a group or individually, providing textual and visual evidence to support a main idea. |
Student Actions
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Teacher Actions
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- Students will use formal and informal presentations to convey ideas.
- Students will refer to evidence from reliable sources to reinforce claims.
- Students will use effective presentation skills.
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Teachers design tasks that require students to present information for various purposes and audiences.
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Teachers require students to refer to evidence to prove or disprove ideas.
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Teachers model formal presentation techniques (eye contact, enunciation, volumeā¦)
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Teachers monitor and provide opportunities for students to receive feedback on the quality of their presentations
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Supporting Resources
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Teacher Insights
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Mount Holyoke guideline for evaluating students speaking in the classroom
Guidelines for Speaking, Arguing, and Writing in the Classroom (PDF) |
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Formal presentations could include Powerpoint, Prezi, or interactive modes presented to a group of listeners by an individual or group of individuals.
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Presenters in this type of presentation must maintain appropriate eye contact, volume, tone, etc.
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In group presentations, equal contributions should be evident.
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Informal presentations are typically the most natural presentations and allow the speaker(s) to express their ideas to their listeners in a relaxed manner.
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Presenters in this type of presentation, while not having had much preparation time, should still attempt to maintain appropriate eye contact, volume, tone, etc.
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In group presentations, though rare at the informal level, equal contributions should still be evident.
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Textual evidence includes references to primary and secondary sources addressing claims and opinions to support the main idea(s).
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Visual evidence could include photographs, charts, graphs, diagrams, or other visual representations of material presenting claims and opinions that support the main idea(s).
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The goal here is for students to effectively communicate. Regardless of whether the presentation is formal or informal, the presenter(s) must communicate in an effective manner so the listener understands the message.
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Due to recursive nature of the standards, it is essential that teachers are aware of how all objectives within and between strands work together for optimal instruction.
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10-1-W-1
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