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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.
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.
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:
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