LEARN NC

K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

Goal 2. Speaking

The learner will comprehend spoken English in a variety of personal, social, and academic contexts.

Level: Novice Low

Students will use various forms of non-verbal communication to express ideas and demonstrate basic comprehension. They may point, touch, match, draw, act out, demonstrate an action, or play games to show their understanding. Learning objectives focus on distinguishing between minimal pairs, identifying meaning of non-verbal cues, developing basic academic vocabulary, following one and two-step directions with modeling, recognizing some academic language conventions, recognizing and pronouncing most of the English alphabet, repeating words and phrases correctly, speaking with simple words and phrases, developing phonemic awareness, recognizing common environmental print, understanding directionality, recognizing cardinal and ordinal numbers, locating and using resource materials, copying words and phrases, developing an awareness of sentence styles, using basic conventions when writing, and recognizing characteristics of American high schools.

Objective NL 2.09

Engage in basic one-to-one conversations.

Resources aligned to this objective

A “defining moment” in editorial writing
Students will be introduced to the definition mode of writing. Students will learn to define a particular subject by responding in an editorial format. Students will first compose an editorial graphic organizer, which will aid in composing a completed editorial using the writing process. This lesson includes modifications for a Novice Low Limited English student.
Format: lesson plan (grade 9–12 English Language Arts and English Language Development)
By Susan Brooks and Carrie Mabry.
A matter of identity: Writing an extended metaphor poem
Students apply their knowledge of literary devices by reading and analyzing the poem “Identity” by Julio Noboa Polanco. Students then create their own poem incorporating the literary devices studied and analyzed in the above mentioned poem. This lesson includes modifications for a Novice Low Limited English student.
Format: lesson plan (grade 9–12 English Language Arts and English Language Development)
By Susan Brooks and Carrie Mabry.