Outcome Chart – British Columbia – English Language Arts: Creative Writing 12
Big Ideas
- Texts are socially, culturally, geographically, and historically constructed.
- Writers write for authentic audiences and real-world purposes.
Curricular Competencies
Comprehend and Connect (reading, listening, viewing)
- Use information for diverse purposes and from a variety of sources to inform writing
- Evaluate the relevance, accuracy, and reliability of texts
- Understand and appreciate how different forms, formats, structures, and features of texts reflect a variety of purposes, audiences, and messages
- Think critically, creatively, and reflectively to explore ideas within, between, and beyond texts
- Identify and understand the role of personal, social, and cultural contexts, values, and perspectives in texts
- Understand and appreciate how language constructs personal, social, and cultural identities
- Construct meaningful personal connections between self, text, and world
- Evaluate how text structures, literary elements, techniques, and devices enhance and shape meaning and impact
Create and Communicate (writing, speaking, representing)
- Respectfully exchange ideas and viewpoints from diverse perspectives to build shared understandings and extend thinking
- Respond to text in personal, creative, and critical ways
- Select and apply appropriate speaking and listening skills in a variety of formal and informal contexts for a range of purposes
- Use writing and design processes to plan, develop, and create engaging and meaningful texts for a variety of purposes and audiences
- Express and support an opinion with evidence
- Assess and refine texts to improve clarity, effectiveness, and impact
- Use acknowledgements and citations to recognize intellectual property rights
- Transform ideas and information to create original texts, using various genres, forms, structures, and styles
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising and Male Violence
- Alcohol Online
- Body Positive Ads
- Break the Fake: Becoming a Fact-Checker
- Camera Shots
- Crime in the News
- Digital Media Literacy for Democracy
- Digital Skills for Democracy: Assessing online information to make civic choices
- Diversity and Media Ownership
- First Person
- Framing the News
- Miscast and Seldom Seen
- Networked News
- Police in the Media
- Relationships and Sexuality in the Media
- Reality Check: Authentication 101
- Reality Check: News You Can Use
- Reality Check: We Are All Broadcasters
- Remixing Media
- Sex in Advertising
- The Front Page
- Transgender Representation in TV and Movies
- Who's Telling My Story?
Content
Students are expected to be able to know the following:
- Text forms and genres
- Text features and structures
- form, function, and genre of texts
- elements of visual/graphic texts
- literal and inferential meaning
MediaSmarts Resources
- Beyond Media Messages: Media Portrayal of Global Development
- Bias and Crime in Media
- Online Propaganda and the Proliferation of Hate
- Police in the Media
- Remixing Media
- Secure Comics