Ontario - Language 5
Strand A: Literacy Connections and Applications
Overall Expectations:
Throughout this course, in connection with the learning in strands B to D, students will:
A1. Transferable Skills
demonstrate an understanding of how the seven transferable skills (critical thinking and problem solving; innovation, creativity, and entrepreneurship; self-directed learning; collaboration; communication; global citizenship and sustainability; and digital literacy) are used in various language and literacy contexts
Specific Expectations:
A1.1 Receptive and Expressive Communication
explain how transferable skills can be used to support communication in various cultural, social, linguistic, and domain-specific contexts, and apply them when reading, listening to, viewing, and creating texts of various forms
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Behaving Ethically Online: Ethics and Empathy
- Break the Fake: What's Real Online?
- Comic Book Characters
- Editing Emotions
- Facing TV Violence: Rewriting the Script
- Getting the Toothpaste Back into the Tube
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Images of Learning
- Introducing TV Families
- Just a Joke? Helping Youth Respond to Casual Prejudice
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 2: Young Drinkers
- Know the Deal: The Value of Privacy
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Looking at News
- Looks Good Enough to Eat
- Media Kids
- Media Stereotypes
- Once Upon a Time
- Packaging Tricks
- Prejudice and Body Image
- Privacy Pursuit: Protecting Your Privacy
- Stay on the Path Lesson One: Searching for Treasure
- Teaching Media: Learning With Media
- Teaching Media: The Construction Crew
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- Police in Media
- TV Dads: Immature and Irresponsible?
- What do Halloween costumes say?
- Winning the Cyber Security Game
- Writing the News
A1.2 Student Voice and Engagement
explain how transferable skills help them to express their voice, be engaged in their learning, and plan the next steps to develop their capabilities and potential
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Calling Out Versus Calling In
- Comic Book Characters
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Just a Joke? Helping Youth Respond to Casual Prejudice
- Media Kids
- Media Stereotypes
- Once Upon a Time
- Online Marketing to Kids: Protecting Your Privacy
- Stereotyping and Genre
- Violence in Sports
- What do Halloween costumes say?
- Where's The Line? Online Safety Lesson Plan for School Resource Officers
A2. Digital Media Literacy
demonstrate and apply the knowledge and skills needed to interact safely and responsibly in online environments, use digital and media tools to construct knowledge, and demonstrate learning as critical consumers and creators of media
Specific Expectations:
A2.1 Digital Citizenship
explain their rights and responsibilities when interacting online with appropriate permission, and make decisions that contribute positively to the development of their digital identity and those of their communities
MediaSmarts Resources
- Behaving Ethically Online: Ethics and Empathy
- Calling Out Versus Calling In
- Getting the Toothpaste Back into the Tube
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Just a Joke? Helping Youth Respond to Casual Prejudice
- Privacy Pirates
- Privacy Pursuit: Protecting Your Privacy
- Social Smarts: Nothing Personal!
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 2: Pathways and Addresses
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 3: Build Understanding
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 4: Communication and Social Media
- Where's The Line? Online Safety Lesson Plan for School Resource Officers
A2.2 Safety, Etiquette and Online Well-Being
demonstrate an understanding of how to navigate online environments safely, manage their privacy and personal data, and interact in a way that supports their well-being and that of others, including seeking appropriate permission
MediaSmarts Resources
- Behaving Ethically Online: Ethics and Empathy
- Calling Out Versus Calling In
- Data Defenders
- Game Time
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Just a Joke? Helping Youth Respond to Casual Prejudice
- Know the Deal: The Value of Privacy
- Online Marketing to Kids: Protecting Your Privacy
- Privacy Pirates
- Privacy Pursuit: Protecting Your Privacy
- Privacy Pursuit: The Value of Privacy
- Social Smarts: Nothing Personal!
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 4: Communication and Social Media
- Where's The Line? Online Safety Lesson Plan for School Resource Officers
- Winning the Cyber Security Game
A2.3 Research and Information Literacy
gather, evaluate, and use information, considering validity, credibility, accuracy, and perspectives, to construct knowledge, create texts, and demonstrate learning
MediaSmarts Resources
- Break the Fake: Verifying Information Online
- Break the Fake: What's Real Online?
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Looking at News
- Stay on the Path Lesson One: Searching for Treasure
- Stay on the Path Lesson Three: Treasure Maps
- Stay on the Path Lesson Two: All That Glitters is Not Gold
- Teaching Media: Critically Evaluating Media
- Teaching Media: Learning With Media
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- The Hero Project: Authenticating Online Information
- Writing the News
A2.4 Digital and Media Forms, Conventions, and Techniques
demonstrate an understanding of the forms, conventions, and techniques of digital and media texts, consider the impact on the audience, and apply this understanding when analyzing and creating texts
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Avatars and Body Image
- Comic Book Characters
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Editing Emotions
- Getting the Toothpaste Back into the Tube
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 3: Understanding Brands
- Looking at News
- Looks Good Enough to Eat
- Media literacy key concepts Introduction: What is media anyway?
- Media Stereotypes
- Once Upon a Time
- Online Marketing to Kids: Strategies and Techniques
- Packaging Tricks
- Police in Media
- Teaching Media: Learning With Media
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Teaching Media: The Construction Crew
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- Tobacco Labels
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 2: Pathways and Addresses
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
- What do Halloween costumes say?
- Writing the News
A2.5 Media, Audience, and Production
demonstrate an understanding of the interrelationships between the form, message, and context of texts, the intended audience, and the purpose for production
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Avatars and Body Image
- Comic Book Characters
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Editing Emotions
- Facing TV Violence: Consequences and Media Violence
- Facing TV Violence: Counting & Discussing Violence on the Screen
- Gender Stereotypes and Body Image
- Getting the Toothpaste Back into the Tube
- Introducing TV Families
- Just a Joke? Helping Youth Respond to Casual Prejudice
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 1: Messages About Drinking
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 2: Young Drinkers
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 3: Understanding Brands
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 4: Interpreting Media Messages
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Looking at News
- Looks Good Enough to Eat
- Media Kids
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 3: Audiences negotiate meaning
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 4: Media have commercial implications
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 5: Media have social and political implications
- Media Stereotypes
- Mirror Image
- Once Upon a Time
- Packaging Tricks
- Police in Media
- Stereotyping and Genre
- Teaching Media: Learning With Media
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Teaching Media: The Construction Crew
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- The Constructed World of Television Families
- Thinking Like a Tobacco Company: Grades 4-6
- Tobacco Labels
- TV Dads: Immature and Irresponsible?
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
- Violence in Sports
- What do Halloween costumes say?
- Writing the News
A2.6 Innovation and Design
select and use appropriate digital and media tools to support the design process and address authentic, relevant, real-world problems by developing innovative solutions
MediaSmarts Resources
- Comic Book Characters
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Looks Good Enough to Eat
- Media literacy key concepts lesson 6: Each medium is a unique aesthetic form
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Teaching Media: The Construction Crew
- Tobacco Labels
- Winning the Cyber Security Game
A2.7 Community and Cultural Awareness
communicate and collaborate with various communities in a safe, respectful, responsible, and inclusive manner when using online platforms and environments, including digital and media tools, and demonstrate cultural awareness with members of the community
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Calling Out Versus Calling In
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Getting the Toothpaste Back into the Tube
- Introducing TV Families
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Just a Joke? Helping Youth Respond to Casual Prejudice
- Media Stereotypes
- Stereotyping and Genre
- The Constructed World of Television Families
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 4: Communication and Social Media
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
- What do Halloween costumes say?
- Where's The Line? Online Safety Lesson Plan for School Resource Officers
A3. Applications, Connections, and Contributions
apply language and literacy skills in cross-curricular and integrated learning, and demonstrate an understanding of, and make connections to, diverse voices, experiences, perspectives, histories, and contributions, including those of First Nations, Métis, and Inuit individuals, communities, groups, and nations
Specific Expectations:
A3.1 Cross-Curricular and Integrated Learning
explain how the knowledge and skills developed in this grade support learning in various subject areas and in everyday life, and describe how they enhance understanding and communication
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Avatars and Body Image
- Behaving Ethically Online: Ethics and Empathy
- Calling Out Versus Calling In
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Facing TV Violence: Consequences and Media Violence
- Facing TV Violence: Rewriting the Script
- Gender Stereotypes and Body Image
- Introducing TV Families
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Junk Food Jungle
- Just a Joke? Helping Youth Respond to Casual Prejudice
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 2: Young Drinkers
- Looking at News
- Looks Good Enough to Eat
- Media Kids
- Media literacy key concepts Introduction: What is media anyway?
- Packaging Tricks
- Pay For Play
- Privacy Pirates
- Privacy Pursuit: Protecting Your Privacy
- Privacy Pursuit: The Value of Privacy
- Social Smarts: Nothing Personal!
- Stay on the Path Lesson Four: Scavenger Hunt
- Stay on the Path Lesson One: Searching for Treasure
- Stay on the Path Lesson Three: Treasure Maps
- Stay on the Path Lesson Two: All That Glitters is Not Gold
- Teaching Media: Learning With Media
- The Anatomy of Cool
- The Constructed World of Television Families
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 1: Using the Internet
- What do Halloween costumes say?
- Winning the Cyber Security Game
A3.2 Identity and Community
demonstrate an understanding of the historical contexts, contributions, lived experiences, and perspectives of a diversity of individuals and communities, including those in Canada, by exploring the concepts of identity, self, and sense of belonging in a variety of culturally responsive and relevant texts
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introducing TV Families
- Media Stereotypes
- Once Upon a Time
- Stereotyping and Genre
- The Constructed World of Television Families
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
Strand C: Comprehension (Understanding and Responding to Texts)
C1. Knowledge about Texts
apply foundational knowledge and skills to understand a variety of texts, including digital and media texts, by creators with diverse identities, perspectives, and experience, and demonstrate an understanding of the patterns, features, and elements of style associated with various text forms and genres
Specific Expectations:
C1.2 Text Forms and Genres
describe some characteristics of various text forms and genres, including cultural text forms, and explain how they help communicate meaning
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Avatars and Body Image
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 3: Understanding Brands
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 4: Media have commercial implications
- Mirror Image
- Once Upon a Time
- Packaging Tricks
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Teaching Media: The Construction Crew
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- What do Halloween costumes say?
C1.3 Text Patterns and Features
identify text patterns, such as cause and effect in a persuasive text, and text features, such as a preface and glossary, associated with various text forms, including cultural texts, and explain how they help readers, listeners, and viewers understand the meaning
MediaSmarts Resources
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Editing Emotions
- Packaging Tricks
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 1: Using the Internet
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 2: Pathways and Addresses
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 3: Build Understanding
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
C1.4 Visual Elements of Texts
explain how images, graphics, and visual design create, communicate, and contribute to meaning in a variety of texts
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Avatars and Body Image
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Editing Emotions
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Media Stereotypes
- Packaging Tricks
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
C1.5 Elements of Style
describe various elements of style in texts, including voice, word choice, word patterns, and sentence structure, and analyze how each element helps create meaning and is appropriate for the text form and genre
MediaSmarts Resources
C1.6 Point of View
identify the narrator’s point of view, including first, second, or third person, in a variety of texts, and describe the advantages and disadvantages of the approach used in each story
MediaSmarts Resources
C3. Critical Thinking in Literacy
apply critical thinking skills to deepen understanding of texts, and analyze how various perspectives and topics are communicated and addressed in a variety of texts, including digital, media, and cultural texts
Specific Expectations:
C3.1 Literary Devices
describe literary devices, including imagery and humour, in a variety of texts, and explain how they help create meaning and are appropriate for the intended purpose and audience
MediaSmarts Resources
C3.2 Making Inferences
make local and global inferences, using explicit and implicit evidence, to extend their understanding of various texts
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Break the Fake: What's Real Online?
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introducing TV Families
- Junk Food Jungle
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 1: Messages About Drinking
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 2: Young Drinkers
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 4: Interpreting Media Messages
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Media literacy key concepts Introduction: What is media anyway?
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 2: Media are constructions
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 4: Media have commercial implications
- Media literacy key concepts lesson 6: Each medium is a unique aesthetic form
- Media Stereotypes
- Mirror Image
- Once Upon a Time
- Packaging Tricks
- Teaching Media: Critically Evaluating Media
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 3: Build Understanding
- What do Halloween costumes say?
C3.3 Analyzing Texts
analyze various texts, including literary and informational texts, by identifying main and supporting ideas, sequencing the events of multiple plots, recording relevant information, and explaining cause and effect
MediaSmarts Resources
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Introducing TV Families
- Junk Food Jungle
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 1: Messages About Drinking
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 2: Young Drinkers
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 4: Interpreting Media Messages
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 4: Media have commercial implications
- Mirror Image
C3.4 Analyzing Cultural Elements of Texts
identify cultural elements that are represented in various texts, including norms, values, artifacts, sports, and music, investigate the meanings of these elements, and make connections to their lived experience and culture
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Media Kids
- Teaching Media: Critically Evaluating Media
- The Anatomy of Cool
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
C3.5 Perspectives within Texts
identify explicit and implicit perspectives communicated in various texts, explain how these perspectives are conveyed, give some evidence of any biases the texts may contain and suggest how such biases could influence an audience
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introducing TV Families
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 4: Media have commercial implications
- Media Stereotypes
- Mirror Image
- Once Upon a Time
- Prejudice and Body Image
- Teaching Media: Critically Evaluating Media
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
- What do Halloween costumes say?
C3.6 Analysis and Response
explain how various topics, such as diversity, inclusion, and accessibility, are addressed in texts, and describe what insights or messages are conveyed
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Introducing TV Families
- Media Stereotypes
- Once Upon a Time
- Prejudice and Body Image
- Teaching Media: Critically Evaluating Media
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- Villains, Heroes and Heroines
- What do Halloween costumes say?
Strand D: Composition (Expressing Ideas and Creating Texts)
D1 Developing Ideas and Organizing Content
plan, develop ideas, gather information, and organize content for creating texts of various forms, including digital and media texts, on a variety of topics
Specific Expectations:
D1.1 Purpose and Audience
identify the topic, purpose, and audience for various texts they plan to create, and explain why the chosen text form, genre, and medium suit the purpose and audience and how they will help communicate the intended meaning
MediaSmarts Resources
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 2: Media are constructions
- Media literacy key concepts Lesson 3: Audiences negotiate meaning
- Mirror Image
- Thinking Like a Tobacco Company: Grades 4-6
- What do Halloween costumes say?
D1.2 Developing Ideas
generate and develop ideas and details about various topics, such as topics related to diversity, equity, and inclusion and to other subject areas, using a variety of strategies, and drawing on various resources, including their own lived experiences
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Editing Emotions
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introduction to Ethics: Avatars and Identity
- Media literacy key concepts lesson 6: Each medium is a unique aesthetic form
- Prejudice and Body Image
- Social Smarts: Nothing Personal!
- Teaching Media: Critically Evaluating Media
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- The Hero Project: Authenticating Online Information
- Thinking Like a Tobacco Company: Grades 4-6
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 3: Build Understanding
- What do Halloween costumes say?
D1.3 Research
gather and record information and content relevant to a topic, using multiple textual sources; verify the reliability of sources, using simple criteria; and record the creator and source of all content created by others
MediaSmarts Resources
- Break the Fake: What's Real Online?
- The Constructed World of Television Families
- The Hero Project: Authenticating Online Information
- Media literacy key concepts Introduction: What is media anyway?
D1.4 Organizing Content
select and classify ideas and collected information, using appropriate strategies and tools, and sequence content, taking into account the chosen text form, genre, and medium
MediaSmarts Resources
- Editing Emotions
- Media literacy key concepts Introduction: What is media anyway?
- Prejudice and Body Image
- Teaching Media: Critically Evaluating Media
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 1: Using the Internet
- Understanding the Internet Lesson 3: Build Understanding
D2 Creating Texts
apply knowledge and understanding of various text forms and genres to create, revise, edit, and proofread their own texts, using a variety of media, tools, and strategies, and reflect critically on created texts
Specific Expectations:
D2.1 Producing Drafts
draft texts of various forms and genres, including narrative, persuasive, and informational texts, using a variety of media, tools, and strategies
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Avatars and Body Image
- Behaving Ethically Online: Ethics and Empathy
- Break the Fake: What's Real Online?
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Editing Emotions
- Game Time
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introducing TV Families
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Looking at News
- Media Kids
- Media literacy key concepts lesson 6: Each medium is a unique aesthetic form
- Media Stereotypes
- Once Upon a Time
- Packaging Tricks
- Privacy Pursuit: Protecting Your Privacy
- Teaching Media: Learning With Media
- Teaching Media: Media Techniques
- Teaching Media: The Construction Crew
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- The Hero Project: Authenticating Online Information
- Violence in Sports
- What do Halloween costumes say?
D2.3 Voice
establish a personal voice in their texts, using varied language and elements of style to express their thoughts, feelings, and opinions about a topic, and using a tone appropriate to the form and genre
MediaSmarts Resources
- Avatars and Body Image
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Kids, Alcohol and Advertising 2: Young Drinkers
- The Hero Project: Authenticating Online Information
- Violence in Sports
D2.4 Point of View and Perspective
identify the point of view, implicit and explicit perspectives, and bias conveyed in their texts, and explain how their messages might be interpreted by audiences with different perspectives
MediaSmarts Resources
D2.5 Revision
make revisions to the content of draft texts and to elements of style, such as word choice, and add or delete sentences, to improve clarity, focus, and coherence, seeking feedback
MediaSmarts Resources
D3 Publishing, Presenting and Reflecting
select suitable and effective media, techniques, and tools to publish and present final texts, and critically analyze how well the texts address various topics
Specific Expectations:
D3.1 Producing Final Texts
produce final texts using a variety of techniques and tools, including digital design and production tools, to achieve the intended effect
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising All Around Us
- Avatars and Body Image
- Break the Fake: What's Real Online?
- Earth Day: Maps as Media
- Editing Emotions
- Girls and Boys on Television
- Introducing TV Families
- Looking at Advertising: Brands and Mascots
- Looking at News
- Media Kids
- Media Stereotypes
- Once Upon a Time
- Packaging Tricks
- Prejudice and Body Image
- Teaching Media: Learning With Media
- Teaching Media: The Construction Crew
- Teaching Media: The Frame as a Story Teller
- Teaching Media: Thinking About Media
- The Hero Project: Authenticating Online Information
- What do Halloween costumes say?
D3.2 Publishing and Presenting Texts
publish and present texts they have created, using selected media and tools, and explain how each helped them communicate their intended message