Outcome Chart - British Columbia - Literacy Foundations - English Language Arts - Level 6
This outcome chart contains media-related learning outcomes from the British Columbia, Level 6, Literacy Foundations, English Language Arts curriculum, with links to supporting resources on the MediaSmarts site.
It is expected that students will:
Reading and Viewing
Specific Expectations
- view and demonstrate an understanding of the meaning conveyed by a variety of visual media (e.g., broadcasts, web sites, videos, DVDs, visual components of print media such as tables, graphics, illustrations, graphic novels, art work, photographs)
- before reading and viewing, make predictions about the content and meaning of texts (e.g., textbooks, brochures, newspaper, web site, fiction, non-fiction) by
- setting a purpose
- generating guiding questions (e.g., record questions in a graphic organizer and review after reading to answer or revise)
- accessing prior knowledge to make connections
- previewing text features
- during reading and viewing, construct meaning from texts by analysing the significance of the themes and points of view by
- differentiating between main ideas and supporting details
- predicting and questioning
- using syntactic and context cues to guide and inform their understanding of the text (e.g., knowledge of grammar, word order, and sentence structure)
- using text features to locate information and support comprehension (e.g., diagrams, headings, bold and italicized words, table of contents)
- recognizing literary elements (e.g., plot, conflict, character, setting, climax, resolution, theme)
- recognizing literary devices (e.g., irony, hyperbole, simile, metaphor)
- making inferences (e.g., about characters’ feelings or story problems)
- drawing conclusions (e.g., make connections between cause and effect)
- making relevant notes using logical categories (e.g., outlines, mind maps, timelines)
- self-monitoring and self-correcting (e.g., identify when meaning-making is breaking down, reread to clarify understanding, use context cues and resources such as a dictionary to figure out unfamiliar vocabulary)
- self-monitoring and self-correcting (e.g., identify when meaning-making is breaking down, use context cues and resources to figure out unfamiliar vocabulary)
- generating and responding to questions
- using graphic organizers to process, record, and demonstrate synthesis of information
- making inferences and drawing conclusions
- summarizing, synthesizing, and applying new ideas (e.g., suggest an alternative approach or conclusion, consider alternative interpretations, extend the story)
- reflecting on purpose for reading, predictions, and questions made during reading
- after reading and viewing, develop and monitor their understanding of the meaning conveyed in texts by
Lessons
- Advertising All Around Us
- Comic Book Characters
- Comparing Real Families to TV Families
- Cop Shows
- Facing TV Violence: Consequences and Media Violence
- Facing TV Violence: Counting & Discussing Violence on the Screen
- Facing TV Violence: Rewriting the Script
- Introducing TV Families
- Junk Food Jungle
- Looking At Food Advertising
- Looking at Newspapers: Introduction
Student Tutorials (Licensed Resource)