Unit 1: Identities – What makes you-you
Duration
Weeks: 10
LP Attributes
Thinker, Communicator
Key Concept
Connections
Related Concept(s)
Purpose, theme
Global Context
Identities and Relationships (Personal efficacy and agency)
Statement of Inquiry
Connection serves as a fundamental thread weaving together themes and purposes within the intricate web of human interactions.
Summative Assessment Criteria
Criterion A, Criterion B
ATLs (Skills)
- C-Read critically and for comprehension
- C-Make inferences and draw conclusions
- C-Use and interpret a range of discipline-specific terms and symbols
- T-Recognise unstated assumptions and bias
- T-Interpret data
- T-Evaluate evidence and arguments
- T-Draw reasonable conclusions and generalizations
Curriculum Standards
- Interconnected Skills 3.2 identify, in conversation with the teacher and peers, how their skills as viewers, representers, readers, and writers help them improve their oral communication skills.
- Purpose 1.1 identify a range of purposes for listening in a variety of situations, formal and informal, and set goals related to specific listening tasks.
- Active Listening Strategies 1.2 demonstrate an understanding of appropriate listening behaviour by adapting active listening strategies to suit a variety of situations, including work in groups.
- Comprehension Strategies 1.3 identify a variety of listening comprehension strategies and use them appropriately before, during, and after listening in order to understand and clarify the meaning of increasingly complex oral texts.
- Making Inferences/Interpreting Texts 1.5 interpret oral texts by using stated and implied ideas from the texts.
- Reading Unfamiliar Words 3.2 predict the meaning of and rapidly solve unfamiliar words using different types of cues, including: semantic (meaning) cues; syntactic (language structure) cues; graphophonic (phonological and graphic) cues.
- Text Features 2.3 identify a variety of text features and explain how they help readers understand texts.
- Developing Ideas 1.2 generate ideas about more challenging topics and identify those most appropriate to the purpose.
- Vocabulary 3.3 confirm spellings and word meanings or word choice using a wide variety of resources appropriate for the purpose.
- Grammar 3.5 use parts of speech correctly to communicate their meaning clearly, with a focus on subject/verb agreement and the use of nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositions.
- Proofreading 3.6 proofread and correct their writing using guidelines developed with peers and the teacher.
- Publishing 3.7 use a wide range of appropriate elements of effective presentation in the finished product, including print, script, different fonts, graphics, and layout.
Unit 2: XLIS and Me
Duration
Weeks: 8
LP Attributes
Knowledgeable, Communicator
Key Concept
Communication
Related Concept(s)
Audience, Context
Global Context
Orientation in space and time – Natural and human landscapes and resources
Statement of Inquiry
Considering context and audience helps us engage in successful communication about schools in the context of spatiotemporal positioning.
Summative Assessment Criteria
Criterion C, Criterion D
ATLs (Skills)
- C-Give and receive meaningful feedback
- C-Use a variety of speaking techniques to communicate with a variety of audiences
- C-Use appropriate forms of writing for different purposes and audiences
- C-Use and interpret a range of discipline-specific terms and symbols
- C-Write for different purposes
- C-Organize and depict information logically
Curriculum Standards
- Purpose 1.1 identify a range of purposes for listening in a variety of situations, formal and informal, and set goals related to specific listening tasks.
- Active Listening Strategies 1.2 demonstrate an understanding of appropriate listening behaviour by adapting active listening strategies to suit a variety of situations, including work in groups.
- Extending Understanding 1.6 extend understanding of oral texts by connecting, comparing, and contrasting the ideas and information in them to their own knowledge, experience, and insights; to other texts, including print and visual texts; and to the world around them.
- Presentation Strategies 1.9 identify a variety of presentation strategies used in oral texts and analyse their effect on the audience.
- Purpose 2.1 identify a variety of purposes for speaking and explain how the purpose and intended audience influence the choice of form.
- Clarity and Coherence 2.3 communicate orally in a clear, coherent manner, using appropriate organizing strategies and formats to link and sequence ideas and information.
- Non-Verbal Cues 2.6 identify a variety of non-verbal cues, including facial expression, gestures, and eye contact, and use them in oral communications, appropriately and with sensitivity towards cultural differences, to help convey their meaning.
- Interconnected Skills 3.2 identify, in conversation with the teacher and peers, how their skills as viewers, representers, readers, and writers help them improve their oral communication skills.
- Research 1.3 gather information to support ideas for writing, using a variety of strategies and a wide range of print and electronic sources.
- Classifying Ideas 1.4 sort and classify ideas and information for their writing in a variety of ways that allow them to manipulate information and see different combinations and relationships in their data.
- Vocabulary 3.3 confirm spellings and word meanings or word choice using a wide variety of resources appropriate for the purpose.
- Grammar 3.5 use parts of speech correctly to communicate their meaning clearly, with a focus on subject/verb agreement and the use of nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositions.
Unit 3: Healthy Lifestyles
Duration
Weeks: 8
LP Attributes
Caring, Balanced
Key Concept
Culture
Related Concept(s)
Empathy, Point of view
Global Context
Personal and cultural expression – Philosophies and ways of life
Statement of Inquiry
Diverse cultural view and empathetic understanding intersect and shape lifestyles.
Summative Assessment Criteria
Criterion A, Criterion B
ATLs (Skills)
- C-Read critically and for comprehension
- C-Make inferences and draw conclusions
- C-Use and interpret a range of discipline-specific terms and symbols
- T-Interpret data
- T-Recognise and evaluate propositions
- T-Draw reasonable conclusions and generalizations
- T-Test generalizations and conclusions
Curriculum Standards
- Purpose 1.1 identify a range of purposes for listening in a variety of situations, formal and informal, and set goals related to specific listening tasks.
- Active Listening Strategies 1.2 demonstrate an understanding of appropriate listening behaviour by adapting active listening strategies to suit a variety of situations, including work in groups.
- Comprehension Strategies 1.3 identify a variety of listening comprehension strategies and use them appropriately before, during, and after listening in order to understand and clarify the meaning of increasingly complex oral texts.
- Metacognition 3.1 identify, in conversation with the teacher and peers, what strategies they found most helpful before, during, and after listening and speaking and what steps they can take to improve their oral communication skills.
- Interconnected Skills 3.2 identify, in conversation with the teacher and peers, how their skills as viewers, representers, readers, and writers help them improve their oral communication skills.
- Comprehension Strategies 1.3 identify a variety of reading comprehension strategies and use them appropriately before, during, and after reading to understand increasingly complex texts.
- Demonstrating Understanding 1.4 demonstrate understanding of increasingly complex texts by summarizing and explaining important ideas and citing relevant supporting details.
- Extending Understanding 1.6 extend understanding of texts by connecting, comparing, and contrasting the ideas in them to their own knowledge, experience, and insights, to other familiar texts, and to the world around them.
- Metacognition 4.1 identify the strategies they found most helpful before, during, and after reading and explain, in conversation with the teacher and/or peers, or in a reader’s notebook, how they can use these and other strategies to improve as readers.
- Interconnected Skills 4.2 explain, in conversation with the teacher and/or peers or in a reader’s notebook, how their skills in listening, speaking, writing, viewing, and representing help them make sense of what they read.
- Purpose and Audience 1.1 explain how a variety of media texts address their intended purpose and audience.
- Responding to and Evaluating Texts 1.3 evaluate the effectiveness of the presentation and treatment of ideas, information, themes, opinions, issues, and/or experiences in media texts.
- Production Perspectives 1.6 identify who produces various media texts, the reason for their production, how they are produced, and how they are funded.
Unit 4: Diary – What’s happiness and pursuing happiness 幸福像花儿一样
Duration
Weeks: 8
LP Attributes
Thinkers, Open-minded
Key Concept
Creativity
Related Concept(s)
Stylistic choices, Theme
Global Context
Personal and cultural expression – Creation
Statement of Inquiry
The deliberate blend of creativity, style, themes in personal narratives enriches the grasp and achievement of happiness.
Summative Assessment Criteria
Criterion C, Criterion D
ATLs (Skills)
- C-Give and receive meaningful feedback
- C-Use a variety of speaking techniques to communicate with a variety of audiences
- C-Use appropriate forms of writing for different purposes and audiences
- C-Use and interpret a range of discipline-specific terms and symbols
- C-Write for different purposes
- C-Organize and depict information logically
- SM-Plan short- and long-term assignments; meet deadlines
- SM-Use appropriate strategies for organizing complex information
Curriculum Standards
- Interactive Strategies 2.2 demonstrate an increasingly sophisticated understanding of appropriate speaking behaviour in a variety of situations, including paired sharing, dialogue, and small- and large-group discussions.
- Clarity and Coherence 2.3 communicate orally in a clear, coherent manner, using appropriate organizing strategies and formats to link and sequence ideas and information.
- Appropriate Language 2.4 use appropriate words and phrases from the full range of their vocabulary including inclusive and non-discriminatory language, and stylistic devices appropriate to the purpose and context, to communicate their meaning accurately and engage the interest of their intended audience.
- Vocal Skills and Strategies 2.5 identify a range of vocal effects, including tone, pace, pitch, volume, and a variety of sound effects, and use them appropriately and with sensitivity towards cultural differences to help communicate their meaning.
- Non-Verbal Cues 2.6 identify a variety of non-verbal cues, including facial expression, gestures, and eye contact, and use them in oral communications, appropriately and with sensitivity towards cultural differences, to help convey their meaning.
- Visual Aids 2.7 use a variety of appropriate visual aids.
- Variety of Texts 1.1 read a wide variety of texts from diverse cultures, including literary texts.
Comprehension Strategies 1.3 identify a variety of reading comprehension strategies and use them appropriately before, during, and after reading to understand increasingly complex texts. - Demonstrating Understanding 1.4 demonstrate understanding of increasingly complex texts by summarizing and explaining important ideas and citing relevant supporting details.
- Purpose and Audience 1.1 identify the topic, purpose, and audience for more complex writing forms.
- Developing Ideas 1.2 generate ideas about more challenging topics and identify those most appropriate to the purpose.
- Organizing Ideas 1.5 identify and order main ideas and supporting details and group them into units that could be used to develop a summary, a debate, or a report of several paragraphs, using a variety of strategies.
- Spelling Familiar Words 3.1 spell familiar words correctly.
- Spelling Unfamiliar Words 3.2 spell unfamiliar words using a variety of strategies that involve understanding sound-symbol relationships, word structures, word meanings, and generalizations about spelling.
- Punctuation 3.4 use punctuation appropriately to communicate their intended meaning in more complex writing forms, including forms specific to different subjects across the curriculum, with a focus on the use of: commas to separate introductory phrases from the main part of a sentence and to separate words, phrases, and clauses in a series; quotation marks to distinguish words being discussed as words and to indicate titles; ellipses (…) and dashes to indicate sentence breaks, ambiguities, or parenthetical statements.
- Proofreading 3.6 proofread and correct their writing using guidelines developed with peers and the teacher.