Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
Each teacher in the middle grades shall possess the knowledge
and skills articulated in this Section.
a) The Disciplinary Literacy Curriculum
Effective middle grade teachers:
1) understand and use the scientific basis of
teaching to plan, evaluate and modify instruction (e.g., use of appropriate
research in identifying and implementing effective instructional
practices);
2) know the
developmental sequence of language and literacy skills, along with age-level or
grade-level benchmarks of development, particularly for adolescent
learners;
3) understand the
Illinois Learning Standards for English Language Arts and Literacy in
History/Social Studies, Science and Technical Subjects (23 Ill. Adm. Code
1.Appendix D, State Goals for Learning), their organization, progressions and
the interconnections among the skills;
4) understand the role of systematic and
explicit teaching of literacy skills; and
5) understand the influence of students'
literacy skills on their performance on discipline-specific
assessments.
b)
Foundational Knowledge
1) Language
Effective middle grade teachers understand:
A) the nature and communicative role of
various features of language, including semantics, syntax, morphology and
pragmatics;
B) major theories and
stages of first and second literacy acquisition and the role of native language
in learning to read and write in a second language;
C) language, reading and writing development
across the middle school years using supporting evidence from theory and
research;
D) the role of academic
language in developing students' understanding of concepts, content, skills and
processes; and
E) conventions of
standard English grammar and usage (e.g., irregular plural nouns, past tense of
irregular verbs, subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement,
conjunctions, prepositions, interjections, perfect verb tenses).
2) Text
Effective middle grade teachers understand:
A) the quantitative, qualitative and
individual factors that affect text complexity, including how to estimate text
readability;
B) the organizational
structures, literary devices, rhetorical features, text features and graphics
commonly used in literary and informational texts;
C) the characteristics of various genre or
forms of literary and informational text; and
D) the role, perspective and purpose of text
in specific disciplines.
c) Using Research-Based Instructional
Approaches
1) Reading Comprehension
Effective middle grade teachers:
A) select high-quality texts that match
student needs and educational goals;
B) identify disciplinary text features that
may impede comprehension (e.g., author's assumption of prior knowledge, use of
unusual key vocabulary, complexity of sentences, unclear cohesive links,
subtlety of relationships among characters or ideas, sophistication of tone,
complexity of text structure, use of literary devices or data);
C) scaffold reading to enable students to
understand and learn from challenging text (e.g., re-reading, pre-teaching of
vocabulary or key information not provided in the text);
D) introduce texts efficiently providing a
clear purpose for reading and refrain from revealing information that students
can learn from reading the text;
E)
guide close reading discussions that require students to identify the key ideas
and details of a text, analyze the text's craft and structure (including the
tone and meaning of words) and critically evaluate the text;
F) teach students to trace and evaluate the
argument and specific claims in a text and to distinguish claims that are
supported by reasons and evidence from those claims that are not
supported;
G) provide instruction
in interpreting graphic features (e.g., tables, charts, illustrations, tables
of contents, captions, headings, indexes) and their relationship to
text;
H) guide students to use
note-taking, previewing, identification of main idea and supporting details,
and review strategies to clarify and solidify comprehension;
I) ask high-level, text-dependent
questions;
J) support students in
analyzing the organizational structure of texts (e.g., sequentially, causally,
comparatively) and in considering how specific sentences, paragraphs and larger
portions of the text relate to each other and to the text as a whole;
K) assist students with recognizing features
of text common to individual disciplines;
L) guide students to identify and analyze
content in texts that indicates point of view, perspective, purpose, fact,
opinion, speculation and audience;
M) guide the reading of multiple texts to
enable students to comparatively analyze and evaluate information and
synthesize information from the texts into a coherent understanding of a topic;
and
N) model and encourage the use
of reading strategies to improve comprehension (e.g., predicting,
purpose-setting, sequencing, connecting, visualizing, monitoring, questioning,
summarizing, synthesizing, making inferences, evaluating).
2) Writing
Effective middle grade teachers:
A) provide instructional support and
opportunities for students to write routinely for authentic purposes in
multiple forms and genres to demonstrate the power and importance of writing
throughout their lives;
B) engage
students in using writing to develop an understanding of content area concepts
and skills;
C) support students in
producing coherent and clear writing with organization, development, substance
and style appropriate to the task, purpose and audience;
D) provide feedback to written work to guide
students' revisions;
E) reinforce
the process for writing arguments to support claims in an analysis of
substantive topics or texts using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient
evidence;
F) provide instruction to
students on how to create a text that introduces an opinion on a topic,
supports the opinion with information and reasons based on facts and details,
uses appropriate transitional devices and concludes with a statement supporting
the opinion;
G) provide
instructional support for creating a narrative text based on real or imagined
experiences or events that introduces a narrator and/or characters; uses
dialogue, description and pacing to develop and organize a sequence of events;
uses concrete words, phrases, sensory details and transitional devices; and
uses a conclusion that follows from the experiences or events;
H) facilitate the writing of informative and
explanatory texts to examine and convey complex ideas and information clearly
and accurately through the effective selection, organization and analysis of
content;
I) instruct students in
the skills necessary to conduct research projects using evidence drawn from
multiple sources (including how to select and develop topics; gather
information from a variety of sources, including the Internet; synthesize
information; paraphrase, summarize and quote or cite sources);
J) provide support in using search terms
effectively, assessing the credibility and accuracy of sources, avoiding
plagiarism and following a standard format for citations;
K) facilitate the use of the conventions of
standard English grammar (e.g., irregular plural nouns, past tense of irregular
verbs, subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement, conjunctions,
prepositions, interjections, perfect verb tenses); and
L) engage students in using technology to
produce and publish writing and to interact and collaborate with
others.
3) Speaking and
Listening
Effective middle grade teachers:
A) engage students in a variety of oral
language activities, including whole and small group collaborative discussion,
asking questions, reporting on a topic and recounting experiences;
B) teach students to present ideas and
information; use facts and relevant details to support main ideas; and use
presentation software, media and visual displays appropriate to the purpose and
audience;
C) support students in
using conventions of standard English, eye contact, voice projection and
enunciation in formal presentations; and
D) teach students to listen actively and
critically in order to understand, evaluate and respond to a speaker's
message.
4) Vocabulary
Effective middle grade teachers:
A) for the instructional focus, select
appropriate words central to the meaning of the text and likely to be
unfamiliar, academic vocabulary and word relationships;
B) support the use of word-solving strategies
for clarifying the meaning of unfamiliar words, including contextual analysis,
structural analysis and the use of reference materials;
C) support oral and written language
development and the use of newly acquired vocabulary across
disciplines;
D) understand and
implement the forms and functions of academic language to help students develop
and express content understandings;
E) utilize authentic text to help students
develop word consciousness; and
F)
actively engage students in using a wide variety of strategies for developing
and expanding vocabularies.
d) Using Materials, Texts and Technology
Effective middle grade teachers:
1) use a wide range of high-quality
literature and informational texts, including primary sources;
2) select literature and informational texts
that address the interests, backgrounds and learning needs of each
student;
3) estimate the difficulty
level of text using readability measures and qualitative factors, and make text
accessible to students;
4) use
culturally responsive texts to promote students' understanding of their lives
and society;
5) use a variety of
technologies to support disciplinary literacy instruction (e.g., computers,
cameras, interactive websites, blogs, online research); and
6) use techniques for helping students
navigate online sources, including the importance of critically evaluating the
information available online by addressing sources, audience and
purpose.
e) Monitoring
Student Learning through Assessment
Effective middle grade teachers:
1) assess students' interest, engagement and
response to instruction to guide teaching;
2) use assessment data, student work samples
and observations from continuous monitoring of student progress to plan and
evaluate disciplinary literacy instruction;
3) provide feedback to students on their work
to help them understand their own progress and how to improve
performance;
4) communicate results
of assessments appropriately;
5)
engage students in self-assessment; and
6) recognize how to maintain and use accurate
records of students' performance and progress in meeting disciplinary literacy
standards.
f) Meeting
the Needs of Diverse Learners
Effective middle grade teachers:
1) understand the impact of cultural,
linguistic, cognitive, academic, physical, social and emotional differences on
language development and literacy;
2) seek appropriate assistance and support
for struggling readers and writers;
3) collaborate and plan with other
professionals to deliver a consistent, sequenced and supportive instructional
program for each student;
4)
differentiate strategies, materials, pace, levels of text and language
complexity to introduce concepts and skills to meet the diverse learning needs
of each student; and
5) make
content accessible in appropriate ways to English language learners.
g) Constructing a Supportive
Language and Literacy Environment
Effective middle grade teachers:
1) understand motivation and engagement and
the use of the "gradual release of responsibility approach" to design learning
experiences that build student self-direction and ownership of literacy
learning;
2) establish classroom
routines that promote independence, self-direction, collaboration and
responsibility for disciplinary literacy learning;
3) incorporate student choices in determining
reading and writing materials and activities; and
4) build collaborative classroom communities
that support and engage all students in reading, writing, listening, speaking,
viewing and visually representing their thoughts and ideas.