Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (2024)

Module 5

Module 5 Participant Notebook

Optional Readings and Activities

Optional Videos

Addressing our State Standards

Instructional Considerations: Comparing Development Across Languages

Misconceptions and Realities About English Learners

Examine an Oracy Lesson

Instructional Methods to Develop Oral Language

Talking About Content

Promoting Oral Language Across Content

Accountable Talk Framework

Techniques that Support the Overall Goal for Oral-Language Development

Vocabulary Routine Activity

Module 5

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (1)Module 5E Participant Notebook for the Texas Reading Academies 2022-23 (1).pdf

Module 5 Participant Notebook

Optional Readings and Activities

  • Review IES Practice Recommendation 1 pp. 6-13

  • Read T2% Vocabulary article

Optional Videos

  • Video 5: Narrative Language, Retell

  • Video 6: Narrative Language, Main Idea

  • Video 7: Narrative Language, Cause & Effect

  • Video 8: Morphology

  • Video 9: Academic Vocabulary in Text

Language Structure Defined

To support the learning that you have already done, take a moment to consider Dr. Elsa Cárdenas-Hagan’s explanation of oral language. Think about those components and how they might impact literacy development. In one or two sentences, using your preferred communication mode, share a short explanation (less than 2 minutes) of why oral language is important for literacy development.

Semantic Gradient Activity

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (2)

In your classroom, you can support building vocabulary depth by engaging in word gradients. To engage in this, you can use the Semantics Gradient Lesson from Reading Rockets or follow the steps below:

  1. Allow the children to choose two words with opposite meanings.

  2. Generate five to seven synonyms for each of the words.

  3. Arrange the words in a way that makes a bridge from one opposite word to the other. Continuums can be done horizontally or vertically, in a ladder-like fashion.

  4. Engage the children in a discussion about why they placed certain words in certain locations. Encourage a conversation about the similarities and differences among the words.

  5. Compare similarities and differences among the words through oral conversation.

Addressing our State Standards

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (3)K-5th Grade Vertical Alignment Document.pdf

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (4)ELPS

"Languages as bound systems and fixed codes make little sense in multilingual communities."51

What is bilingualism and how does this frame our language development? As we look back at the traditional language constructs, bilingualism is simply defined as 1+1=2, illustrating the notion of balanced bilingualism which views a bilingual as two persons, each language equally fluent. However, bilingualism is not about 1+1=2 but about a plural that mixes different fractions of language behavior as they are needed to be socially meaningful.49 Teaching and assessing multilingual students as if they were a “Spanish plus an English” monolingual excludes the possibility of their linguistic multiplicities and the potential of bilingual language—translanguaging.35 As educators, we should allow, acknowledge, and equally value a “third space”—”Spanglish”—as part of our cultural and linguistic identity.

In this video, pay attention as Dr. José Medina reminds us of the goals of bilingual education and the connection to this third space our students enable as multilingual learners in and out of our classrooms using their entire linguistic repertories flexibly.

Instructional Considerations: Comparing Development Across Languages

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (5)Instructional Considerations

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (6)Guiding-Principles-of-Language-Development.pdf

Misconceptions and Realities About English Learners

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (7)5_2_Misconceptions and Realities.pdf

Teacher Tool

You can provide students time to have conversations and share stories with their classmates. This will lay a foundation for using story elements to comprehend literary texts. Conversation starters can help facilitate these conversations.

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (8)Conversation Starters-1 (1).pdf

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (9)Oral Language Classroom Activities.pdf

  • Build students’ receptive and expressive language.

  • Promote agency and support students as they engage in social and academic conversations.

  • Build an understanding of grade-level content through oral-language and vocabulary experiences.

  • Model conventional oral-language use (e.g., content vocabulary, a variety of sentence structures, and use of structure words common in academic discussions).

  • Notice, name, and explain the features of oral language that students are learning.

Examine an Oracy Lesson

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (10)Oracy Development that leads to literacy-1 (1).pdf

  • How might this type of lesson promote agency and support students’ ability to converse about their world?

  • How does this type of lesson engage students of varying proficiency levels in grade-level content standards?

Instructional Methods to Develop Oral Language

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (11)Instructional Methods to Develop Oral Language (1)

Talking About Content

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (12)Talking about Content Teacher Handout-Eng.pdf

As students are discussing with their partners, teachers use this opportunity to monitor their comprehension. Students collaborate with their peers to clarify ideas and ask questions to construct their responses. Collaborating with a partner reinforces the student’s thinking or need for clarification. They can practice their responses in a smaller environment before moving into a larger, whole-group setting. Teachers can take these opportunities to observe students as they interact in pairs to determine what students understand about the content or need for clarification. These types of interactions help students become increasingly confident, leading them to expand on their oral-language and vocabulary development. Strategies such as this invite students to be involved and accountable for their learning.

Promoting Oral Language Across Content

Accountable Talk Framework

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (13)Accountable Talk Framework.pdf

We've learned about the importance of teacher-student conversations and student-student talk with their partners. These opportunities will promote oral-language proficiency, but students will learn even more if we use those opportunities to encourage more in-depth conversations in which students ask questions, build on comments from others, and synthesize what they are learning.

View the video to see how to provide opportunities for oral-language development. Click on the hotspots in the video to stop and jot your answers to the questions

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (14)PEER and CROWD in English and Spanish.pdf

Techniques that Support the Overall Goal for Oral-Language Development

  • PEER is a sequencing technique that encourages short but focused interaction between the child and the adult as they read. During this time, the adult will prompt the child about the book, evaluate responses given, expand using the child’s responses, and repeat prompts to ensure that the child has learned from the experience.

  • The prompts used in a PEER experience are known as CROWD. These prompts include completion prompts, recall prompts, open-ended prompts, wh-prompts, as well as distancing prompts.

Through these experiences, children are able to make connections with a variety of texts. These techniques involve higher-order thinking skills and allow the children to take their language and learning to the next level.

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (15)Response TEKS and Oral Language

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (16)Student Characteristics and Oral-Language Supports (1).pdf

This document describes characteristics of the teacher’s students along with the most effective oral-language supports to support their needs in this scenario. Note that students may benefit from these oral-language supports even if they are not being served by a special program, or they have not been identified under a specific classification.24

Teacher Tool

You can use current events topics to spark interest in your students and engage them in listening comprehension and vocabulary development through audio clips and brief lessons like the ones provided in this Listenwise pdf of audio lessons.

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (17)Listenwise Resources.pdf

Explore the video to learn more about oral language vocabulary instruction.

Vocabulary Routine Activity

Take a moment to think about an upcoming unit you and the students are going to engage in. Choose a word that you will be explicitly teaching in this upcoming lesson. Design an explicit vocabulary routine to teach this word. Highlight where you have added support for special populations.

  1. Choose one grade-level TEKS.

  2. Choose the word you will explicitly teach.

  3. Create a short vocabulary routine aligned with this standard.

  4. Provide a scaffold to support engagement in oral language.

Texas Reading Academy - Module 5 (2024)

FAQs

What happens if you don't pass the Texas reading Academy? ›

If a participant does not complete or pass the Texas reading Academies on the first attempt, they must enroll again in the next available cohort.

How long does it take to complete the Texas reading Academy? ›

How long will it take participants to complete the Reading Academies? Participants should expect to dedicate ten 6-hour days or 60 hours total to complete Reading Academies.

How much do you get paid at reading Academy in Texas? ›

PD Hours and Stipends

Participants who successfully complete the Reading Academies will receive continuing professional education (CPE) hours from the state. Will teachers receive a stipend? Yes. Stipends are $1400 for teachers ONLY.

Do all Texas teachers have to do reading Academy? ›

Statutes written to support the 2019 House Bill 3 state that all kindergarten through third-grade teachers and principals must begin Texas Reading Academies training before the 2022-2023 school year.

What is the punishment for truancy in Texas? ›

Children are required to attend school regularly from ages 6-18 in the State of Texas. Parents can receive a citation for Contributing to Non-attendance. If convicted, parents can be ordered to pay a fine of up to $500 for each of their child's unexcused absences.

Do you have to pass the post test on reading Academy? ›

To pass Reading Academies, learners must complete the pre- and post-test; complete pre-work (CFUs and discussion posts) and artifacts; attend live training sessions; and demonstrate mastery of Reading Academies content during classroom observation by the cohort leader.

What school in Texas pays the most? ›

High-paying jobs for teachers in Texas
  • Mansfield ISD.
  • Crowley ISD.
  • Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD.
  • Lackland ISD.
  • Deer Park ISD.
  • Grady ISD.
  • Draw Academy.
  • Academy for Academic Excellence.

How much does Academy pay in Texas per hour? ›

As of Jul 30, 2024, the average hourly pay for an Academy Warehouse in Texas is $17.61 an hour.

Is reading school fee paying? ›

We are a state funded academy so there are no tuition fees.

Can you become a teacher without a teaching degree in Texas? ›

Complete an Educator Preparation Program - You must complete an Approved Educator Preparation Program. If you do not hold a degree you must complete a university program. If you hold a degree you may contact an Alternative Certification Program or Post Baccalaureate program .

Is reading Academy the same as science of teaching reading? ›

The STR certification exam demonstrates a beginning teacher's proficiency in the science of teaching reading. Reading Academies is an 11-month professional development program that continues learning and builds on knowledge of the STR in a school context.

What are the instructional strategies for reading Academy? ›

Instructional strategies are provided such as repeated reading, partner reading, echo reading, and teacher-led modeling of rate, accuracy, and expression.

What happens if I don't pass my Texes exam? ›

If, after five total attempts, the student has not passed the exams, they may appeal for a waiver from the State Board of Educator Certification. Select a practice test to help you prepare for your upcoming exam.

What happens if you don't pass the EOC in Texas? ›

If a student passes the course but does not pass the end-of-course assessment, the student may take the test again. However, a student is not required to retake a course just because he or she failed the assessment.

Are Texas reading Academies required for math and science? ›

K-3 math and science teachers who are teachers of record must complete Reading Academies because literacy plays an important role in math and science instruction, and all K-3 teachers will benefit from the information learned in the Texas Reading Academies.

Why is reading academy important? ›

My Reading Academy's immersive games offer structured practice and dynamic scaffolding, leading to automaticity in phonological awareness and phonics, and the program's rich interactive reading experiences strengthen standards-based skills in vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension.

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