c/c_Literary Studies_Grade 10_Strategies and processesreading strategiesmetacognitive strategieswriting processesoral language strategies
Subject
Grade
Concept/Content
Strategies and processes
- reading strategies
- metacognitive strategies
- writing processes
- oral language strategies
Elaboration
There are many strategies that readers use when making sense of text. Students consider what strategies they need to use to “unpack” text. They employ strategies with increasing independence depending on the purpose, text, and context. Strategies include but may not be limited to predicting, inferring, questioning, paraphrasing, using context clues, using text features, visualizing, making connections, summarizing, identifying big ideas, synthesizing, and reflecting.
- thinking about our own thinking
- reflecting on our processes and determining strengths and challenges
- Students employ metacognitive strategies to gain increasing independence in learning.
There are various writing processes depending on context. These may include determining audience and purpose, generating or gathering ideas, free-writing, making notes, drafting, revising, and/or editing. Writers often have very personalized processes when writing. Writing is an iterative process.
speaking with expression, connecting with listeners, asking questions to clarify, listening for specifics, summarizing, paraphrasing
keywords
reading strategies
metacognitive strategies
writing processes
oral language strategies