edTPA Vocabulary | Questions and Answers with complete solution
Learning Segment - A set of 3-5 lessons that build one upon another toward a central focus, with a clearly defined beginning and end. Each discipline has its own requirements for the learning segment (see Handbook) Formal Assessment - "[R]efer[s] to all those activities undertaken by teachers and by their students . . . that provide information to be used as feedback to modify teaching and learning activities. Assessments provide evidence of students' prior knowledge, thinking, or learning in order to evaluate what students understand and how they are thinking. Formal assessments may include, for example, quizzes, homework assignments, journals, and projects. Informal Assessment - "[R]efer[s] to all those activities undertaken by teachers and by their students . . . that provide information to be used as feedback to modify teaching and learning activities."14 Assessments provide evidence of students' prior knowledge, thinking, or learning in order to evaluate what students understand and how they are thinking. Informal assessments may include, for example, student questions and responses during instruction and teacher observations of students as they work. Central Focus - A description of the important understandings and core concepts that you want students to develop within the learning segment. The central focus should go beyond a list of facts and skills, align with content standards and learning objectives, and address the subject-specific components in the learning segment. The subject-specific components for elementary literacy include an essential literacy strategy and the associated requisite skills for comprehending or composing text. Learning Target - A specific learning goal that has been articulated for student learning. Learning Strategy - An approach selected deliberately by a reader or writer to comprehend or compose text. When students are able to select and use strategies automatically, they have achieved independence in using the strategy to accomplish reading and writing goals. Example strategies for reading include summarizing or retelling, comparing and contrasting firsthand and secondhand accounts of the same event, using evidence to predict, interpreting a character's feelings, or drawing conclusions from informational text. Example strategies for writing include organizing ideas before writing, note taking from informational text to support drafting a topic, using graphic organizers to organize writing, using a rubric to revise a draft, or using quotes as evidence to support an argument.Academic Language - Oral and written language used for academic purposes. Academic language is the means by which students develop and express content understandings. Academic language represents the language of the discipline that students need to learn and use to participate and engage in the content area in meaningful ways. There are language demands that teachers need to consider as they plan to support student learning of content. These language demands include vocabulary, language functions, syntax, and discourse. Vocabulary - Includes words and phrases that are used within disciplines including: (1) words and phrases with subject-specific meanings that differ from meanings used in everyday life (e.g., table); (2) general academic vocabulary used across disciplines (e.g., compare, analyze, evaluate); and (3) subjectspecific words defined for use in the discipline.
Escuela, estudio y materia
- Institución
- EdTPA Vocabulary
- Grado
- EdTPA Vocabulary
Información del documento
- Subido en
- 29 de julio de 2023
- Número de páginas
- 4
- Escrito en
- 2022/2023
- Tipo
- Examen
- Contiene
- Preguntas y respuestas
Temas
Documento también disponible en un lote