CCOG for ABE 0791 archive revision 202003
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- Effective Term:
- Summer 2020 through Summer 2024
- Course Number:
- ABE 0791
- Course Title:
- Advanced Integrated Reading and Writing
- Credit Hours:
- 0
- Contact Hours:
- 60-72
Course Description
Integrates reading and writing skills to enhance critical thinking, analysis, and synthesis of information for understanding and effective communication. Requirement: CASAS reading placement 235 or higher.
Addendum to Course Description
Recommended: CASAS reading placement 239 or higher.
Total contact hours: 60-72
Intended Outcomes for the course
Upon completion of the course students will be able to:
- Use and understand the pre-writing and pre-reading strategies to identify, clarify, and prepare for the purpose of any reading or writing activity.
- Incorporate fluency and new vocabulary into daily and academic reading and writing.
- Apply a range of strategies including activating prior knowledge and cultural understanding to monitor and enhance comprehension.
- Utilize steps in the writing process and apply the appropriate English language conventions to daily and academic writing.
- Apply critical thinking in written responses.
- Analyze, evaluate, and integrate writing styles, ideas, arguments and themes from multiple complex sources into a written or oral response.
Aspirational Goals
- Exhibit persistence, self-motivation, self-advocacy, and personal responsibility
- Reflect upon, assess, identify, and celebrate one’s own learning gains
- Explore, develop, and monitor appropriate academic and professional goals
- Advance knowledge and skills to make independent choices as a citizen, family member, worker, and life-long learner
Outcome Assessment Strategies
- Complete CASAS reading test
- Pass GED Practice tests in Reasoning Through Language Arts, Social Studies, and Science
- Take Compass Test (if college bound)
- Create writing portfolios, including reflections, drafts that show evidence of editing and revising
- Write paragraphs, essays, letters, poems, resumes, journal entries, notes, writing in response in response to text, and annotations
- Graph reading rate
- Develop projects, presentations, and debates
- Complete Reading with Understanding Diary
- Assess comprehension with quizzes, multiple choice questions, written response, and discussion questions
- ABE Advanced In-Class Reading and Writing Assessment
- Complete a computer-based assignment
Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)
Themes: Family, Citizen, Lifelong Learner, Worker. Social Studies, Science, Metacognition
Concepts :goal setting, critical thinking, decision making, confidence building, collaborative team-work, media literacy, cultural literacy, student success skills
Issues: barriers to student success, access to resources, communication skills, learning differences, test and school anxiety, and behavior appropriate to academic and professional settings
Skills:
- Awareness of writing as a process (planning, developing, organizing, revising, editing)
- Clarify purpose of the writer(s) and reader(s) in a specific situation
- Draw on prior experience, research, new knowledge, and one’s own questions, interests and observations to generate ideas
- Choose among a variety of strategies appropriate to planning and organizing texts types
- Develop and organize ideas and information in varied genres, including the presentation of an argument
- Summarize and paraphrase ideas in a text while avoiding plagiarism
- Introduce claims, acknowledge alternate or opposing claims and organize the reasons logically
- Support claim(s) with logical reasoning and relevant evidence, using accurate, credible source
- Use words, phrases and clauses to create cohesion and clarify the relationships among claims, reasons, and evidence
- Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the argument presented
- Use basic and complex grammar to construct coherent text with sentences that vary in style, length and complexity
- Draw from a broad vocabulary that includes words needed for specialized and/or academic purposes
- Express one’s own thoughts and ideas in a way that is clear and compelling
- Consider and apply feedback from self and others to enhance the impact of the writing and better address the writing purpose
- Use writing conventions appropriate for complex text types in multiple genres, including academic or occupational texts
- Proofread and apply knowledge of conventions to enhance reader understanding
- Draw from a variety of technologies and media appropriate for the writing purposes.
- Carry out writing tasks that involve presentations of information, or require the synthesis, analysis and/or evaluation of ideas
- Select the writing development strategy appropriate to writing purposes and needs
- Read regularly for own purposes
- Identify, clarify, and/or prepare for complex reading purpose
- Pronounce on sight words, abbreviations, and acronyms found in everyday texts and a range of terms related to areas of interest or study
- Recognize on sight syllable patterns/types, root words, and affixes in multi-syllabic words
- Acquire and apply meanings of most words and phrases found in everyday and academic texts, including terms related to specialized topics
- Accurately read text composed of dense or long, complex sentences and paragraphs with appropriate pacing, phrasing, and expression
- Evaluate and/or apply prior knowledge of the content and situation, including cultural understanding, to support comprehension
- Use strategies easily and in combination to pronounce and/or discern the meanings of unfamiliar words found in a complex text
- Choose from a range of strategies, including some sophisticated ones, and integrate them to monitor and/or enhance text comprehension (e.g. scan/skim, make inferences, mark text and/or make notes, organize notes and/or make graphic organizers and text maps, write a summary to check understanding, discuss with others)
- Use text format and features (e.g. search engines, drop down menus, headings) to enhance comprehension
- Locate, analyze, and critique stated and unstated information, ideas/arguments, and/ or themes in a complex functional, informational, or persuasive text
- Determine, analyze and summarize the author’s central idea and major points over multiple paragraphs/pages
- Evaluate the reliability, accuracy, and sufficiency of information, claims, or arguments
- Draw conclusions related to the structural elements of a complex literary work, using literary terms
- Analyze and evaluate an authors style, attending to the use of language and literary techniques and to influences on the writing
- Integrate the people/characters, events, information, ideas/arguments, themes, or writing styles in lengthy or multiple complex tests with each other and/or with knowledge of the world to address a complex reading purpose
- Agree or disagree with an idea/argument/claim or theme, and explain reasoning
- Follow complex, multi step directions, integrating written and graphic information (e.g., science experiment)
- Compare and Contrast people/characters, events and ideas in different texts
- Combine, compare, contrast and/or critique ideas/arguments/claims or themes in different texts