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A Day in the Life Author: National Institute of the Family Level: Elementary Cycle Three, Secondary Cycle One Subject Area: English Language Arts, Technology
Description: This lesson examines how technology and media have changed over the past fifty years, and how this has influenced everyday life. In small groups, students will read a pair of case studies that review a day in the life of two high school students, one living in 1949 and the other in 1999. In each case study, students will look at the role played by the media in the lives of the individual. After discussing the case studies, students are asked to predict what the role of media might be fifty years from now.
| Cross-curricular Competencies |
Broad Areas of Learning |
- To use information
- To exercise critical judgement
- To be creative
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This lesson satisfies the following English Language Arts Competencies from the Quebec Education Program:
Competency 1: To Read and Listen to Literary, Popular and Information-Based Texts
Essential Knowledges:
Uses prior knowledge and personal experience of the content of a text
Questions and talk with others to clarify and enrich interpretations
Makes predictions, confirmations and inferences, when prompted by the teacher
Makes connections to prior knowledge or to other texts
Uses different reading strategies according to the text type
Reads, listens to and views a range of self-selected and personally relevant texts that include:
- Use of personal, social and cultural background and experiences to interpret texts
Develops a personal response process in the context of a community of readers through:
- Discussion of responses with others individually, on small groups and in the whole class
- Recount of the story and, with guidance, outline of information in a text
- Development of opinions on literary or popular texts
- Sharing of responses with others to clarify meaning and enrich interpretation
- Comparing own responses with those of others at a beginner's level
- Discussing own response process at a beginner's level
Moves beyond the initial response through:
- Responses to texts in a variety of ways that include talking, writing, the Arts, Media
- Early attempts to explain own views of a text
- Support for own views with references to the text in small and large group discussions
- Adjustment of own interpretations in the light of the responses of others at a beginner's level
Begins to identify the view of the world presented in a text through:
- Making of inferences, when prompted, about the view of the world presented by the text
- Comparison, with guidance, of own values with some of the social, cultural and historical values in a literary text in teacher and peer discussions
Recognizes self as a member of a reading audience
Competency 2: To Write Self-expressive, Narrative and Information-based Texts
Essential Knowledges:
- Writes to a familiar audience in order to express meaning(s):
- Specific structures and features of familiar texts incorporated into own writing
- Selection of ways to influence a familiar audience in self-expressive and narrative texts
- Experiments with familiar structures and features of different text types in own writing:
- Based on wide repertoire of texts read, viewed in the media and encountered in her/his community
- To suit own purpose and audience
- Develops concept of writer's craft:
- Guided discussion and questioning of texts read, listened to and produced in order to discover how the text works
Competency 3: To Represent Her/His Literacy in Different Media
Essential Knowledges:
Uses structures and features of texts:
- Compare structures and features of familiar media texts
Consider some of the functions of the media through:
- Collaboration with peers in pairs, small groups and whole class to clarify, decode and respond to media texts
- Recognizing and naming of familiar media: television, radio, film, magazine, video, Internet, CD-ROM, children's magazines
- Identifying her/his understanding of the messages/meanings of familiar media texts
Understands that texts are social and cultural products through:
- Own response and responses of others:
- Compares own response with those of peers in order to support and enrich own understanding
- Investigates, with teacher's guidance, how different media text types construct reality for us
- Explores, with guidance, some of the structures and features for communicating and presenting information in age-appropriate popular and information-based media texts
Competency 4: To Use Language to Communicate and Learn
Essential Knowledges:
- Shares information with peers and teacher
- Talks about responses and point of view with peers and teacher
- Asks and answers questions from peers and teacher
- Responds to the ideas and points of view of others with sensitivity and interest
- Talks through new ideas and information
- Examining of alternative points of view and providing reasons for choosing one over the other
- Uses language (talk) for learning and thinking by:
- Participating in collaborative reading, writing, viewing, visually representing, listening and talking activities:
- Writing, producing and reading together
- Planning of a project
- Brainstorming
- Planning of a cross-curricular or mixed media project
- Participating in role-playing, improvisation and storytelling activities to try out new ideas in new situations and for other purposes
- Questioning and challenging of different points of view/perspectives
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