Enduring Understandings
- important
ideas that students should carry with them years beyond the instruction
received this year.
- Developing knowledge and skills in a second language also provides
insight into the foundations of different cultures.
- Learning a foreign language enables individuals to participate in
multilingual communities.
- Being able to communicate in a second language other than English
equips graduates to participate in and contribute to the growth of a
global economy.
- Understanding different cultural perspectives, patterns of behavior,
ways of life, worldviews, and contributions is essential in order to.
Essential Questions
- most important
“big picture” questions students should be able to answer after completing
learning activities.
-
Communication - How will learning a language enhance my life?
-
Cultures
- How can cultural awareness enhance my language learning and vice
versa?
-
Communities - How does where I live shape who I am?
-
Comparisons - How do I determine the most effective language learning
style for me?
-
Connections - How might learning a language open “doors of opportunity”?
Standards
District 11 Foreign Language courses are aligned to the
Colorado Model Content Standards for Foreign
Language and include Standards,
Benchmarks, and Indicators.
STANDARD - The information or skills that must be learned
and demonstrated for expertise in a given discipline or content
domain. Also, refers to standards of practice, performance
standards, etc.
BENCHMARK - More specific definitions that teachers can
follow to assess and measure a student’s performance at various
stages in his or her school career.
INDICATORS - The actual learning behaviors teachers will
look for in the classroom.
Colorado Model Content Standards for Foreign Language
STANDARD 1: Students communicate in a foreign language while
demonstrating literacy in all four essential skills: listening,
speaking, reading, and writing.
LISTENING: Students listen to and derive meaning from a variety
of foreign language sources.
RATIONALE: Students listen to comprehend information spoken in a
foreign language. In order to meet this standard, a student
will:
• recognize common expressions;
• obtain meaning from diverse listening sources;
• demonstrate comprehension through appropriate responses; and
• engage in a variety of listening situations.
Grades 9-12 of a Foreign Language Program - As students
at the advanced level extend their knowledge, what they know and
are able to do includes:
• deriving meaning through context, intonation, and situations
from listening sources including conversations, lectures,
authentic videos, films, and recordings; and
• obtaining and processing information by selecting,
categorizing, and analyzing from these sources. For students
extending their foreign language education, what they know and
are able to do may include
• processing information by organizing, synthesizing, and
evaluating from all types of authentic listening sources;
• integrating listening skills by interacting and/or
participating with members of the community in various
professions who use the foreign language; and
• using listening skills to interact culturally with peers
and/or others in the foreign language.
71.2 SPEAKING:
Students speak in the foreign language for a variety of purposes
and for diverse audiences.
RATIONALE The ability to speak other languages allows students
to communicate with people from various cultures. In order to
meet this standard, a student will:
• apply pronunciation rules and intonation patterns;
• use vocabulary, grammatical forms, and structures of the
target language to convey meaning;
• apply knowledge of cultural practices to spoken language;
• express needs, tell stories, obtain and convey information,
explain concepts and procedures, and persuade; and
• interact with speakers of the language in a variety of venues:
personal, business, debate panels, dramatic presentations.
Grades 9-12 of a Foreign Language Program - As students
at the advanced level extend their knowledge, what they know and
are able to do includes:
• applying pronunciation and intonation patterns at a normal
rate of speech;
• making predictions, analyzing, drawing conclusions, and
expressing facts and opinions;
• defining points of view; and
• summarizing and paraphrasing.
For students extending their foreign language education, what
they know and are able to do may include:
• communicating and talking about topics of current, public, and
personal interest; and
• handling complicated tasks such as describing, narrating, and
hypothesizing with increasing accuracy.
81.3 READING:
Students read and derive meaning from a variety of materials
written in a foreign language.
RATIONALE Reading in a foreign language gives students access to
information, and expands their knowledge. This ability provides
students with the opportunity to learn about cultures and the
human experience. In order to meet this standard, students will:
• recognize words, phrases, idiomatic expressions, and
grammatical structures;
• demonstrate comprehension of reading materials written for a
variety of purposes;
• use and apply the information gained from reading; and
• respond to the cultural elements contained in reading
materials of the language.
Grades 9-12 of a Foreign Language Program
As students at the advanced level further extend their
knowledge, what they know and are able to do includes:
•analyzing and synthesizing reading materials;
•recognizing the author's point of view and purpose;
•expressing personal reactions to reading materials; and
•interpreting cultural elements found in reading materials.
For students extending their foreign language education, what
they know and are able to do may include:
• using literary terminology accurately including setting,
character, conflict, plot, resolution, and theme; and
• responding to and discussing a variety of authentic texts.
91.4 WRITING:
Students write in a foreign language for a variety of purposes
and for diverse audiences.
RATIONALE Writing allows students to express themselves, to
communicate with others, and to document ideas in a foreign
language. In order to meet this standard, students will:
• write for purposes such as relating personal experiences,
obtaining and conveying information, explaining ideas and
opinions, and persuading;
• write for audiences such as peers, teachers, community
members, and people from other countries;
• plan, draft, revise, proofread, and edit written
communications;•use correct grammar, sentence structure,
vocabulary, spelling, punctuation, and capitalization to convey
meaning; and
• use legible handwriting and/or word processing.
Grades 9-12 of a Foreign Language Program - As students
at the advanced level further extend their knowledge, what they
know and are able to do includes:
• analyzing and drawing conclusions;
• incorporating information from foreign language resource
materials in their writing;
• selecting and expressing ideas and opinions on topics from
various content areas; and
• using specialized vocabulary and more advanced grammatical
structures.
For students extending their foreign language education, what
they know and are able to do may include:
• writing business letters and/or advertisements;
• using writing skills to analyze, persuade and hypothesize with
increasing accuracy; and
• writing creative poetry and short stories.
STANDARD 2:
Students acquire and use knowledge of cultures while developing
foreign language skills.
RATIONALE Language learners are culture learners as well.
Students need to develop an understanding of the cultures in
which the language is spoken and the ability to function in an
appropriate manner. In order to meet this standard, students
will:
• demonstrate knowledge of aspects of foreign cultures such as
daily life, education, history, geography, government,
economics, and the arts;
• apply knowledge of cultural practices when communicating in a
foreign language; and
• use the foreign language to access cultural information
available only in that language.
Grades 9-12 of a Foreign Language Program - As students
at the advanced level further extend their knowledge, what they
know and are able to do includes:
• analyzing aspects of the cultures being studied, such as
social and political institutions and laws;
• functioning in a culturally appropriate manner, through
speaking and writing, in complex social and/or work situations;
and
• researching a topic of interest using sources from the
cultures being studied. |