a simple & coherent rubric for teachers and school leaders
all teachers are teachers of literacy
Do your staff see themselves as 'teachers of literacy'?
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All teachers are teachers of literacy, regardless of the year level or subject that they teach.
So let's make it easy for them.
lisa provides one coherent and simple rubric that all teachers across a school or district (kahui) can use to teach literacy in their class(es).​
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Let's explain ...
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Humans are social creatures and communication is important to us.
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People are social creatures.
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We use language to connect with each other.
Writing is one way that we communicate with others if they’re not currently nearby to talk to, or because there’s a lot of information to consider.
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We write to share our thoughts and feelings with others, our audience.
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We write for a purpose … to explain, persuade or narrate a story.
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We use conventions to help others understand us.
why do we write?
purpose
of lisa framework
The purpose of the LISA framework is to …
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helps schools to teach and assess the mechanics of writing across all year levels and learning areas
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support all teachers to be teachers of literacy
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give students a simple rubric for learning to write effectively.
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support learning areas and teachers to adapt the to their unique needs.
how do we write?
01.
PHYSICAL HANDWRITING
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We form shapes (letters, numbers, punctuation symbols) and group them in certain ways. Later in school (and life) we use computers for this.
02.
IDEAS
We share ideas and detailed information about them.
03.
ORGANISATION
We organise (structure) our writing to help readers follow our ideas and understand us.
04.
VARIETY
We use a variety of words and structures that are appropriate to our purpose and audience, to add impact and effect to our writing.
05.
ACCURACY
We spell correctly, and use punctuation and syntax accurately to help others understand our writing.
note:
Good writers also deliberately break conventions to add effect to their writing.
To help students learn how to write more effectively, we break down each convention into ‘sub-conventions’ as follows.
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Physical Handwriting
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Form
We form letters, numbers and punctuation symbols.
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Direction
We write left to right, and top to bottom.
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Spacing
We group letters together to form words, we leave spaces between words and we write across 2 or more lines.
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Ideas
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Ideas
We produce ideas.
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Elaboration
We provide details about our ideas, e.g. facts, examples, or quotes.
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Organisation
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Overall Structure
Writing has a beginning, middle and end.
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Sequence of Ideas
We put our ideas in order to help readers understand and remember them.
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Sentences and Paragraphs
We use sentences and paragraphs to help with our structure.
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Variety
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Vocabulary
We use a variety of words.
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Sentence Variety
We use a variety of sentences.
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Language
We use a variety of language features.
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Tone
We write formally or informally, as appropriate.
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Accuracy
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Spelling
We spell words accurately.
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Punctuation
We use punctuation correctly.
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Syntax
We follow grammatical conventions correctly.
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We change how we write to suit our purpose. In general, there are three different purposes for writing. These are as follows.
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Explain
Writing to inform others. This might be to share information, explain complex ideas, or describe a process or how something worlds.
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Persuade
Writing to persuade others. This may be to get someone to do something, or to get them to agree with the writer about something.
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Narrate
Writing to tell a real or imagined story, experience or event.
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