develop three handouts (one each for kindergarten, first grade, and second/third grade teachers) with strategies for enhancing emergent literacy and developing positive dispositions toward reading and language learning in K–3 children.
Instructions
Before submitting your Assessment, carefully review the rubric. This is the same rubric the assessor will use to evaluate your submission and it provides detailed criteria describing how to achieve or master the Competency. Many students find that understanding the requirements of the Assessment and the rubric criteria help them direct their focus and use their time most productively.
Access the following to complete this Assessment:
Enhancing Emergent Literacy in Kindergarten (Template)
Creating Exciting Literacy Centers in First Grade Classrooms (Template)
Creating Literacy-Rich Libraries in Second Grade and Third Grade Classrooms (Template)
Enhancing Literacy Development and Positive Dispositions Toward Reading and Language Learning
Scenario
You are a mentor teacher in a K–3 school who is committed to implementing effective strategies to enhance literacy development and positive dispositions toward reading and language learning for children in kindergarten through the primary grades. You lead your school’s Early Literacy Committee, which is supporting K–3 teachers with the following literacy initiatives:
Helping kindergarten teachers recognize key signs of emergent literacy and provide independent activities to enhance emergent literacy in kindergartners;
Creating engaging literacy centers for independent activities for literacy development in first grade classrooms;
Creating literacy-rich libraries in second and third grade classrooms;
Promoting positive dispositions toward reading and language learning in K–3 children.
In your role as an early literacy mentor and teacher leader, you have created three templates with guidelines for each literacy initiative that K–3 teachers can complete for their classrooms. You decide to fill in each template to provide a model that you can discuss with teachers at an upcoming K–3 staff meeting. In preparation for the meeting, you