Apr 25, 2024  
2021-2022 Cal State East Bay Catalog 
    
2021-2022 Cal State East Bay Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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TED 664 - Literacy Intervention


Units: 3
Review research; assess, instruct and provide intervention for each component of research-based literacy instruction; modify the curriculum to address specific needs of students; interpret and use assessment data to inform placement and intervention decisions.

Prerequisites: TED 663 with grade B- or better.
Possible Instructional Methods: Entirely On-ground, or Entirely Online, or Hybrid.
Grading: A-F grading only.
Student Learning Outcomes - Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
  1. Think critically and creatively and apply analytic and quantitative reasoning to address complex challenges and everyday problems (ILO).
  2. Communicate ideas, perspectives, and values clearly and persuasively while listening openly to others (ILO).
  3. Apply knowledge of diversity and multicultural competencies to promote equity and social justice in our communities (ILO).
  4. Work collaboratively and respectfully as members and leaders of diverse teams and communities (ILO).
  5. Demonstrate expertise and integration of ideas, methods, theory, and practice in specialized discipline of study (ILO).
  6. Possess the knowledge, abilities, dispositions to act responsibly and sustainably in their personal and professional life to help build a sustainable future that ensures environmental integrity, economic vitality, and a just society for present and future generations (ILO).
  7. Demonstrate knowledge, skills, and dispositions aligned with professional standards to implement universal design and research-based programs to achieve equitable learning outcomes (UAO).
  8. Demonstrate the ability to create environments, systems, and practices in which all individuals are treated with respect, dignity, trust, and fairness (UAO).  
  9. Work collaboratively with students, parents, and professional colleagues to achieve equitable learning outcomes and equitable environments (UAO).
  10. Candidates preparing to work in schools as teachers or other school professionals know and demonstrate the content knowledge, pedagogical content knowledge and skills, pedagogical and professional knowledge and skills, and professional dispositions necessary to help all students learn (UAO).
  11. Assessments indicate that candidates meet professional, state, and institutional standards (UAO).
  12. Demonstrate a thorough understanding of theory and research on an effective culture of literacy for diverse prekindergarten through high school students, their families, and communities (SLO).
  13. Demonstrate knowledge of research-based instructional practices in each component of literacy and the ability to assess, instruct, and provide intervention for each component of literacy instruction, including phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, oral language development, reading and listening comprehension, and vocabulary development, and writing (SLO).
  14. Plan and implement successfully a balanced literacy environment, including the selection and use instructional materials, technology, routines, and strategies that are appropriately aligned with students’ assessed language and literacy needs (SLO).
  15. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn how to assess, instruct, and provide intervention, if needed, for each component of research-based literacy instruction, including: oral language development (CTC3.2a).
  16. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn how to assess, instruct, and provide intervention, if needed, for each component of research-based literacy instruction, including: word analysis (1. 3.2b).
  17. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn how to assess, instruct, and provide intervention, if needed, for each component of research-based literacy instruction, including: fluency (3.2c).
  18. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn how to assess, instruct, and provide intervention, if needed, for each component of research-based literacy instruction, including: vocabulary development (3.2d).
  19. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn how to assess, instruct, and provide intervention, if needed, for each component of research-based literacy instruction, including: listening and reading comprehension (3.2e).
  20. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn how to assess, instruct, and provide intervention, if needed, for each component of research-based literacy instruction, including: written language development (3.2f).
  21. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn how and to develop the skills needed to modify curriculum to address the specific needs of diverse groups of students, including but not limited to struggling (3.2g).
  22. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn the normal progression of complexity for each component of literacy, as explicated in the Foundations/Standards and their Frameworks, the expected stages and patterns in students’ development including early and adolescent literacy, the implications of delays or differences in students’ literacy development relative to grade level standards, and when such delays/differences warrant further assessment, differentiated instruction and intervention (3.3).
  23. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn instructional sequences and routines that develop and accelerate students’ language and literacy learning, including RtI2 , and how to maximize students’ literacy development by using the reciprocal relationships among the components of a research-based literacy program (3.4).
  24. The program provides opportunities for candidates to learn methods to assist teachers in using grade level or school-wide assessment data to implement and revise instructional programs and to plan, implement, and evaluate school-wide professional development (3.8).
  25. The program will provide Reading and Literacy Added Authorization candidates with opportunities to evaluate research for appropriateness to the target population, integrate research and practice, and to apply appropriate assessment, instruction, and differentiation in the field (4.1).
  26. Candidates will demonstrate the knowledge, understanding, and application of all elements of the curriculum defined in Curriculum Standards 2 and 3.  Comprehensive experiences will be available for candidates to: interpret results of classroom assessments, including formative, on-going and summative; perform additional assessments as appropriate; implement instructional strategies based on results of the assessment; and monitor and evaluate student (4.3).
  27. The program ensures that candidates work at field sites or clinical settings where the instructional approaches and methods are consistent with a balanced, comprehensive program of reading and literacy instruction (4.4).
  28. Fieldwork must include on-going guidance, assistance, and feedback by the instructor, professor, or other designated, qualified personnel, including Reading and Literacy Leadership Specialist Credential candidates, (in conjunction with the program faculty) to ensure that candidates demonstrate the knowledge and skills identified in Standards 2 and 3 (4.5).
  29. Candidates evaluate the culture of literacy at a classroom, grade or school level, and identify how it supports or impedes students’ literacy development.  Candidates use that information and current research and theories on reading and literacy development, including first and second language development, to develop a plan of action to strengthen the culture so that it better supports literacy learning (5.A1).
  30. Candidates interpret results of disaggregated school-wide assessment data to propose changes in instructional practices through grade and school level discussion and professional development (5.A2).
  31. Candidates use assessment results to guide instruction and to determine the timing of appropriate placement in and exit from intervention programs with the goal of accelerated, successful reentry into grade level standards-based (5.B2).
  32. Candidates plan, implement, and monitor formal literacy instruction that is sequential, linguistically logical, systematic, explicit, differentiated, and based on ongoing formal and informal assessments of individual students’ progress that assures that the full range of learners develop proficiency as quickly and effectively as possible (5.A4) .
  33. Candidates use modeling, massed and distributed practice, and opportunities for application as strategies to facilitate student learning. 
  34. Candidates select and use instructional materials, technology, routines, and strategies that are appropriately aligned with students’ assessed language and literacy needs (5.B3).




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