In my first-grade classroom, weve been studying early world civilizations. My students and I have pretended to hop in our time machines and travel backfirst to ancient Mesopotamia, then to ancient Egypt. Weve written our names on clay tablets in cuneiform and learned what it means for a religion to be polytheistic. Weve compared and contrasted early farming systems and places of worship. As I prepared to read aloud another lesson a few days ago, I mentioned to the class that it was the eleventh lesson in the unit of study, prompting widened eyes and a chorus of Already!?
I teach eighteen six- and seven-year olds in a Title I school, where half of the students are low-income, 75% are non-white, and over half are multilingual/English learners or speak another language at home. In my job, Im honored to empower students who schools and society have not always served well. I became a teacher to help end that inequityto close the knowledge gap and ensure that low-income, non-white, and immigrant children receive the tools they need to build a bright future. A growing body of research tells us that a strong base of content knowledge is essential for student growth and success in literacy. We also know that students who come from low-income backgrounds are less likely to come to school possessing the academic background knowledge of their peers, presumably because they have more limited opportunities to come across this type of knowledge at home. For this reason, Im grateful that around a year and a half ago, my district adopted the knowledge-based literacy curriculum CKLA.
Scenes from a knowledge-based curriculum
What does knowledge-based learning look like in practice? Heres one powerful example of how a knowledge-forward lesson helped my students succeed in practicing an important literacy skill. We were reading about Howard Carter, the British archaeologist who wanted to locate Tutenkhamans tomb. The lesson lends itself well to one of our states curriculum standards for the quarter: to make and confirm predictions about nonfiction text. Part one of the Read-Aloud ends on a cliffhanger: After a years-long search with no success, encountering dead ends and tomb robbers, Carter uncovers a hidden door marked with a royal seal.
A prediction, I explained, is a careful guess about what you think might happen, based on the clues you already know. Think about what you know from the story, and predict what Carter might find behind the door. We quickly reviewed some of the main points as I scribed on chart paper: Carter had been searching for Tutenkhamans tomb for six years, pharaohs were often buried with treasure or gold, the door they found was in the last possible place to look in the Valley of the Kings. I handed out papers Id prepared with sentence frames for students to record or dictate their ideas. We hadnt yet spent much time this year explicitly practicing prediction-makingin fact, I wondered how many of my students even knew what the word prediction meantbut I could see the wheels already turning behind most of my students eyes as they wiggled with excitement, envisioning gold, ghosts, King Tuts tomb, or a pile of bones.
Maybe nothing, one studenta six-year-old who speaks primarily Spanish at hometold me with a shrug as I helped him write down his ideas. Maybe the tomb robbers took it all.
How to improve critical thinkingwith knowledge
Even though my students might or might not have been familiar with the literacy skill of making and confirming predictions, the rich and meaty Read-Aloud set them up for success. It was rife with topics of interest to many a six- or seven-year-oldexploration, tomb robbers, golden treasure, mummieswhich kept them engaged. And it included plenty of details through which they could actually draw a meaningful inference about what Carter might have found. I had to explain only once that a prediction should be based on information you already havenot a random guessand every one of my eighteen students successfully generated a plausible idea.
This is the magic of a knowledge-based curriculum. It levels gaps in learning by generating a rich, shared base of content knowledge that supports the development of key literacy skills. My students were successful in plausibly guessing what might happen next in the story because they had a strong grasp of the information about Howard Carter. I might have chosen to teach an entire mini-lesson on prediction-making first and then asked my students to apply the skill to a less thoughtfully selected text, or to an independently selected book on their own, but if they werent already familiar with the topics it covered, my guess is that they would have been far less successful.
The curriculum standards for literacy in both the Common Core and Virginia (my schools state) emphasize critical thinking skills and specific comprehension strategies, such as inferencing, over content knowledge. This is understandable: Students must learn to make meaning of a text in front of them, not just read the words on the page. But as Natalie Wexler puts it, The ability to think critically夷s inextricably linked to how much knowledge you have about the situation at hand (, 39). How could my students make a prediction about a future event in a text if they didnt understand the textual clues they were given in the first place? Especially given that students from low-income homes are likely to possess less background knowledge about the curriculum they will encounter in school, a focus on teaching skills in isolation can contribute to a far-from-level playing field.
Teaching comprehension skills first and then expecting students to apply them is common practice in the method of literacy instruction frequently referred to as balanced literacy. Though the conversation about literacy is, thankfully, moving toward a research-backed approach focused on the Science of Reading, we still have a long way to go. While student teaching during my education masters program less than three years ago, I was encouraged to teach mini-lessons on topics such as finding the main idea and using topic headings to understand, which students would then practice with independently selected texts. This approach is not supported by research as a best practiceand it assumes a shared base of cultural knowledge. In that way, it entrenches inequality by privileging students who may already possess more background knowledge, allowing our most vulnerable learners to fall even further behind.
By contrast, a knowledge-based curriculum creates that base together, giving all students a better chance at success. My own experience confirms the research. CKLA empowers my students to take ownership of their learning, expand their vocabularies, make connections, and passionately engage. I’m grateful to use an evidence-based curriculum designed to ensure that every studentincluding those too often left behind by our schools and other institutionscan learn to read.
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