Elementary Literacy Framework
Mission
We will ensure student success through engaging learning experiences, collaborative leadership, and a focus on maximizing student achievement.
Vision
GPISD is a learning community committed to student academic growth, innovation, and equity for all.
Literacy Vision
GPISD is where each child has the capacity and curiosity to become an analytical reader, skilled writer, and thoughtful communicator through exposure to rigorous texts and thought-provoking academic tasks. Using research and best practices to ground our work, we will prepare all stakeholders: scholars, educators, leaders, instructional coaches, and families to work together to support our students’ growth in literacy.
The Instructional Core
The Instructional Core (Elmore, 2009; Harvard Graduate School of Education, 2023) provides three elements for quality instruction: Effective Teaching, Rigorous Content, and Student Engagement. The elements of the Instructional Core work together to improve student learning and provide a structure to continuously improve literacy practices.
Effective Teaching
Daily instruction is systematic and explicit and includes rigorous, on-grade level content. Small groups, student goals, and conferencing offer differentiated support based on student needs to accelerate grade-level content and/or intervene to close gaps. The foundation skills for literacy (print concepts, phonological awareness, phonics/word recognition, fluency, and encoding/writing) are explicitly taught. Instructional decisions are based on data. Literacy instruction is diverse and language-rich, including reading, writing, listening, and speaking.
Rigorous Content
All students will experience rigorous, on-grade-level literacy content. Reading includes authentic texts that are relevant, relatable, cross-curricular, and multi-genre (fiction, drama, poetry, literary nonfiction, informational, argumentative, persuasive, and correspondence). Teachers cultivate background knowledge and an understanding of content across genres. Common assessments are designed to measure student performance and growth on the TEKS using higher-level questioning. Independent reading and writing are practiced daily, with teacher feedback.
Student Engagement
Teachers create literacy communities through diverse classroom libraries that promote a love and passion for reading–including the cultures and communities of children in the classroom and school. Teachers provide students with choice, motivation, encouragement, and time to apply literacy practices independently.
Authentic reading and writing opportunities maintain student interest. Students are challenged to lead conversations, work in groups, and respond to open-ended questions.
Instructional Principles
The Instructional Principles for Literacy at Grand Prairie ISD are grounded in the Science of Reading and are used daily in service of supporting all students in becoming skilled readers and writers.
Foundational Skills |
Students in Grades K-3 will be taught Foundational Skills through an explicit and systematic approach, including print concepts, phonological awareness, phonics/word recognition, fluency, and encoding/writing. Teachers will provide students with the skill-aligned practice that is both in and out of context. Students in Grades 4-5 will continue this work through purposeful vocabulary development and differentiated supports to become fluent readers and writers. |
Text Complexity |
Students will engage with grade-level texts that are appropriately complex, rigorous, and culturally relevant. Complex texts are those that provide students with worthy opportunities to work with new language, knowledge, and ways of thinking. They are worth the time spent reading, writing, talking, and thinking about. |
Knowledge Coherence |
Content matters! Background knowledge is essential for success as learners and critical thinkers, and it plays a critical role in reading comprehension. Students will be given multiple opportunities to learn the context and background knowledge to support their meaningful understanding of the text they are reading. |
Text-Based Responses |
Writing about what you read and speaking about what you heard strengthens comprehension. Students will receive explicit writing instruction embedded within the curriculum and grounded in their learning content. By grounding discussion in the text, all students can engage and actively participate. Students are consistently given feedback on their writing by their peers and teachers. |
Stakeholder Commitments
Our students’ literacy learning experiences do not start and end at the school doors. Working together as a community, all Grand Prairie stakeholders (scholars, educators, leaders, instructional coaches, and families) will support our learners to become strong and confident readers. These are the commitments that we will hold each other accountable to:
Scholars |
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Educators |
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Leaders |
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Instructional Coaches |
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Families |
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