Four Key Areas of Expertise for Teachers of Literacy
1. Expertise in Systematic Observation and Assessment: Responsive Teaching
Teachers need to be able to observe carefully what students know and are able to do as readers, writers, listeners, talkers, or viewers, and they need to be skilled at using this information to guide teaching. Skilled observers note the precise language and literacy behaviors the child reveals and understand how the behaviors reflect the child’s building of a processing system for literacy. They can use that knowledge to make their next teaching move. Responsive teaching meets the learners where they are and brings them forward with intention and precision.
2. Expertise in Understanding the Reading and Writing Process and How it Changes Over Time: Teaching Toward Competencies
Teachers need to know what proficient reading and writing looks like and sounds like. Through observing effective processing and how it changes over time, teachers build understandings of how readers and writers build a literacy processing system and can teach towards those competencies. This means teaching forward with a clear view of the competencies, and the ability to note changes along the way.
3. Expertise in Understanding the Demands of Texts: Progressive Complexity
When teachers understand the ten characteristics of texts (see spotlight at top right), they can anticipate the demands and provide successive levels of support to each reader in taking on new ways of processing increasingly complex texts. When teachers are able to analyze mentor texts, they can help students learn from effective writers of every genre how to write for a variety of purposes and audiences. Knowledge of texts also enables the expert teacher to use different texts for different purposes.
4. Expertise in Core Instructional Procedures: The Elements of High Impact Teaching
Teachers need to develop expertise in a set of highly effective instructional procedures that can be linked to student learning. The procedures need to reflect elements of high impact teaching such as good pacing, intensity, and transfer. This includes knowing when whole group teaching, small group teaching, or individual teaching is appropriate and effective for the students. This also requires knowledge of the texts that provide the appropriate amount of support and challenge to assure new learning.