
ENL1W - English
Department
English
Development Date
2007
Course Title
English
Grade
09
Ministry Course Code
ENL1W
Prerequisite
None
Course Developer
The Educators Academy
Revision Date
2025
Course Reviser
The Educators Academy
Course Type
De-Streamed
Credit Value
01
Ministry Curriculum Policy Document
The Ontario Curriculum, Grade 9 2023 (Revised)
Overall Curriculum Expectations
- Literacy Connections and Applications
- Foundations of Language
- Comprehension: Understanding and Responding to Texts
- Composition: Expressing Ideas and Creating Texts
- A1. Transferable Skills:
Demonstrate an understanding of how the seven transferable skills (critical thinking and problem solving, innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship, self-directed learning, collaboration, communication, global citizenship and sustainability, and digital literacy) are used in various language and literacy contexts. - A2. Digital Media Literacy:
Demonstrate and apply the knowledge and skills needed to interact safely and responsibly in online environments, use digital and media tools to construct knowledge, and demonstrate learning as critical consumers and creators of media. - A3. Applications, Connections, and Contributions:
Apply language and literacy skills in cross-curricular and integrated learning, and demonstrate an understanding of, and make connections to, diverse voices, experiences, perspectives, histories, and contributions, including those of First Nations, Métis, and Inuit individuals, communities, groups, and nations.
- B1. Oral and Non-Verbal Communication:
Apply listening, speaking, and non-verbal communication skills and strategies to understand and communicate meaning in formal and informal contexts and for various purposes and audiences. - B2. Language Foundations for Reading and Writing:
Demonstrate an understanding of foundational language knowledge and skills, and apply this understanding when reading and writing. - B3. Language Conventions for Reading and Writing:
Demonstrate an understanding of sentence structure, grammar, cohesive ties, and capitalization and punctuation, and apply this knowledge when reading and writing sentences, paragraphs, and a variety of texts.
- C1. Knowledge about Texts:
Apply foundational knowledge and skills to understand a variety of texts, including digital and media texts, by creators with diverse identities, perspectives, and experience, and demonstrate an understanding of the patterns, features, and elements of style associated with various text forms and genres. - C2. Comprehension Strategies:
Apply comprehension strategies before, during, and after reading, listening to, and viewing a variety of texts, including digital and media texts, by creators with diverse identities, perspectives, and experience, in order to understand and clarify the meaning of texts. - C3. Critical Thinking in Literacy:
Apply critical thinking skills to deepen understanding of texts, and analyze how various perspectives and topics are communicated and addressed in a variety of texts, including digital, media, and cultural texts.
- D1. Developing Ideas and Organizing Content:
Plan, develop ideas, gather information, and organize content for creating texts of various forms, including digital and media texts, on a variety of topics. - D2. Creating Texts:
Apply knowledge and understanding of various text forms and genres to create, revise, edit, and proofread their own texts, using a variety of media, tools, and strategies, and reflect critically on created texts. - D3. Publishing, Presenting, and Reflecting:
Select suitable and effective media, techniques, and tools to publish and present final texts, and critically analyze how well the texts address various topics.
Unit Outline
Units
Titles
Approx. Time
1
27 Hours
2
Novel Study
27 Hours
3
Anthology
27 Hours
4
Drama and Media Studies
27 Hours
5
Final Examination
2 Hours
Total
110 Hours
Unit Description
- Unit 1: Youth Power (27 Hours)
- Unit 2: Novel Study (27 Hours)
- Unit 3: Anthology (27 Hours)
- Unit 4: Drama and Media Studies (27 Hours)
Unit 1: Youth Power (27 Hours)
This unit focuses on the development and understanding of active listening skills, good note-taking, planning an effective presentation, and speaking skills and vocal strategies. Students will listen to, and critically engage with a variety of lectures and presentations. Students will also plan, prepare, and deliver their own oral presentation in video format.Unit 2: Novel Study (27 Hours)
A diverse collection of poetry and short stories provides students with the opportunity to read a wide variety of texts and to explore, discuss, and write about different text features and stylistic elements.Unit 3: Anthology (27 Hours)
There are two novels to choose from in this unit. On reading a longer work of fiction students will bring several reading and writing skills to their assignments. The novels are presented in the following ways: students are asked to read the novel in sections. In each section students are provided with some comments on the characters and details from the plot. The notes will comment on the main characters as students get to know them. Because the novel contains some difficult vocabulary, definitions for words students may not know are provided. Each section of the novel will contain an idea from the novel to write about and submit to the teacher for evaluation.Unit 4: Drama and Media Studies (27 Hours)
Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night (both the play and modern productions) acts as starting points into exploration of modern situation comedy formulas, timeless humour, script adaptation, target audience, casting, and advertising. Students will complete a number of assignments by focusing on the theme of adapting Twelfth Night for a modern television audience.Program Considerations
- Assessment and Evaluation
- Teaching & Learning Strategies
Assessemnt & Evaluation
The primary purpose of assessment and evaluation is to improve student learning. Information gathered through assessment helps teachers to determine students’ strengths and weaknesses in their achievement of the curriculum expectations in each course. This information also serves to guide teachers in adapting curriculum and instructional approaches to students’ needs and in assessing the overall effectiveness of programs and classroom practices.
For assessment and evaluation, we follow the Ministry of Education's Growing Success document, and by doing so will benefit the students both in the present and future. We designed assessments in such a way as to make it possible to gather and show evidence of learning in a variety of ways to gradually release responsibility to the students, and to give multiple and varied opportunities to reflect on learning and receive detailed feedback.
Assessment and evaluation will be based on the provincial curriculum expectations and the achievement levels outlined in this document. Growing Success articulates the vision the Ministry has for the purpose and structure of assessment and evaluation techniques.
In order to ensure that assessment and evaluation are valid and reliable and that they lead to the improvement of students’ learning, The Educators Academy’s assessment and evaluation strategies focus on:
- i. Address both what students learn and how well they learn.
- ii. Are varied in nature, administered over a period of time, and designed to provide opportunities for students to demonstrate the full range of their learning.
- iii. Are appropriate for the learning activities used, the purposes of instruction, and the needs and experiences of the students.
- iv. Are fair to all students.
- v. Accommodate students with special education needs, consistent with the strategies outlined in their Individual Education Plan and those who are learning the language of instruction (English or French).
- vi. Ensure that each student is given clear directions for improvement.
- vii. Promote students’ ability to assess their own learning and to set specific goals.
- viii. Include the use of samples of students’ work that provide evidence of their achievement.
- ix. Are communicated clearly to students and parents at the beginning of the school year and at other appropriate points (Parent Teacher Nights) throughout the school year.
The overall expectations are broad in nature, and the specific expectations define the particular content or scope of the knowledge and skills referred to in the overall expectations. Our teachers use their professional judgment to determine which specific expectations should be used to evaluate achievement of the overall expectations, and which ones will be covered in instruction and assessment (e.g., through direct observation) but not necessarily evaluated.
The assessment and evaluation strategy include diagnostic, formative and summative within the course and within each unit.
Assessment Strands:
The Educators Academy will ensure that student work is assessed and/or evaluated in a balanced manner with respect to the four categories, and that achievement of particular expectations is considered within the appropriate categories.
The purpose of the achievement chart is to:
- provide a common framework that encompasses the curriculum expectations for all courses outlined in this document;
- guide the development of quality assessment tasks and tools (including rubrics);
- help teachers to plan instruction for learning;
- assist teachers in providing meaningful feedback to students;
- provide various categories and criteria with which to assess and evaluate student learning.
Evaluation and Reporting of Students' Achievements by Report Cards
Student achievement is communicated formally to students and parents by means of the Provincial Report Card. The report card provides a record of the student's achievement of the curriculum expectations in every course, at particular points in the school year or semester, in the form of a percentage grade. Report cards are issued upon completion of the course. Each report card will focus on related aspects of student achievement. The percentage grade will represent the quality of the student's overall achievement of the expectations for the course and will reflect the corresponding level of achievement. The Educators Academy will record a final grade for every course, and a credit is granted for the course in which the student's grade is 50% or higher.
- Seventy per cent of the grade will be based on evaluations conducted throughout the course. This portion of the grade should reflect the student's most consistent level of achievement throughout the course, although special consideration should be given to more recent evidence of achievement.
- Thirty per cent of the grade will be based on a final evaluation in the form of an examination, performance, essay, and/or other method of evaluation suitable to the course content and administered towards the end of the course.
Final Assessment and Evaluation = 100%
The teacher will also provide written comments concerning the student's strengths, areas for improvement, and next steps (E–Excellent, G–Good, S–Satisfactory, N–Needs Improvement). The report card will indicate whether an OSSD credit has been earned or not. Upon completion of a course, The Educators Academy will send a copy of the report card back to the student's home school where the course will be added to the ongoing list of courses on the student's Ontario Student Transcript. The report card will also be sent to the student's home address for parents' communication.
Teaching & Learning Strategies
Students are exposed to a variety of genres throughout the course and develop skills to analyze and evaluate the effectiveness of texts which may include poems, short stories, novels, non-fiction texts, plays, videos, and songs or other media texts from a wide range of cultures and time periods. Students identify and use various strategies including building vocabulary, learning to understand and use features and organization of texts, and developing knowledge of conventions. Throughout the course, students develop into stronger readers, writers, and oral communicators while making connections to the workplace and international events.
High-quality instructions for English Curriculum will include the following:
- i. Instruction that is guided by formative assessment that takes into consideration students’ strengths and addresses their learning needs.
- ii. Instructions that clarify the purpose for learning and helps students activate prior knowledge.
- iii. Instruction that is differentiated to meet individual and small group needs.
- iv. Instruction that models learning strategies and encourages students to talk and reflect on their thinking and learning processes.
- v. Instruction that introduces a rich variety of activities that integrate expectations and provides explicit teaching of knowledge and skills.
- vi. Instruction that provides opportunities for guided and independent practice.
- vii. Instruction that encourages higher-level thinking skills (analysis, synthesis, evaluation).
- viii. Instruction that encourages students to think about fairness, equity, social justice, and citizenship in a global society.
- ix. Presentation
- x. Inquiry Teaching
- xi. Discovery Method Concept Teaching
- xii. Demonstration
- xiii. Direct Instruction
- xiv. Cooperative Learning Classroom Discussion
- xv. Journal Writing
- xvi. Portfolios and Narrative Description
- xvii. Reading Response
- xviii. Creative Writing