Ontario Outcome Chart: English - Grade 12 Workplace Preparation This outcome chart contains media education learning outcomes from the Ontario, Curriculum for English, Grade 12, with links to supporting resources on the Media Awareness Network site. It is expected that students will: | Developing and Organizing Content | | Generate, gather, and organize ideas and information to write for an intended purpose and audience - identify the topic, purpose, and audience for a variety of writing tasks
- generate, expand, explore, and focus ideas for potential writing tasks, using a variety of strategies and print, electronic, and other resources, as appropriate
- locate and select information to appropriately support ideas for writing, using a variety of strategies and print, electronic, and other resources, as appropriate
- identify, sort, and order main ideas and supporting details for writing tasks, using a variety of strategies and organizational patterns suited to the content and the purpose for writing
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determine whether the ideas and information gathered are relevant to the topic, accurate, complete, and appropriately meet the requirements of the writing task | Lessons
Magazine Production Scripting a Crime Drama
Images of Learning: Secondary
Sex in Advertising
The Pornography Debate
Don't Drink and Drive: Assessing the Effectiveness of Anti-Drinking Campaigns
Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
ICYouSee: A Lesson in Critical Thinking
Thinking About Hate
Deconstructing Web Pages Activities and Student Handouts Internet Glossary: Authenticating Online Information
5 W's of Cyberspace Backgrounders Evaluating Internet-Based Information: A Goals-Based Approach Evaluating Internet Research Sources
How To Discourage Plagiarism
How to Search the Internet Effectively
Quick Tips for Authenticating Online Information MNet Special Initiatives
Making Your Voice Heard: A Media Toolkit for Youth | | Using Knowledge to Form Style | | Draft and revise their writing, using a variety of informational, literary, and graphic forms and stylistic elements appropriate for the purpose and audience - write for different purposes and audiences, using a variety of literary, graphic, and informational forms
- establish a distinctive voice in their writing, modifying language and tone skilfully to suit the form, audience, and purpose for writing
- use appropriate descriptive and evocative words, phrases, and expressions to make their writing clear, vivid, and interesting for their intended audience
- explain how their own beliefs, values, and experiences are revealed in their writing
- revise drafts to improve the content, organization, clarity, and style of their written work, using a variety of teacher-modelled strategies
- produce revised drafts of texts, including increasingly complex texts, written to meet criteria identified by the teacher, based on the curriculum expectations
| Lessons Don't Drink and Drive: Assessing the Effectiveness of Anti-Drinking Campaigns
Scripting a Crime Drama News is Not Just Black and White:
Diversity Audit
| | Applying Knowledge and Conventions | | Use editing, proofreading, and publishing skills and strategies, and knowledge of language conventions, to correct errors, refine expression, and present their work effectively - proofread and correct their writing, using guidelines developed with the teacher and peers
- use a variety of presentation features, including print and script, fonts, graphics, and layout, to improve the clarity and coherence of their written work and to heighten its appeal for their audience
- produce pieces of published work to meet criteria identified by the teacher, based on the curriculum expectations
| Lessons The Pornography Debate
Don't Drink and Drive: Assessing the Effectiveness of Anti-Drinking Campaigns Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
ICYouSee: A Lesson in Critical Thinking
Activities and Student Handouts Internet Glossary: Authenticating Online Information
5 W's of Cyberspace Backgrounders Evaluating Internet-Based Information: A Goals-Based Approach Evaluating Internet Research Sources
How To Discourage Plagiarism
How to Search the Internet Effectively
Quick Tips for Authenticating Online Information | | Reflecting Skills and Strategies | | Reflect on and identify their strengths as writers, areas for improvement, and the strategies they found most helpful at different stages in the writing process - describe a variety of strategies they used before, during, and after writing, explain which ones they found most helpful, and identify appropriate steps they can take to improve as writers
- identify a variety of skills they have in listening, speaking, reading, viewing, and representing, and explain how these skills help them write more effectively
- select a variety of types of writing that they think most clearly reflect their growth and competence as writers, and explain the reasons for their choice
| MNet Special Initiatives
Making Your Voice Heard: A Media Toolkit for Youth |
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