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Reflecting on Your Language Use

META
EnglishEnglish Thinking|Ages 10—11|ID: mt_haNr13NIuN

Reflect on yourself as a language user — how your reading, writing, and speaking shift across audiences, purposes, and contexts, and where you want to develop further

Mastery Evidence

  • metalinguistic awareness development
  • register and audience awareness research

Assessment Prompt

“Does [child] notice how they communicate differently in different situations — writing for school versus texting a friend, or speaking in a debate versus chatting at home — and can they explain why those differences matter?”

Prerequisites3

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  • Knowing What You Don't Know soft

    Reflecting on yourself as a language user includes awareness of your vocabulary range and gaps across different registers and contexts

    • Inference vs Explicit Meaning soft

      Monitoring vocabulary gaps requires distinguishing what you genuinely understand from what you have inferred or assumed — the same literal/inferred awareness applied to word knowledge

      • Teaching It Back soft

        Distinguishing literal from inferred requires being able to articulate your own understanding clearly enough to examine its source

      • Monitoring Comprehension hard

        Distinguishing literal from inferred requires first being able to monitor whether you have actually understood — you must notice comprehension before you can interrogate its source

        • Feeling of not understanding soft

          Noticing the decoding/understanding gap is the English-specific form of the universal comprehension-monitoring habit

          • Asking for Help hard

            Noticing confusion and acting on it requires already knowing that asking for help is a valid response to being stuck

        • Reading for Meaning hard

          Noticing the gap between decoding and understanding requires first having the foundational idea that reading means making meaning

          • Feeling of not understanding soft

            Understanding that reading means making meaning is the English-domain grounding of the universal habit of noticing when you don't understand

            • Asking for Help hard

              Noticing confusion and acting on it requires already knowing that asking for help is a valid response to being stuck

    • Learning from Mistakes soft

      Monitoring vocabulary gaps is a form of error and gap analysis — the same habit of investigating what you don't fully know applied to word knowledge

      • Checking Your Own Work soft

        Investigating why something was wrong grows from the earlier habit of checking whether an answer seems right

      • Trying a New Approach hard

        Error analysis requires the habit of trying different approaches — you need to have tried something before you can analyse what went wrong

        • Feeling of not understanding hard

          Strategy switching is triggered by noticing the current approach isn't working — requires comprehension monitoring

          • Asking for Help hard

            Noticing confusion and acting on it requires already knowing that asking for help is a valid response to being stuck

        • Planning a Task hard

          Switching strategy requires first having made a plan — you can only switch away from something you chose deliberately

          • Checking Your Own Work hard

            Planning before a task grows from the habit of checking back after finishing — both are self-regulatory bookends

  • Reviewing Own Writing hard

    Reflecting on yourself as a language user across contexts requires first having evaluated your writing in specific contexts — the general self-awareness builds from specific evaluations

    • Author's word choices hard

      Evaluating whether your own writing creates an intended effect requires first understanding how authors' choices create effects on readers — reading like a writer before writing like a reader

      • Connecting New & Old Ideas soft

        Recognising how authorial choices create effects requires connecting your reading experience to existing knowledge of how language and texts work

        • Thinking Before Starting hard

          Making connections between new and old ideas requires the habit of activating prior knowledge first

          • Persisting When It's Hard hard

            Activating prior knowledge requires the foundational habit of persistent engagement with new material

      • Monitoring Comprehension hard

        Recognising authorial effects requires reading for meaning rather than just decoding — you can only notice the effect of a word choice if you are genuinely engaging with meaning

        • Feeling of not understanding soft

          Noticing the decoding/understanding gap is the English-specific form of the universal comprehension-monitoring habit

          • Asking for Help hard

            Noticing confusion and acting on it requires already knowing that asking for help is a valid response to being stuck

        • Reading for Meaning hard

          Noticing the gap between decoding and understanding requires first having the foundational idea that reading means making meaning

          • Feeling of not understanding soft

            Understanding that reading means making meaning is the English-domain grounding of the universal habit of noticing when you don't understand

            • Asking for Help hard

              Noticing confusion and acting on it requires already knowing that asking for help is a valid response to being stuck

    • Understanding Why soft

      Evaluating whether your writing works requires asking 'why does this passage succeed or fail?' — the elaborative-interrogation habit applied to your own text

      • Teaching It Back hard

        Asking 'why does this work?' requires first being able to explain what you know — interrogation builds on explanation

  • Reflecting After Learning soft

    Reflecting on yourself as a language user is the English-domain form of the universal learning-reflection habit

    • Teaching It Back soft

      Articulating what helped in the learning process requires the self-explanation habit

    • Learning from Mistakes hard

      Reflecting on the learning process requires the ability to analyse errors — reflection without error analysis stays superficial

      • Checking Your Own Work soft

        Investigating why something was wrong grows from the earlier habit of checking whether an answer seems right

      • Trying a New Approach hard

        Error analysis requires the habit of trying different approaches — you need to have tried something before you can analyse what went wrong

        • Feeling of not understanding hard

          Strategy switching is triggered by noticing the current approach isn't working — requires comprehension monitoring

          • Asking for Help hard

            Noticing confusion and acting on it requires already knowing that asking for help is a valid response to being stuck

        • Planning a Task hard

          Switching strategy requires first having made a plan — you can only switch away from something you chose deliberately

          • Checking Your Own Work hard

            Planning before a task grows from the habit of checking back after finishing — both are self-regulatory bookends

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