Lesson 15: Application Lab – Integrating All Code Knowledge
🎯 Learning Objectives
- Apply phonics, morphology, and fluency strategies independently across literacy centres
- Collaborate to create meaningful texts connected to current inquiry themes
- Evaluate personal literacy growth using evidence collected throughout the unit
- Provide peer feedback using success criteria aligned with structured literacy goals
- Celebrate bilingual and cultural knowledge within literacy tasks
📦 Materials & Prep
Teacher Toolkit:
- Station instruction cards & rotation timer
- Word cards (diphthongs, multisyllabic, morphology)
- Fluency scripts & recording devices
- Project planning templates (“Design a Decodable”, “Create a Whānau Guide”)
- Peer feedback checklists & celebration stickers
- Week 6 resource pack (centre briefs, morphology cards, pānui, teacher notes)
Student Packs:
- Literacy Passport (updated with Lesson 15 goals)
- Centre-specific resource bins (manipulatives, file folders, clipboards)
- Reflection journals or Google Slides template
- Headphones/microphones for fluency recording
- Te reo Māori word bank cards
Prep Tip: Set up four learning zones with clear signage; embed QR codes linking to exemplar videos or audio.
Literacy Centre Rotations (4 x 9 minutes + 3-minute transition)
1. Code Architects – Build a Decodable
- Use word/pattern cards to design a short decodable story for younger ākonga (70–90 words).
- Highlight target patterns (e.g., ou/ow, multisyllabic words) and write comprehension questions.
- Optional: record audio narration with expression.
2. Fluency Studio – Performance & Feedback
- Perform selected text (reader’s theatre, persuasive excerpt, or bilingual poem).
- Partners use fluency rubric to provide warm/ cool feedback.
- Upload best clip to class portfolio to share with whānau.
3. Morphology Makers – Word Webs
- Choose a root word (e.g., struct, mana) and build a mind-map of related words.
- Define each word, illustrate, and create bilingual sentences where possible.
- Share how morphology unlocks meaning in academic texts.
4. Comprehension Collaboratory – Inquiry Texts
- Read short articles linked to current kaupapa (e.g., climate action, local iwi histories).
- Apply Stop/Think/Fix and summarise key points using a story map or infographic.
- Prepare one inquiry question to carry into the final assessment.
Reflection Circle (8 minutes)
- Gather in circle; each student shares one success and one challenge from centres.
- Use sentence starters “I applied…” / “Next time I will…” / “I felt proud when…”
- Update Literacy Passport with evidence (photo, audio link, peer feedback).
- Close with karakia of thanks acknowledging collective mahi.
Assessment, Differentiation & Next Steps
📊 Evidence Collection
- Collect decodable drafts, fluency rubrics, morphology webs, and comprehension summaries.
- Note students ready for final assessment vs those requiring reteach.
- Record anecdotal observations in progress tracker (accuracy, fluency, vocabulary, application).
🌈 Differentiation
Awhina (Support):
- Assign peer buddies as “code coaches”.
- Provide simplified tasks with picture support.
- Offer teacher-led mini station for targeted practice.
- Use whisper phones and sentence stems for reflections.
Wero (Extension):
- Design a bilingual infographic teaching a syllable type.
- Write a short speech advocating for literacy support in the community.
- Lead a mini-workshop for classmates on a strategy they’ve mastered.
- Curate a playlist of audio readings with commentary on expression choices.
🔮 Next Steps
- Final lesson (16) = celebration & summative assessment. Prepare portfolios and certificates.
- Compile student evidence into the Literacy Viewer for data sharing with kaiako/whānau.
- Plan reteach sessions based on centre evidence before final assessment.