Professional Development Programme on
Promoting Reading across the Curriculum (RaC) in the Primary
English Classroom
Dr Simon Chan
The University of Hong Kong
ssychan@hku.hk
Rundown of the workshop
Part 1— Reflection on experience in implementing RaC Part 2 – Introduction to RaC
Part 3 – Cross-subject collaboration
Part 4 – (Demonstrations on) effective strategies to develop students’ reading skills for more in-depth processing of the texts
Reflection on RaC implementation
Discuss the following questions with colleagues around you.
1. What is RaC to you? Why are you interested in it (so that you come to this workshop)?
2. Have you tried doing RaC in your classes? Any successful / not so successful experience to share?
3. What do you want to know (further) about
RaC? What are your expected outcomes of
Part 2 : Introduction to RaC
Two core themes of the workshop
• Reading across the Curriculum (RaC)—What is it and why is it relevant to us as English
Teachers?
• RaC with the use of texts from different sources:
– English textbook texts (Exemplar 1) – authentic texts (Exemplar 2)
– real books (Hands-on task)
RaC and its relevance to ELT
Reading across the Curriculum (RaC)—What is it and why is it relevant to us as English Teachers?
Dual goals:
• To broaden students’ knowledge base, help them connect their learning experiences and provide
opportunities for integrating and applying knowledge and skills developed in different KLAs/subjects (ELE KLA CG, CDC, 2017, p.9)
• To provide opportunities for students to develop a wide range of reading skills, extend learning of the
RaC and its relevance to ELT
In implementing RaC, teachers of the English Language Education KLA are encouraged to:
• identify reading materials in both print and non-print
forms with suitable entry points (e.g. themes, text types, language features and vocabulary) for connecting students’
learning experiences in different KLAs;
• help students develop the reading skills and strategies
necessary for understanding and analysing language use in English texts written for general or academic purposes (e.g.
text structures, rhetorical functions and vocabulary);
RaC and its relevance to ELT
• design reading activities that reinforce students’ ability to integrate the knowledge, skills and learning experiences gained in different KLAs; and
• collaborate with teachers of other KLAs to develop learning activities that provide students with opportunities to
consolidate the knowledge and skills acquired across KLAs, and develop the essential attributes that go beyond
individual subjects or KLAs such as humanistic qualities
Part 3 : Cross-subject Collaboration
Are there any common concepts or skills shared among these subjects?
Chinese Language
Visual
Arts Mathematics
General Studies
English
Language Music
Some common concepts or skills between English Language and other subjects for RaC activities:
• Healthy Eating in English Language and Growth and Health in GS; and
• Making Things in English Language and Art
Making in VA
Possible modes of cross-subject
collaboration with teachers of other KLAs:
• Curriculum mapping, designing and carrying out the cross-curricular learning activities or project work together;
• Teaching the same theme/topic at around the same time;
• Seeking advice on the choice and
appropriateness of reading materials and the
schedule of teaching a certain topic;
Points to note:
• It is important to
– expose students to a variety of text types (e.g. on p. A14, 2017 ELE KLACG) https://www.edb.gov.hk/attachment/en/curriculum-development/kla/eng- edu/Curriculum%20Document/ELE%20KLACG_2017.pdf
– develop students’ awareness of text types, their purposes and characteristics, text features (format & layout) and organisation of information (rhetorical structures)
• Sources of reading materials (print/ non-print), e.g.
– Theme-based Reading - Suggested Book Lists
https://www.edb.gov.hk/en/curriculum-development/4-key-tasks/reading- to-learn/contribution-of-book-titles/index.html
– Book Lists for RaC https://www.edb.gov.hk/en/curriculum-
development/kla/eng-edu/references-resources/RaC/RaCBooklists.html – Bookflix (accessed through the public library web site)
– Epic! web site: https://www.getepic.com/
Example 1 of RaC across subjects
Let’s examine an example of connecting students’ learning experiences in English Language and General Studies:
• Topic: Healthy Eating
• Input:
– Knowledge and skills learnt from English Language - a leaflet
“Eat smart, eat healthy” in a textbook (New Magic, 5A (pp. 24- 25))
– Knowledge and skills learnt from GS – healthy diet, food labels – Relevant books are recommended for students’ extensive
reading.
Task:
Example 2 of RaC across subjects
• Topic: Making things
• Input:
– Knowledge and skills learnt from English Language – A newsletter “Science food fun” in a textbook
(Longman English Leap, 5B (pp. 4-5))
– Knowledge and skills learnt from VA – creating a piece of art work
– Relevant books are recommended for students’
extensive reading.
Part 4 : (Demonstrations on) effective strategies to develop students’
reading skills for more in-depth
processing of the texts
What are those skills?
The lists of language skills and language
development
strategies for KS1-4 are provided in
Appendix 5.
Exemplar 1: RaC with the use of English textbook texts
Sample Teaching Unit on RaC/WaC based on an English textbook text
• Level: Primary 5
• Theme / Topic: Healthy Eating
• Lessons allocated: 8-10 lessons
• Text type: Leaflet
Strategic and complementary use of textbook texts for RaC
Goal:
• Setting and achieving aims of the GE Programme and Reading Workshops for the school-based English
Language curriculum to ensure the development of students’ literacy and critical thinking skills
Means:
• By setting reading tasks based on the appropriate
skills for KS1/KS2 as listed in the curriculum guide for
What do you think about the table-filling task that comes with the textbook text? Discuss the task
with your partner.
Further questions could be set to develop
students’ reading skills
and strategies necessary
for processing the text in a
more in-depth way.
Step 1 (Pre-reading):
“Firing up” the chosen textbook text for the
target students, i.e. identifying the topic and the genre (features) of the text, activating their
schemata for the while-reading stage
Strategic and complementary use of textbook
texts for RaC
Have a quick look at the text for 5 seconds.
What kind of text is it? What make(s) you think so?
Reading skills targeted:
What is the topic of this text?
How do you know?
There are two main parts in this text.
What are they?
Can you guess what is being discussed in
Now read this special version of the text.
Reading skills targeted:
Let’s look at the pictures and the words in the
“Word building” section.
Do you know all of them? Circle them as they appear in the text as quickly as you can.
Raise your hand once you finish.
Reading skills targeted:
Step 2 (While-reading):
Setting reading tasks using textbook information texts with reference to the 2017 ELE KLACG and the English Language Curriculum Guide (P1-P6) (CDC, 2004) and guiding students to accomplish such tasks through purposeful questioning and
Strategic and complementary use of textbook
texts for RaC
While-reading
1. Read lines 4-10. Which of the following is/are TRUE? Change the FALSE one(s) to make
it/them become true.
• David eats fewer snacks than Jenny.
• David does not add any sugar in his drinks.
• David eats the same amount of fruit as Jenny.
• Jenny should eat less sweet food.
What reading skills can we target through the previous item? How can we guide the students to
reach the correct answers?
(Refer to the reading skills for KS2 in ELE KLACG)
• scan a text to locate specific information by using strategies such as looking at
headings and repeated phrases [Key phrases to look for?]
• fewer, more, less, too much, enough etc.
• identify details that support the gist or main ideas [What’s the main idea?]
• Sub-heading and thesis statement:
Text grammar achieved
2. To avoid getting fat, we should not eat too many/too much…
A. noodles and vegetables B. meat and sugar
C. milk and cheese D. fish and bread
Reading skills targeted:
• understand the connection between
ideas [Any clues for connecting meat
3. What does ‘two plus three’ (line 26) refer to? What does it mean to ‘remember two plus three’?
Reading skills targeted:
• read written language in meaningful chunks
• work out the meaning of an unknown word or
expression by using visual clues, context and knowledge of the world [What clues are there to guess the
meaning of the phrase?]
• understand intention, attitudes and feelings conveyed in a text by recognising features such as the choice and use of language [What does the writer want to do with the use of the expression? Look at the second part of
4. Why does the writer present the different food in the form of the ‘food pyramid’?
Reading skills targeted:
• skim a text to obtain a general impression and the gist or main ideas [Which section to be
skimmed?]
• identify details that support the gist or main ideas [What details can we use to infer?]
• work out the meaning of an unknown word or
5. The heading of the text ‘Eat smart, eat healthy’
suggests that the text mainly talks about…
A. eating delicious food B. looking smart
C. doing healthy exercises D. choosing the right food
Reading skills targeted:
• skim a text to obtain a general impression and the gist or main ideas [Any clues for skimming through the text quickly?]
• recognise the format and language features of a variety of text types [How about the sub-headings and
pictures typically found in the leaflet text type?]
Step 3 (Post-reading/Cross-curricular):
Engaging the students with a new task in which they recycle their understanding of the content of the textbook text as well as the grammar and vocabulary items they have noticed/the teacher has highlighted during the reading process
RaC across subjects (Example 1 of Part 3 above)
RaC and Reading to write
An extension to the reading task:
Goal:
• Setting and achieving aims of the writing component of the GE Programme for the school-based English Language curriculum to ensure the development of students’ literacy skills, critical thinking and creativity Means:
• Strategic and complementary use of authentic information texts with reference to students’
learning needs and interests
• Integrating content and language from various
sources of input, using graphic organisers to gather,
Task: You are working in small groups to make some recommendations on some healthy snacks to be sold at the
school’s tuck shop. Read the ‘food labels’ of some snacks and decide which to recommend based on their
health value.
“Reading
some food labels”
From Reading to Writing:
Which is healthy/ier?
Writing some
suggestions for a healthy diet
A Graphic Organiser
“Making suggestions” (oral practice of suggestions written)
- To David? For Ourselves?
For our Class/Schoolmates?
I should eat less
chocolate because it contains a lot of sugar.
We should eat oatmeal because it contains a lot of dietary fibre.
Tips for developing reading to write tasks:
• Teachers can use questioning, feedback and graphic organisers to help students process and write information texts.
– Reading different information texts as “input”:
• “Eat Smart, Eat Healthy”
• Different food labels
– Asking them questions to better understand the
“content” of the information texts
– Using graphic organisers to draft / organise ideas for the writing task
Tips for developing reading to write tasks
• It is important to show students how to use
appropriate formats, conventions and language features in writing information texts.
– Writing task: Give suggestions to your friends on buying healthier snack (chocolate, instant oatmeal, sweet corn).
• Language features:
– The tuck shop should sell ________________. / You should eat ____________.
Food for thoughts:
• How can we plan an RaC teaching unit with textbook texts and theme-related information texts in the GE programme and Reading Workshops?
– Material selection
• How can we make good use of the texts to set meaningful reading and writing tasks, i.e. using reading as input for writing?
– Material adaptation
• The end products for RaC activities could be diversified as long as they provide opportunity for students to recycle what they have learnt across KLAs, i.e. apart from writing tasks, the products could be oral presentations,
production of multimodal texts, projects, performance
An Overview of ‘Genre and Purpose’
Text / Activity Text-type Purpose
“Healthy Lunch”
food labels
“Making suggestions”
leaflet
(information report)
to give information
labels
(information report / description)
to give information about food
suggestion to suggest / advise
Selecting textbook materials for RaC
• The topic “healthy diet / lifestyle” is a very popular topic among primary schools /
teachers.
• It offers an entry point for integrating reading activities into the school-based curriculum as well as other KLAs.
• There is a range of extra resources / materials
/ aids available under this theme.
Adapting textbook materials for RaC
• The text is chosen not just for its teaching value.
It can demonstrate how some “far-from-perfect”
materials can be adapted for use in the classroom using an RaC approach.
• Many of the available textbooks contain examples of
narratives. Although narratives are common and can be used as a good starting point, students also need to
broaden their exposure to non-fiction texts.
• By including RaC texts and activities, teachers can provide their students with a more balanced ‘language diet’.
• This also allows English teachers to start with something
Exemplar 2: RaC with the use of authentic (-like) texts (Example 2 of Part 3 above)
Sample Teaching Unit on RaC based on an authentic(-like) text
• Level: Primary 5/6
• Theme / Topic: Fun things to make
• Lessons allocated: 2-3 lessons
• Text type: Procedural texts
Let’s do things differently this time…
• I’m not going to demonstrate the whole
teaching unit to you, but would engage you in some awareness-raising activities instead,
through which you’ll get some ideas for
planning your own RaC teaching units.
Let’s take a reading challenge first!
I’m going to show you a text for THREE SECONDS
ONLY! Try to read as much of it as you can and see
if you can identify the topic and genre of the text.
• What type of text is it?
• What is its topic?
• How did we identify the above in such a short
time?
• Now read Version 2 of the text (on the handout).
• Is it the same as or different from the previous one?
• If you are to suggest one of
the two versions for your
KS2 learners to read, which
one would you pick? Why?
• Now let’s watch a final version.
• Which of the three
versions would you
use to build an RaC
activity? Why? What
kind(s) of activity is it?
Food for thoughts:
Adopting and adapting authentic texts for RaC:
- Use of multimodal texts to allow the students sense the meanings of the text from different channels
- Integration of texts so that the texts themselves scaffold each other
- Building explicit links between grammar and vocabulary patterns and the meaning functions they serve in
various common RaC genres, i.e. genre-based pedagogy
Discussion:
How does the reading text connect the GE programme with the other subjects?
What can be a cross-curricular learning activity following
Food for thoughts:
Adopting and adapting authentic texts for RaC:
- How about using multimodal texts (even non-print ones) from websites like YouTube and
instructables.com and integrate those with the procedure texts written in academic style on the topic ‘making things’?
A systematic framework for guiding reading and writing texts:
The “Genre Egg” Model (adapted from Rose, 2012)
Genre-Based Pedagogy
What is it and how is it related to RaC?
Part 5 : Hands-on activity
Application Time
Time to apply what we’ve learnt…
Hands-on Task: RaC with the use of real books
1. Get ourselves into groups of 3-4.
2. Design an RaC unit based on the real book assigned to the group, using the suggested template. Make sure there are connections with another subject/KLA (10-15 min)
3. Share our ideas with the fellow groups
(5-10 min)
A few principles for you to consider…
• That the real books are available to local
schools (e.g. class readers, books at the school library or books from the Internet)
• That the themes / topics of the real books can be linked to the other subjects/KLAs
• That the real books can be easily adapted, and
appropriate tasks and activities can be
Some RaC suugestions based on a
reader
How to Have a Green Day
Connecting learning experiences between GE Programme & Reading Workshops (KS2 Module:
Taking care of our earth)
Highlights of the book:
• broad cross-curricular content knowledge that allows students to link their learning experiences from English to General Studies
• students could learn about the text type features of an information book and learn to become an independent reader with the help of glossary
Promoting Values Education through RaC Book title: How to Have a Green Day Author: Jenny Alexander
Publisher: Pearson Education Limited ISBN: 9780582461772
How about building some reading items for developing reading strategies?
Read P.6-7. These are tips on:
A. Eating breakfast B. Watching TV
C. Getting dressed D. Saving electricity
Reading skill targeted: Main ideas
How about building some reading items for developing reading strategies?
Read P.9. Before bottles and jars are recycled, they need to be ___________________.
A. kept in boxes
B. wrapped with old newspapers C. put on breakfast dishes
D. cleaned with water
A wrap up
• Learning and teaching is a dynamic, organic
process. There is no “quick-fix”, or any SINGLE best way.
• However, there are a few principles that we can apply when we select appropriate reading materials to illustrate how RaC tasks can be
designed.
What we have discussed in the workshop
• Principles of RaC—emphasis on content and language integrated learning (CLIL) and identifying common
communicative functions and language patterns in addition to text types
• Selection of texts for building RaC tasks, recommendation of sources of texts, and multimodal resources, e.g.
readers for young learners with authentic information texts such as posters
• Incorporation of RaC texts in the General English
curriculum, with specific foci on the development of
reading skills as well as grammatical and lexical awareness
• Connecting primary students’ learning experiences,