Wisconsin Standards for World Languages | FL4K’s Alignment with Wisconsin Standards for World Languages |
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Wisconsin: The Wisconsin Standards for World Languages are strategically aligned with the national World-Readiness Standards for Learning Languages (The National Standards Collaborative Board, 2015). The national World- Readiness Standards target five goal areas, the “Five Cs” of Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, and Communities. These goal areas are complemented by Can-Do Statements that articulate learner progress with interpretive, interpersonal, presentational, and intercultural communication. Wisconsin standards are divided into these competency categories: Communication Cultural and Global Competencies:
| FL4K: Is designed to align with the NCSSFL-ACTFL guidelines for world language instruction. FL4K provides opportunities to compare, connect, and communicate through cultural contexts using authentic resources and offers ideas for teachers and students on how to interact with local and international communities. FL4K fosters an acquisition process with proficiency targets that lead to a student feeling comfortable and confident with the target language, with the goal of reaching a Novice-High or higher level of proficiency. Provides an engaging and fun language acquisition and intercultural awareness program possible for today’s student so that they can communicate naturally and spontaneously, including Interpretive, Interpersonal, and Presentational skillbuilding with a complete video program interwoven with an intercultural curriculum, reading program, hands-on activities, online practice questions, and games specifically designed to build oral proficiency |
Wisconsin: Standard 1: Interpretive Communication (IT) Students will use the language and cultural knowledge to interpret, analyze, and demonstrate understanding of authentic speech, texts, media, or signed language on topics relevant to their lives and broader communities. | FL4K: Students will reach an intermediate-low level by the end of the program units and be able to:
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Wisconsin: Standard 2: Interpersonal Communication (IP) Students use the target language and cultural knowledge to negotiate meaning through the exchange of information, ideas, reactions, feelings, and opinions in spoken, written, or signed interactions relevant to their lives and broader communities. | FL4K:
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Wisconsin: Standard 3: Presentational Communication (PS) Students use the target language and cultural knowledge to present information, concepts, and ideas on topics of relevance to their lives and broader communities to inform, explain, persuade, and narrate for diverse audiences within and beyond the learning environment. | FL4K: Learners will present (writing and speaking) information, concepts, and ideas to inform, explain, persuade, and narrate on a variety of topics using appropriate media and adapting to various audiences of listeners, readers, or viewers. Learners will be able to:
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Wisconsin Cultural and Global Competence: Standard 4: Intercultural Communication (IC) Students use the target language and cultural knowledge to investigate, compare, explain, interact, and reflect on the relationships between the products, practices, and perspectives of diverse and dynamic cultures within their local and global communities. Cultures: Use the target language to investigate, explain, and reflect on the relationship between the practices, products, and perspectives of cultures studied. The student can:
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Wisconsin: Connections: Build, reinforce, and expand knowledge of other content areas and evaluate information and diverse perspectives while using the target language to develop critical thinking and creative problem solving. The student can:
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Wisconsin: Comparisons: Standard 5: Global Competence and Community Engagement (GCE)— Students use the target language and cultural knowledge to investigate the world, recognize diverse perspectives, interact, and exchange ideas with people from diverse backgrounds, and engage with others to improve conditions within their local and global communities. | FL4K:
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Wisconsin: Communities: Students set goals and reflect on their use of language and intercultural skills to maximize life-long learning, personal enrichment, and benefit to self and community. The student can:
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Wisconsin: Wisconsin state standards include proficiency benchmarks for interpretive, interpersonal, and presentational modes of communication from the NCSSFL-ACTFL Can-Do Statements (NCSSFL-ACTFL, 2017) (National Council of State Supervisors for Languages and American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages). The NCSSFL-ACTFL Can-Do Statements performance indicators are used, with minor stylistic edits focused on student performance, for Wisconsin Standards one through four. Proficiency benchmarks for intercultural investigation are original to Wisconsin, and the benchmarks for intercultural interaction are adopted from the NCSSFLACTFL Can-Do Statements | FL4K: Offers Can-Do Statements with built-in recording features for students to provide evidence of what they can do as they progress on a continuum of proficiency according to skill in an interwoven language and culture program with a multi-level intercultural curriculum for differentiation including heritage speakers FL4K is aligned to the NCSSFL-ACTFL Can-Do Statements performance indicators. |
Wisconsin: Standards lead to the Seal of Biliteracy Achievement. https://dpi.wi.gov/english-learners/wi-seal-of-biliteracy | FL4K: Mirrors the format for the national tests used for the Seal of Biliteracy to provide a comfort level from the lowest level to the intermediate level. The objective for learning is to scaffold language in context as students achieve higher proficiency levels in each mode. Feedback to students is personalized. Student content can easily be differentiated for learner needs. |