5. Story retell

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Task details

Name of writing assessment task  Story retell
EAL curriculum level range  A1, A2, BL, B1, B2, CL, C1, C2
Text orientation Imaginative
Task type Extended response

 

 

Task specification

Purpose To assess students’ ability to retell a simple narrative.
Description Students retell a story, in writing and through illustrations, by providing 4 or 6 sequenced illustrations and text in their retelling of the story.
Assumed knowledge and description
  1. Content knowledge: The story should have been read to the students (in big book format) several times on the days prior to the activity.  Students should already be familiar with the setting, key events etc. in the story.
  2. Text type, genre: narrative/retell, use of appropriate structure: orientation/events/resolution
  3. Linguistic structures and features:
    • appropriate use of simple past tense, first person and conjunctions of time
    • use of first person and second pronouns
    • simple subject-verb-object sentences
    • use of sequencers: and then, suddenly etc.
  4. Vocabulary: use of vocabulary from the story, plus additional appropriate vocabulary for retelling the story

 

Learning/teaching context

Language centre/mainstream class Small group
Subject/key curriculum objectives, outcomes   English
Topic/teaching unit  Animals
Assessment conditions
  1. Individual activity
  2. Formal/informal: formal
  3. Time limit: one lesson 
  4. Teacher intervention: limited to response to student request for clarification and encouragement, and how to spell new words
  5. Access to resources: personal dictionaries or wall, classroom dictionaries, word charts
  6. Scaffolding (modelled/guided/independent support): modelled
  7. Accommodations: Students may complete their retell by requesting the teacher to scribe words or sentences for their illustrations, which the student then copies, but not by copying directly from the book.
Notes
  • Select a story with the following characteristics:
    • ‘big book’ format
    • simple story line
    • well illustrated, with illustrations containing additional story elements
    • one or two sentences to a page
    • scope for further elaboration of the story.
  • These kinds of texts are commonly found in early literacy reader sets.
  • Assessment is done on the first draft.
  • Pre-assessment activities can be extended as appropriate for students.

 

Task implementation

STAGE ACTION STEPS
Pre-assessment activity
  • Whole class or small group reading of the story, which students should have heard several times before. Students are encouraged to join in.
  • The students discuss what is happening in the story, and are encouraged to mime the actions in the text. Students can act out the story or retell a page of the story to each other verbally.
  • The teacher asks students to point out individual words in the text, or which can be implied from the illustrations, and writes them on the white board.
  • The teacher then models writing the story in her/his own words. The story is erased before students write their own story.
  • Students can write on a blank sheets of paper OR, if students prefer, give them an A3 sheet of paper.  Show students how to fold their sheet of paper into 4 or 6 boxes. Ensure students understand that they must use a box to write each part of their story.
Assessment activity
  • Students write their retelling of the story, using illustrations to add detail.
Post-assessment activity
  • Students read their story to the teacher, self-correcting their drafts if they note errors or omissions.
  • Students are given time to type a final draft of their story on a computer, print it out and illustrate. The original illustrations can be cut and pasted onto the completed text.

Click here for the unmarked assessment criteria:

An explanation of the purpose, nature and use of criteria sheets is available at 4. Using the assessment criteria.

 

Sample One
Sample Two
Sample Three
Sample Four

Biographical information:

Year: 1

Home language: Vietnamese

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Biographical information:

Year: 1

Home language: Vietnamese

image1

 

Biographical information:

Year: 3

Home language:
image1

 

Biographical information:

Year: 9

Home language: 
image1

 

Purpose and value of task

This task assesses students’ abilities to retell a known story. The story chosen should be engaging, but told mostly through the illustrations so that students are not able to learn the original text verbatim. Well-chosen picture story books give students scope to tell their own story, and to elaborate on what they see in the illustrations. The task elicits narrative and story-telling language, and assesses the ability students have to use linguistic elements common to narrative and storytelling, such as past tense, adverbials of time and use of first- or third-person narration. This task is related to Oral Task 3: Story retell, to TEAL Oral Task 12: Retelling a folk story or legend, and TEAL Writing Task 16: A ghost story.

Contextual information

The students were prepared for the task by listening to the story several times, taking part in ‘shared book’ activities such as a modelled retell.

Commentary

The samples cover a wide range of stages, some students are at a very early stage of both English language development and writing development (and who are still working out the conventions of writing in English, such as basic sound-symbol relationships), and are therefore only able to write a small amount of text. Other samples show students able to deal much better with the challenges of writing in English but still only able to construct quite simple retells with little elaboration. As their proficiency increases the students are increasingly able to provide more details in their retell, and to add more conventional story-telling elements.

 

Sample One
Sample Two
Sample Three
Sample Four

 

Screen Shot 2015-06-07 at 6.26.56 pmCommentary

In this sample, even though the student is at a very early point in learning to write in English, a basic understanding of the task and the need to retell the story is shown. The student has followed the modelled text structure and has placed a sentence in each ‘box’, with some minimal illustration. The sentences however do not tell a coherent story.

The student uses a mixture of known words and attempts at spelling new words from the text, with the words being represented by one or two letters. The illustrations do not add detail or assist the reader in understanding the story. The student was able to read the story back to the teacher who has transcribed, in complete sentences, what the student was able to say.

The text shows that the student is still at a very early stage in being able to express a sequenced, coherent story, but has some important early understandings about writing in English, including some basic sound-letter relationships.

The student is able to form letters correctly, but does not show an understanding of when to use upper and lower case letters.

The marked criteria sheet shows that the student meets most criteria at level 1 of performance.

The student’s language use in this task is consistent with the descriptions of students at Level A1, Victorian Curriculum F-10 EAL.

TEAL Writing Task 5- criteria sheet- Sample 1

Using this assessment for further learning

 (Select the points you think are currently of most importance to the student.)

  • Ask the student to read their story. Add a few words like ‘cat’ and ‘dog’ to the student’s personal dictionary.
  • Ask the student to suggest words that sound the same from their oral repertoire, and to add these to their personal dictionary or to a class word chart.
  • Ask the student to illustrate, for example: sat, cat, mat.
  • Point out when we would use upper and lower case letters in words such as ‘dog’ and ‘cat’.
  • The student may be able to orally retell a fuller, more sequenced and detailed story, which can be scribed by the teacher and used for further reading and writing activities such as ‘story sequencing’ and ‘fill-the-gaps’ activities.
  • The teacher could print a model representation of the student’s text to add to the portfolio alongside the original text.

 

Screen Shot 2015-06-07 at 6.35.03 pm

Commentary

The student clearly understands the task. Although the text does not give an entirely coherent or structured retell, some key elements of the story are understandable. The illustrations add some information to the written text. The student has used the terms ‘beginning’ and ‘middle’ and ‘at 3rd’ to show the sequence of events, and how the story moves forward. A concluding sentence is provided: she did lay her egg in the house. Some dialogue is attempted: oh no a cat. The text is quite well placed on the page, and shows some evidence of planning, with the text at the top of the page and the illustration underneath.

The student uses common simple past tense forms correctly: wanted, said, went.

The student uses a mixture of spelling strategies in the text, including plausible attempts at unknown words, and correct spelling of high-frequency words. The use of capital letters is not consistent, but there is some evidence that the student understands the need for a capital letter at the start of sentences or new ideas, and perhaps for the story title at the beginning of the story. There is no other punctuation apart from a full stop at the end.

The student has been able to do some self-correction, crossing out some words and inserting others.

The marked criteria sheet shows that the student meets criteria at levels 1 and 2 of performance.

The student’s language use in this task is consistent with the descriptions of students at Level A1, Victorian Curriculum F-10 EAL.

TEAL Writing Task 5- criteria sheet- Sample 2

Using this assessment for further learning

 (Select the points you think are currently of most importance to the student.)

  • Ask the student to read the story, and encourage the student to do further corrections focusing on elements such as spelling, punctuation for showing sentence beginnings and endings, or correction of verb tense forms.
  • The teacher can read the student’s text to the student and then ask him or her to talk about which bits of the story are missing, where they could be added and how further sequence words such as ‘then’ and ‘after that’ could be used in place of ‘beginning’ and ‘middle’. The teacher can scribe the missing elements for the student.
  • The student may be able to retell a fuller, more sequenced and detailed story, which can be scribed by the teacher and used for further reading and writing activities such as story sequencing, fill-the-gaps activities.
  • The teacher could print a model representation of the student’s text to add to their portfolio alongside the original text:

Screen Shot 2015-06-07 at 6.36.10 pm

Commentary

The student has written a clear, mostly coherent text that tells an understandable story, with most of the key elements evident. A title is provided, on a separate line but there are no illustrations.

The student has attempted dialogue, which is not marked with punctuation. The dialogue is in present tense, while the rest of the story is generally in the past tense.

Use of upper and lower case letters is more consistent, with most sentences starting with an upper case letter, although all the words starting a new line are also capitalised.

The student fairly consistently spells high-frequency words correctly, but others such as here (hiyr), and said (seiab) are consistently misspelt and the phonetic attempts are not really plausible.

The student has been able to do some self-correction, crossing out some words and inserting others.

The marked criteria sheet shows that the student meets criteria at levels 2 and 3 of performance.

The student’s language use in this task is consistent with the descriptions of students at Level B2, Victorian Curriculum F-10 EAL.

TEAL Writing Task 5- criteria sheet- Sample 3

Using this assessment for further learning 

(Select the points you think are currently of most importance to the student.)

  • During a teacher-student conference encourage the student to read back the story. Ask the student to sound out the words ‘said’, ‘here’, ‘lay’ and ‘can’t’ and add them to their personal dictionary. Ask the student to highlight where these words are used in the text, so that they can be correctly written in the next draft.
  • Read the text to the student and ask for help to add full stops at the end of complete ideas.
  • Help the student to notice when to use capital letters – at the beginning of new sentences rather than at the beginning of every line.
  • The student has successfully used dialogue in the retelling of the story so help him or her to notice and add punctuation conventions – inverted commas etc. around spoken dialogue to differentiate it from the rest of the text.
  • Give the student time and support to write up and illustrate a final draft of the story to add to a portfolio.
  • The teacher could print  a model representation of the student’s final text to add to their portfolio alongside the final written text.

 

Screen Shot 2015-06-07 at 6.37.26 pm

Commentary

The student has written an extended text, set out in six numbered boxes. The student has structured the story well so that it fits the layout of the page. The story is clear and coherent. Some storytelling conventions have been included, such as ‘Once upon a time’, and ‘Happily ever after’. Sentence structures and novel constructions: … so the meeting under the moon; old man fall down the bed; how go the work; are evidence of her level of both oral and writing development in English.

The student has written this first draft in preparation for publishing as a small booklet.

Dialogue is provided, sometimes indicated by quotation marks. The dialogue is in the present tense, while the rest of the story is generally in the past tense. The student’s verbs are consistently in the appropriate tense, with some errors: go (went to) house, how go (goes) the work, love (loved) the duck.

Use of upper and lower case letters are more consistent than previous samples, with most sentences starting with an upper case letter. Basic punctuation, full stops and commas are mostly consistently correct.

The student consistently spells high frequency words correctly, but some others such as ‘they’ are often incorrect. The student uses strong knowledge of sound-letter relationships in English to spell versions of less well known words: chest (chased), leezy (lazy) and chiken.

The student has been able to independently self-correct, crossing out some words and inserting others.

The marked criteria sheet shows that the student meets criteria at levels 3 and 4 of performance.

The student’s language use in this task is consistent with the descriptions of students at Level C2, Victorian Curriculum F-10 EAL.

TEAL Writing Task 5- criteria sheet- Sample 4

Using this assessment for further learning

 (Select the points you think are currently of most importance to the student.)

  • During the teacher-student conference, the teacher could highlight the misspelt high frequency words for the student to self-correct for their next draft.
  • The teacher could also highlight the use of tenses in the student’s text and see if the student can self-correct replacing present tense forms with past tense forms where appropriate.
  • Give the student time and support to write a final draft to add to their portfolio.