Course Outline English Language Arts Primary–3 has been revised with the intent of providing greater opportunities for all students to become literate preparing students for the literacy challenges they will face throughout their lives responding to continually evolving education needs of students and society responding to current and proven research findings bringing greater coherence to assessment and instruction in English language arts across Nova Scotia Pervasive, ongoing changes in society, especially with respect to rapidly expanding use of technologies, require a corresponding shift in learning opportunities. This shift is necessary for students to develop relevant knowledge, skills, strategies, processes, and attitudes that will enable them to function well as individuals, citizens, and learners. To function productively and participate fully in an increasingly sophisticated technological, information-based society, citizens will need to capably and flexibly use 21st century skills. This language arts curriculum is shaped by the vision of enabling students to become literate, articulate, and reflective individuals who use language successfully for comprehension and communication in personal and public contexts. English Language Arts Primary–3 is based on the premise that learning experiences in English language arts should help students develop language fluency not only in the school setting, but also in their lives in the wider world contribute toward students’ achievement of the essential graduation learnings The recommendations in this guide are aligned with current research that directs teachers to practices that adhere to balanced literacy planned, purposeful, focused instruction gradual release of responsibility assessment for and of learning timely, descriptive feedback learner-responsive differentiated instruction The English language arts curriculum encompasses the experience, study, and appreciation of language, literature, and communication technology. It involves the language processes of listening, speaking, reading, viewing, writing, and other ways of representing. The ultimate goal of language learning is the integration of language processes when skills and strategies are kept within meaningful language contexts. In order for this to occur, language learning is deemed to be both efficiently and effectively achieved through instruction that is grounded in curriculum outcomes instruction that is purposeful and planned instruction that is appropriate to learners’ needs focus of instruction that is made explicit to students regular and frequent descriptive feedback instruction that is differentiated The English language arts curriculum engages students in a range of experiences and interactions with a variety of texts designed to help them develop increasing control over language processes use and respond to language effectively and purposeful understand why language and literacy are so central to their lives For more information go to the English Language Arts 3 section under English Curricula