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2014 REVISED The Ontario Curriculum Grades 9 to 12

REVISED . 2014. The Ontario Curriculum Grades 9 to 12. French as a Second Language CORE FRENCH EXTENDED FRENCH FRENCH IMMERSION. The Ontario Public Service endeavours to demonstrate leadership with respect to accessibility in Ontario . Our goal is to ensure that Ontario government services, products, and facilities are accessible to all our employees and to all members of the public we serve. This document, or the information that it contains, is available, on request, in alternative formats. Please forward all requests for alternative formats to ServiceOntario at 1-800-668-9938 (TTY: 1-800-268-7095). CONTENTS. PREFACE 3. Secondary Schools for the Twenty-First Century.

The Ontario Curriculum, French as a Second Language – Core, Extended, and Immersion French, Grades 9 and 10, 1999. and . The Ontario Curriculum, French as a Second Language – Core, Extended, and Immersion French, Grades 11 and 12, 2000. Beginning in September 2015, all secondary French as a second language (FSL) courses

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Transcription of 2014 REVISED The Ontario Curriculum Grades 9 to 12

1 REVISED . 2014. The Ontario Curriculum Grades 9 to 12. French as a Second Language CORE FRENCH EXTENDED FRENCH FRENCH IMMERSION. The Ontario Public Service endeavours to demonstrate leadership with respect to accessibility in Ontario . Our goal is to ensure that Ontario government services, products, and facilities are accessible to all our employees and to all members of the public we serve. This document, or the information that it contains, is available, on request, in alternative formats. Please forward all requests for alternative formats to ServiceOntario at 1-800-668-9938 (TTY: 1-800-268-7095). CONTENTS. PREFACE 3. Secondary Schools for the Twenty-First Century.

2 3. Supporting Students' Well-Being and Ability to Learn .. 3. INTRODUCTION 6. Vision and Goals of the French as a Second Language Curriculum .. 6. The Importance of the French as a Second Language Curriculum .. 6. Enduring Ideas in the French as a Second Language Curriculum .. 7. Roles and Responsibilities in the French as a Second Language Programs .. 11. THE PROGRAMS IN FRENCH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE 15. Overview of the Programs .. 15. Curriculum Expectations .. 20. Strands in the French as a Second Language Curriculum .. 21. ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATION OF STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT 26. Basic Considerations .. 26. The Achievement Chart for French as a Second Language.

3 29. SOME CONSIDERATIONS FOR PROGRAM PLANNING IN FRENCH. AS A SECOND LANGUAGE 34. Instructional Approaches .. 34. Planning French as a Second Language Programs for Students with Special Education Needs .. 38. Program Considerations for English Language Learners .. 41. Environmental Education and French as a Second Language .. 44. Healthy Relationships and French as a Second Language .. 44. Equity and Inclusive Education in the French as a Second Language Programs .. 45. Financial Literacy in French as a Second Language .. 46. Literacy, Inquiry Skills, and Numeracy in French as a Second Language .. 47. The Role of the School Library in the French as a Second Language Programs.

4 50. The Role of Information and Communications Technology in the French as a Second Language Programs .. 51. This publication is available on the Ministry of Education's website, at The Ontario Skills Passport: Making Learning Relevant and Building Skills .. 52. Education and Career/Life Planning through the French as a Second Language Curriculum .. 53. Cooperative Education and Other Forms of Experiential Learning .. 54. Planning Program Pathways and Programs Leading to a Specialist High Skills Major .. 54. Health and Safety in the French as a Second Language Programs .. 55. THE CORE FRENCH PROGRAM, Grades 9 TO 12 57. Core French, grade 9, Academic (FSF1D).

5 58. Core French, grade 9, Applied (FSF1P) .. 73. Core French, grade 9, Open (FSF1O) .. 88. Core French, grade 10, Academic (FSF2D) .. 101. Core French, grade 10, Applied (FSF2P) .. 115. Core French, grade 10, Open (FSF2O) .. 128. Core French, grade 11, University Preparation (FSF3U) .. 141. Core French, grade 11, Open (FSF3O) .. 154. Core French, grade 12, University Preparation (FSF4U) .. 167. Core French, grade 12, Open (FSF4O) .. 180. THE EXTENDED FRENCH PROGRAM, Grades 9 TO 12 193. Extended French, grade 9, Academic (FEF1D) .. 194. Extended French, grade 10, Academic (FEF2D) .. 210. Extended French, grade 11, University Preparation (FEF3U) .. 226. Extended French, grade 12, University Preparation (FEF4U).

6 242. THE FRENCH IMMERSION PROGRAM, Grades 9 TO 12 257. French Immersion, grade 9, Academic (FIF1D) .. 258. French Immersion, grade 9, Applied (FIF1P) .. 274. French Immersion, grade 10, Academic (FIF2D) .. 287. French Immersion, grade 10, Applied (FIF2P) .. 303. French Immersion, grade 11, University Preparation (FIF3U) .. 318. French Immersion, grade 11, Open (FIF3O) .. 333. French Immersion, grade 12, University Preparation (FIF4U) .. 348. French Immersion, grade 12, Open (FIF4O) .. 364. GLOSSARY 379. 2. PREFACE. This document replaces The Ontario Curriculum , French as a Second Language Core, Extended, and Immersion French, Grades 9 and 10, 1999 and The Ontario Curriculum , French as a Second Language Core, Extended, and Immersion French, Grades 11 and 12, 2000.

7 Beginning in September 2015, all secondary French as a second language (FSL) courses will be based on the expectations outlined in this document. SECONDARY SCHOOLS FOR THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY. The goal of Ontario secondary schools is to support high-quality learning while giving individual students the opportunity to choose programs that suit their skills and interests. The updated Ontario Curriculum , in combination with a broader range of learning options outside traditional classroom instruction, will enable students to better customize their high school education and improve their prospects for success in school and in life. The REVISED Curriculum recognizes that, today and in the future, students need to be critically literate in order to synthesize information, make informed decisions, communicate effectively, and thrive in an ever-changing global community.

8 It is important that students be connected to the Curriculum ; that they see themselves in what is taught, how it is taught, and how it applies to the world at large. The Curriculum recognizes that the needs of learners are diverse, and helps all learners develop the knowledge, skills, and perspectives they need to be informed, productive, caring, responsible, healthy, and active citizens in their own communities and in the world. SUPPORTING STUDENTS' WELL-BEING AND ABILITY TO LEARN. Promoting the healthy development of all students, as well as enabling all students to reach their full potential, is a priority for educators across Ontario . Students' health and well-being contribute to their ability to learn in all disciplines, including FSL, and that learning in turn contributes to their overall well-being.

9 Educators play an important role in promoting children and youth's well-being by creating, fostering, and sustaining a learning environment that is healthy, caring, safe, inclusive, and accepting. A learning environment of this kind will support not only students' cognitive, emotional, social, and physical development but also their mental health, their resilience, and their overall state of well-being. All this will help them achieve their full potential in school and in life. A variety of factors, known as the determinants of health , have been shown to affect a person's overall state of well-being. Some of these are income, education and literacy, 3. gender and culture, physical and social environment, personal health practices and coping skills, and availability of health services.

10 Together, such factors influence not only whether a person is physically healthy but also the extent to which he or she will have the physical, social, and personal resources needed to cope and to identify and achieve personal aspir- ations. These factors also have an impact on student learning, and it is important to be aware of them as factors contributing to a student's performance. An educator's awareness of and responsiveness to students' cognitive, emotional, social, and physical development is critical to their success in school. A number of research- based frameworks, including those described in Early Learning for Every Child Today: A. Framework for Ontario Early Childhood Settings (2007) and Stepping Stones: A Resource on Youth Development (2012),1 identify developmental stages that are common to the majority of students from Kindergarten to grade 12.


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