About Everyday Life
What is the Everyday Life (EDL) project?
The EDL project uses interactive, situation-based lessons to teach functional literacy skills. Each activity provides learners with the opportunity to test their knowledge of real-world situations and to develop the confidence and skills necessary to be successful in everyday life.
Why are you developing a functional literacy project?
22% of the Americans who took the 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) scored at the Basic level in document literacy. The National Center for Educational Statistics website states that learners at the Basic level are able to read the texts that they encounter, yet struggle to integrate and synthesize information and perform quantitative tasks with multiple steps. The statistics suggest, then, that 44 million Americans experience difficulty when applying their basic literacy skills to everyday life activities.
Our goal is to help these 44 million people reach a higher level of functional literacy and obtain the skills that they need to succeed.
What is your instructional approach?
Our functional, or competency-based, approach provides learners with opportunities to test their knowledge of real-world situations without the fear of real-world consequences. Each scenario is comprised of prose, document, or quantitative literacy tasks, as defined by the NAAL, with an emphasis on task-based applications of literacy. By helping the characters in the lessons reach their goals, learners in will gain relevant skills in a safe and supportive environment. The competencies that our users gain through the interactive modules will be immediately applicable to their daily lives.
Why do you focus on learners at the Basic level?
We developed the first phase of the Everyday Life project to help learners at the Basic level because findings from the 2003 NAAL suggest that these individuals are not likely to seek help from traditional literacy centers. By first targeting learners at the Basic level, we are reaching out to an underserved population. In the future, we will implement new lessons to address the needs of learners at other levels.
How is this different than existing resources?
The GCFLearnFree.org development team is comprised of individuals who were trained in a variety of disciplines including education, instructional design, gaming, technology, and art. This diversity helps us approach teaching in a unique way.
Further, interviews with literacy providers and students reinforced what we found through our own research - that there is a lack of engaging, adult-themed resources available to learners.
With this in mind, we deviated from traditional educational models in order to deliver a program that meets the needs of adult learners, both in content and in style.
How can educators use our Everyday Life program?
Literacy tutors, administrators, and adult basic education providers can refer learners to our site to work independently or use modules as a supplement to their teaching materials. Our site provides learners with the ability to track their progress through the lessons and to repeat activities as often as they wish.
Educational Objectives
Our functional approach teaches
literacy skills through the application of common tasks.
Each lesson has specific educational objectives and is classified as one of the literacy
task categories that the National Assessment of Adult Literacy (
NAAL) measures (i.e.,
Document,
Prose, and
Quantitative), when applicable. Additional information regarding our learning objectives is listed below:
- A Comprehensive Adult Student Assessment System
(CASAS) competency number is listed below each
lessonÃs learning objectives, if the lesson is aligned to a specific competency. According to
CASAS, it is "the most widely used system for assessing adult basic reading, math, listening,
writing, and speaking skills within a functional context." It is approved by the U.S. Department
of Education and the U.S. Department of Labor.
- Although it is not a primary goal of the lessons to teach vocabulary, we can expect to see an
increase in the learnersà vocabulary and understanding of word usage through exposure to the
language in context of the functional task.
- Since the Everyday Life project is online, we have the ability to provide experiences with
technology that a written assessment can not. When applicable, we classify various lessons as
addressing Technological literacy.
View the
learning objectives for each lesson.