Day 3: Skill-Building vs Skill-Using at the Literacy Level

This post is for ESL Literacy teachers who have ever asked:
“Is this Skill-Building or Skill-Using?”
—or worse—
“Can I assess this?”

If that question feels familiar, you are not alone.


Why This Distinction Matters So Much in Literacy Classes

At the Literacy level, confusion between Skill-Building (SB) and Skill-Using (SU) is one of the biggest sources of stress for teachers.

When these stages are unclear:

  • lessons feel rushed
  • learners feel overwhelmed
  • assessment evidence feels shaky
  • teachers second-guess themselves

The good news?
Once SB and SU are clear, everything becomes lighter.


Skill-Building (SB): Where Literacy Learners Feel Safe

Skill-Building is where learning begins.

At the Literacy level, SB includes:

  • repetition
  • modeling
  • correction
  • heavy teacher support
  • low pressure

Examples of Literacy-level Skill-Building:

  • repeating letters or sounds together
  • tracing or copying words
  • matching pictures to words
  • choral reading
  • practicing sentence frames as a class

In SB, learners are allowed to make mistakes — and expected to.

That’s the point.


Skill-Using (SU): Where Confidence Starts to Grow

Skill-Using is where learners use what they practiced — but still with support.

At the Literacy level, SU:

  • feels familiar
  • uses known language
  • includes light teacher guidance
  • builds confidence without pressure

Examples of Literacy-level Skill-Using:

  • reading familiar words independently
  • using sentence frames with a partner
  • completing a routine task they’ve practiced many times
  • answering predictable questions with visuals

SU is not independent yet — and that’s okay.


A Simple Rule That Helps Every Time

When you’re unsure, ask yourself:

“Am I still teaching and correcting?”
→ Skill-Building

“Are learners using what they already practiced?”
→ Skill-Using

If you are still actively correcting or teaching new language, it is not SU yet.

And that’s not a problem — it’s appropriate.


Common Literacy Teaching Trap

One common mistake is trying to turn Skill-Building activities into assessments.

For example:

  • assessing during tracing
  • grading copied writing
  • treating choral repetition as evidence

This creates pressure where learners need safety.

Remember:
👉 Not everything needs to be assessed.


Classroom Steps: How to Plan SB and SU Clearly

Here’s a simple way to structure your lessons:

  1. Start with Skill-Building
    Practice together. Model. Repeat.
  2. Move to Skill-Using
    Let learners try with familiar language.
  3. Save Assessment for Later
    Only assess when learners are ready to demonstrate independently.

This structure protects learning and teacher energy.


PBLA Connection (In Plain Language)

In PBLA:

  • SB = learning how to do the task
  • SU = practicing the task in a familiar way
  • AT = showing you can do it independently

At the Literacy level, SB takes time — and that is PBLA-aligned.

Strong Skill-Building leads to clearer Skill-Using, which leads to better Assessment Tasks later.


One Simple Resource Idea

Create two folders or bins in your classroom:

  • one labeled Practice
  • one labeled Try It

Learners don’t need to read the words — you know the difference.

This visual reminder also helps you stay clear and calm when planning.


A Teacher Reminder

If your Literacy lessons feel “slow,” that does not mean they are ineffective.

It means:

  • learning is being built carefully
  • learners feel safe enough to try
  • foundations are being laid properly

Clarity between SB and SU is one of the greatest gifts you can give yourself as a Literacy teacher.


What’s Coming Tomorrow

Tomorrow’s post will focus on Listening at the Literacy Level — and why listening should come before speaking, reading, or writing.

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