Dr. Westerlund's Blog Organized by Categories

Someone has just reached out and asked me for a progression of learning with a Functional Approach. In response, I have grouped my resources by different language features, starting with noun groups because that seems like an entry point. However, you could start with cohesive devices or causal verbs or evaluative adjectives. It depends on how much you know about language, your existing framework for understanding language, and the goals you have for your students.

You may recognize the three Metafunctions in how I grouped my blogs below: Ideational (1-3), Textual (4&7), Interpersonal (5)

Enjoy!

Dr. Westerlund's Resources for Teaching with a Functional Approach (1)Download

Books

Making Language Visible in Social Studies

πŸ”— Making Language Visible in Social Studies (Book) Although the book focuses on Social Studies, the ideas and language features extend naturally into ELA because they center on how students use language to explain, reason, and build knowledge. The emphasis on causal language in explanations and the language of argumentation supports literacy development across all content areas.

πŸ”— Making Language Visible in a Social Studies Classroom (Video Recordings of the Book Chapters β€œWhat this chapter is about”)

Building a Language Toolkit for Teachers: A Functional Approach

Building a Language Toolkit for Teachers: A Functional Approach

This book is designed for pre-service teachers and K-8 educators seeking to develop their knowledge of how language works. Grounded in Systemic Functional Linguistics, it serves as a practical language toolkit, offering supportive task cycles with exercises that help teachers identify, analyze, and apply language features to support student learning.

This book is essential for those looking to develop their pedagogical language knowledge (PLK) to support multilingual students. Through accessible, targeted, task-based resources for pre-service teachers, this guide supports teachers to apply a functional approach for disciplinary purposes of narrating, informing, explaining and arguing in elementary and middle grade level instruction. Available March 2, 2026

Blogs

➑️ START HEREHow to Create Language Goals with the WIDA Standards

1. Expanding Ideas through Noun Groups

πŸ”— Read-Alouds With a Functional Approach

 πŸ”— Teaching with the WIDA 2020 Standards in a Second Grade Literacy Block

 πŸ”— Unlocking Noun Groups: Packing Meaning in One Phrase

πŸ”— Teaching Students Definitions in the Context of Text

2. Saying Verbs in Realistic Fiction

πŸ”— What I Want to Say About β€œSaying” Verbs

3. Causal Verbs in Science

πŸ”— Moving Beyond Because and So: The Language of Causality

πŸ”— Choosing a Language Focus: Passive Voice in Sequential Explanations

4. Creating Flow in Texts 

πŸ”— Cohesion: the glue that holds the text together

πŸ”— Using Connectives to Argue with Clarity 

πŸ”— Teaching Students how to Stay on Topic

πŸ”— Sequencing without Sequencing Words

πŸ”— Condensing Meanings Through Nominalization

5. Understanding Perspective, Stance & Voice

πŸ”— Finding the Language of Perspective in Children’s Books

πŸ”— Opening and Closing Doors for Other Voices: Teaching the Language of Rebuttals

6. Understanding Discourse Level 

πŸ”— Moving Beyond the Sentence Level

πŸ”— Condensing Meanings Through Nominalization

πŸ”— Turning Language Charts from an Assessment to an Instructional Tool

πŸ”— The Genres of Aurora Borealis

πŸ”— Teaching Students how to Stay on Topic

πŸ”— Slaves or Workers: Teaching Students How to Read Critically 

7. Integrating Language + Writing Across Content Areas

πŸ”— Teaching Writing in the Content Areas: Research and Practice

Cheering you on,

Dr. Ruslana Westerlund

Dr. Ruslana Westlund

Dr. Ruslana Westerlund is a researcher, consultant, and author of three publications on visible language pedagogy. With three decades of experience β€” including contributing to the WIDA 2020 Standards β€” she partners with global school districts to translate complex linguistic theory into equitable classroom practice. Ruslana believes that empowered teachers are the key to empowered students.

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The Topic Sentence Myth

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Turning Language Charts from an Assessment to an Instructional Tool