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READING is FUNDAMENTAL. Week 1. Multiple Intelligences. .... Muliiple inteligences .doc http://www.metacafe.com/watch/2111066/gardners_theory_of_multiple_intelligences.
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READING is FUNDAMENTAL Week 1
Multiple Intelligences • ..\..\Muliipleinteligences • .doc • http://www.metacafe.com/watch/2111066/gardners_theory_of_multiple_intelligences
Books are the legacies that a great genius leaves tomankind, which are delivered down from generation togeneration as presents to the posterity of those who are yet unborn,~ Joseph Addison ~ • Books are men of higher stature;the only men that speak aloud for future times to hear.~ E.S. Barrett ~
RDG081 Criteria • 1. Participation (50) • 2. Timed Readings (Fluency) • 3. Workbook (Vocabulary) • 4. Textbook (Development Skills) • 5. ISN (Note taking) • 6. Socratic Journal (Connections/Comprehension) • 7. Weekly Reading ( Classic Short Stories/Famous Non-fiction) • 8. Project • 9. Novel Reading • 10. Quizzes • 11. Midterm/Final
Participation • 1 point per day • 3 points for the day of the final = 50 points
Timed Readings • 10points x 15 weeks= 150
Vocabulary Notebook • 10 points x 15 weeks =150
Textbook • Note taking… ISN note • 20 points
ISN • ../../ISN%20Notebooks/ISN%20ppp(1).pptx
Socratic Seminar • Socratic Participation: • Socratic Questions/journal: • 20 x 14= 280points
Socratic Reading Log • 10 X 15 =150 points 10 X 14 =140 points
Weekly Article Reading • Non-Fiction Articles: • 15 x 16= 240 points
Project • 10 points
Quizzes • Turning Point • 10 x 7 =70
Mid Term • 30 points
Final Exam • 50 points
Point System • 1200 possible • A=90-100% points: 180 • B=80-89% points: 960 • C=70-79% points: 840 • D=60-69% points: 720 • F=50-59% points: -719
Article • High School to College • Article NOTES
Assignment • Email Account set up • Read Ch. 1 text • Ch.1 Vocab. Pg.8-11 • RS:1 The Yellow Ribbon pg. 445-452
Before Lecture Behaviors 1. Read assignment before class 2. Be on time 3. Get rid of distractions and leave emotions outside. 4. Formulate questions you’d like answered based on title or discussion before the lecture.
During Lecture Behavior • 1. Write all notes and date the page. • 2. Listen attentively • 3. Write notes into your own words • 4. Look at the speaker
After Lecture Behavior • Ask Questions • 2. Summarize in ISN • 3. Read notes • 4. Do assigned readings and workbook pages.
The Active Reader Top 10 Lists • Ten Things the active reader needs to DO: to get at the meaning. • 1. Activate prior knowledge • 2. Question • 3. Connect • 4. Predict • 5. Visualize • 6. Clarify • 7. Use Context Clues • 8. Make inferences, draw conclusions • 9. Evaluate, make judgments • 10. Compare/Contrast
Ten Things the active reader needs to KNOW • 1. Main idea/Supporting detail • 2. Cause/Effect • 3. Author’s Purpose • 4. Author’s Bias • 5. Chronological order/sequence • 6. Fact/Opinion • 7. Theme • 8. Elements of genre • 9. Figurative language • 10. Academic Language Arts Vocabulary
Top 20 Things and Active Reader • Can USE: • 1. Reading logs and Journals • 2. KWL charts • 3. Semantic Mapping • 4. Annotating • 5. Think Aloud • 6. Skimming/Scanning • 7. SQ3R (survey, question, read, recite and review) • 8. Think Pair Share • 9. Jigsaw • 10. Graphic Organizers • 11. Dense Questioning • 12. Socratic Seminar • 13. Critical Thinking • 14. Reciprocal Reading
Schema Theory • Unique set of experiences and knowledge a person has to influence their reading.
Text Book Assignment • Surveying Your Textbook • Step 1. Carefully read the chapter title. • Step 2. Look through the Chapter • Step 3. Read the introduction and the summary • Step 4. Quickly Skim the Chapter. • ******* Fill out the Textbook Preview Form for each of your classes.
Builds Fluency • Independent reading builds fluency. There is substantial evidence that unless students can accurately and effortlessly deal with the word-identification demands of reading, difficulties will result in comprehension and overall reading achievement (LaBerge & Samuels, 1974). There is also evidence that unless children read substantial amounts of print, their reading will remain laborious and limited in effectiveness (Allington, 1984; Stanovich, 1991). Finally, evidence exists which shows that when students do read substantial amounts of text, their reading performance improves (Bridge, Winograd, & Haley, 1983; Dowhower, 1987; Herman, 1985).