1 / 31

Text Structures by Carol Nichols, Metropolitan State College of Denver, nicholsc@mscd

Text Structures by Carol Nichols, Metropolitan State College of Denver, nicholsc@mscd.edu. Structure of Narrative and Expository Texts. Text Structures.

dudley
Download Presentation

Text Structures by Carol Nichols, Metropolitan State College of Denver, nicholsc@mscd

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Text Structuresby Carol Nichols, Metropolitan State College of Denver, nicholsc@mscd.edu Structure of Narrative and Expository Texts

  2. Text Structures • The reader’s ability to see the pattern or the direction the writer is taking in a piece of text has an influence on effective and efficient comprehension.

  3. Narrative Text Structure (Fiction) Much of the narrative text has a similar structure. Generally the following five elements can be found in narrative text:

  4. Elements in most narrative (fiction) text structure • A setting (where and when the story happens) • A character or characters • Events that take place in a certain order • A problem a character has or an objective the character is trying to achieve • A solution to the problem or information telling if the objective was achieved or not

  5. Helping students learn the structure of narrative text The use of a graphic organizer before, during, and/or after the reading of narrative text can help students learn the structure of the text. A graphic organizer is a visual representation of the structure of the text. A graphic organizer can be designed to help students recognize the structure of narrative text. Professional materials usually refer to this as developing a “sense of story” or “story grammar.” On the next slide is a sample graphic organizer for narrative.

  6. Customized story grammar graphic organizers If story grammar graphic organizers are used frequently, the teacher sometimes customizes the graphic organizer for the specific piece of narrative the students will read. Customizing the organizer is not essential, but it does offer some variety for the students.

  7. Customized story grammar graphic organizers for fiction On the following slides are samples of some customized graphic organizers to help students learn the structure of narrative.

  8. Story grammar graphic organizer customized for the book Stone Soup. Organizerdesigned by Shauna Liebendorfer

  9. Customized story grammar graphic organizer for the book The Napping House by Don and Audrey Wood • Organizer designed by Haley Szmak

  10. Customized story grammar graphic organizer for the book Sylvester and the Magic Pebble • Organizer designed by Renae Benedict

  11. Knowledge of narrative text structure • Narrative (fiction) text generally has one structure as seen on earlier slides. • Many teachers in elementary grades teach students the structure of narrative through the use of a story grammar graphic organizer.

  12. Knowledge of expository text structure • Some students start to experience problems with reading during the intermediate grades – 4th, 5th, and 6th grades. • During intermediate grades there is generally more emphasis on reading expository text found in science, social studies, and other textbooks. In primary grades there is usually a greater emphasis on narrative (fiction).

  13. Problems reading expository text • Some educators feel these problems may be caused, in part, because students have not learned to recognize the structures that can be found in their textbooks. • In some elementary-grade classrooms, expository text structures are not taught as extensively as narrative text structure. One reason some students have problems with textbook reading is their lack of ability to identify the organization of a passage of expository text.

  14. Structures of expository texts—nonfiction—science, social studies, etc. Expository (nonfiction) text can be made up of at least six different structures. These structures are: cause and effect; compare and contrast, time sequence, problem/solution, definition/description, and enumeration or steps to accomplish something. • The learning of each of the structures can be enhanced through the use of graphic organizers. • The following slides will show a sample of some graphic organizers for some of the expository text structures.

  15. Source of the Cause/Effect Graphic Organizer on the next slide: • Carol Nichols, Ed.D. Professor, Metropolitan State College of Denver, Department of Teacher Education, Reading Program.

  16. Source of the “Compare & Contrast Diagram” on the next slide: • Black, Howard and Black Sandra, Organizing Thinking: Graphic Organizers. Critical Thinking Press & Software,Midwest Publications, P. O. Box 448, Pacific Grove, CA 93950.

  17. Source of the “Time Sequence: Linear” Graphic Organizer on the next slide: • Carol Nichols, Ed.D. Professor, Metropolitan State College of Denver, Department of Teacher Education, Reading Program.

  18. A “Time Sequence: Cycle” graphic organizer is on the next slide. The organizer helps student recognize how a series of events interact with one event leading to the next, etc. until the cycle starts over again. Some life cycle descriptions in science would be good for this type of organizer. Children’s literature also has many examples of this type of structure. One example is If You Give a Mouse a Cookie.

  19. Source of the “Problem/Solution” Graphic Organizer on the next slide: • Ambruster, Anderson, and Ostertay, “Teaching Text Structure to Improve Reading and Writing,” The Reading Teacher, International Reading Association, November 1989. • The organizer has the student identify the problem, the action taken to solve the problem, and the results of this action.

  20. Adapting the Problem/Solution Organizer The prior organizer only represents one action taken to solve the problem. If the text describes several attempts to take action to solve the problem, the graphic organizer would then be designed to give the student space to note all of the action taken to solve the problem

  21. “Description” graphic organizers which show the central theme, main ideas, and supporting details

  22. “Description” Graphic Organizers • NCREL (North Central Regional Educational Laboratory) website under the topic “Graphic Organizers.” http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/areas/issues/students/learning/Ir1grorg.htm has a graphic organizer called a “Spider Web” which is an effective design to show the central idea, its attributes, and its functions.

  23. Source of the “Steps” Graphic Organizer on the next slide: • Black, Howard and Black Sandra, Organizing Thinking: Graphic Organizers. Critical Thinking Press & Software, Midwest Publications, P. O. Box 448, Pacific Grove, CA 93950, page 25.

  24. Providing Help to Students Reading Expository Text • Spend more time on building background for the reading selection • This background building includes, in a general sense, concept building. • It also includes creating a mental scheme for the text organization. The use of graphic organizers will help students learn text organization

More Related