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Informational Texts & Close Reading

Informational Texts & Close Reading. Insights I have learned from ELA Common Core Training and librarian training. Plus a little something new from the TN CORE. What do they mean by Informational Text?. Informational text is a subset of nonfiction literature

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Informational Texts & Close Reading

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  1. Informational Texts &Close Reading Insights I have learned from ELA Common Core Training and librarian training. Plus a little something new from the TN CORE

  2. What do they mean by Informational Text? • Informational text is a subset of nonfiction literature • Whose purpose is to inform the reader of the natural and social world • That does not utilize characters within the text • That is not procedural • That is not narrative nonfiction

  3. Understanding Text Complexity http://vimeo.com/27251914 Like most parts of CCSS there is more information available on text complexity than any of us have time to read. This is the best explanation I have found. If you have a better, please send it my way.

  4. Note: • The TN Core trainers said we could freely use the materials from the TN Core training materials….I have copied the next several slides from their training materials.

  5. Welcome to www.tncore.org!

  6. ELA & Literacy Resources on www.TNCore.org

  7. Text Complexity Resources

  8. Tennessee provides all educators with access to the resources on www.TNCore.org Some of the materials may be password protected. All teachers may log-in using: Log-in: tneducation Password: fastestimproving You may share this log-in information with your TN colleagues to access the information on www.TNCore.org. Log-in Information

  9. Additional Resources: Tennessee Electronic Library http://www.tntel.tnsos.org/curricular.htm

  10. How can I stay informed?

  11. What if I have questions? Contact TN DOE staff directly by clicking the Contact Us button in the upper right hand corner of any page. You may also email TN DOE staff directly at: TNCore.questions@tn.gov.

  12. Appendix B I have asked and asked again and again how we are suppose to use this appendix. Appendix B is meant to be a guide and tool to locate and select exemplar texts that fit the needs our your classroom curriculum. IT IS NOT A SHOPPING LIST.

  13. Close Reading

  14. Close Reading • Gives students opportunities to ‘assimilate information’ from text and prior knowledge to expand individual schema. • Builds essential skills to tackle more difficult texts.

  15. Student Habits to be created: • 1. Identifying their own purpose for reading the text • 2. Determining the author’s purpose for writing it • 3. Developing their own schema • 4. Considering the thought systems of a discipline, or what we might genres and discipline-specific language (e.g., a poem differs from a science article) • Quoted from Frye and Fisher

  16. Some refer to close reading as • SLOW READING

  17. Elements of Close Reading • Short Passages • Complex Texts • Limit Frontloading • Repeating Reading • Text Dependent Questions • Reader annotates the texts

  18. Who is reading • Of course teachers are suppose to do some of the reading and rereading of passages being used for close reading • When teachers read text aloud we are to model how to break down the text to improve and deepen the comprehension level. • Older students need to reread the text with purpose after their first or second reading of the text.

  19. Frontloading • Yes, we do need to give background information and set the stage for some texts. • However, Close Reading suggests we limited frontloading (or background information only to needed vocabulary)

  20. Close Reading and Frontloading for elementary applications (1) that frontloading not remove the need to read the text, and (2) that frontloading not take readers away from the text to their own experiences too soon.

  21. Text-Dependent Questions Professional Learning Module #2 This slide and the following slides have been copied from the TN Core website.

  22. The CCSS Requires Three Shifts in ELA/Literacy • Building knowledge through content-richnonfiction • Reading, writing and speaking grounded in evidence from text, both literary and informational • Regular practice with complex text and its academic language

  23. Shift # 2: Text Dependent Questions Building knowledge through content-richnonfiction Reading, writing and speaking grounded in evidence from text, both literary and informational Regular practice with complex text and its academic language

  24. Time – In and Out of the Text • More instructional time spent outside the text means less time inside the text. • Departing from the text in classroom discussion privileges only those who already have experience with the topic. • It is easier to talk about our experiences than to analyze the text—especially for students reluctant to engage with reading. • The CCSS are College and Career Readiness Standards.

  25. Text-Dependent Questions are not… • Low-level, literal, or recall questions • Focused on comprehension strategies • Just questions…

  26. Text-Dependent Questions... • Can only be answered with evidence from the text. • Can be literal (checking for understanding) but must also involve analysis, synthesis, evaluation. • Focus on word, sentence, and paragraph, as well as larger ideas, themes, or events. • Focus on difficult portions of text in order to enhance reading proficiency. • Can also include prompts for writing and discussion questions.

  27. Three Types of Text-Dependent Questions When you're writing or reviewing a set of questions,consider the following three categories: • Questions that assess themes and central ideas • Questions that assess knowledge of vocabulary • Questions that assess syntax and structure

  28. What makes Casey’s experiences at bat humorous? What can you infer from King’sletter about the letter that he received? “The Gettysburg Address” mentions the year 1776. According to Lincoln’s speech, why is this year significant to the events described in the speech? Non-Examples and Examples Not Text-Dependent Text-Dependent In “Casey at the Bat,” Casey strikes out. Describe a time when you failed at something. In “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” Dr. King discusses nonviolent protest. Discuss, in writing, a time when you wanted to fight against something that you felt was unfair. In “The Gettysburg Address” Lincoln says the nation is dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Why is equality an important value to promote?

  29. Creating Text-Dependent Questions

  30. Core Understanding and Key Ideas • Reverse-engineered or backwards-designed • Crucial for creating an overarching set of successful questions • Critical for creating an appropriate culminating assignment

  31. Vocabulary Which words should be taught? • Essential to understanding text • Likely to appear in future reading Which words should get more time and attention? • More abstract words (as opposed to concrete words) persist vs. checkpoint noticed vs. accident • Words which are part of semantic word family secure, securely, security, secured

  32. Vocabulary and Text Dependent Questions From “Hot and Cold Summer” - 5th grade fictional text • “To avoid someone means to keep away from them so that you don’t have to see them and they don’t have to see you. How did the boys avoid meeting Bolivia at first?” (pg. 23) • Re-read the last two paragraphs on page 39. Rory had a “strong suspicion”. What is a suspicion? What details in the story made Rory suspicious of Bolivia?

  33. Syntax and Text Dependent Questions • Syntax can predict student performance as much as vocabulary does. • Questions and tasks addressing syntax are powerful. Example: Who are the members of the wolf pack? How many wolves are in the pack? To answer this, pay close attention to the use of commas and semi-colons in the last paragraph on pg. 377. The semi-colons separate or list each member in the pack.

  34. Structure and Text-Dependent Questions • Text-dependent questions can be crafted to point students’ attention to features of text that enhance understanding (such as how section headers and captions lead to greater clarity or provide hints regarding what is most important in informational text, or how illustrations add to a narrative).

  35. Structure and Text Dependent Questions Examples: • “Look at the illustrations on page 31. Why did the illustrator include details like the power outlets in the walls?” • “Dillard is careful to place opposing descriptions of the natural and man-made side-by-side. How does this juxtaposition fit with or challenge what we have already read? Why might she have chosen this point in the text for these descriptions?”

  36. Reading Strategies and Text-Dependent Questions • Text-dependent questions generally call on students to employ reading strategies. • Strategies are no longer taught in isolation. • The text and readers’ need to comprehend it should determine what strategies are activated - not the other way around.

  37. Culminating Tasks • Should relate to core understanding and key ideas. • A coherent sequence of textdependent questions will scaffold students toward successfully completing the culminating task. • Example: “The title of this selection is ‘Because of Winn-Dixie.' Using your answers from the questions above and class discussion, explain why this is an appropriate title for the selection. Be sure to clearly cite evidence from the text for each part of your answer.” “Officer Buckle’s final safety tip is 'ALWAYS STICK WITH YOUR BUDDY.' How did he and Gloria each learn this lesson for themselves throughout the story?”

  38. Final Thoughts • There is no one right way to have students work with text dependent questions. • Providing for the differing needs of students means providing and scaffolding supports differentially - not asking easier questions or substituting simpler text. • Listening and speaking should be built into any sequence of activities along with reading and writing: • “Re-read it, think it, talk it, write it” • The CCSS require ALL students to read and engage with grade appropriate complex text regularly. This requires new ways of working in our classrooms.

  39. Finding Resources • There are more resources available for CCSS than we collectively have time to explore. • I have been collecting tools I think will benefit you from other teachers and librarians.

  40. Useful websites • http://www.readwritethink.org • http://deweybrowse.org • http://www.lexile.com/analyzer/ **** • http://timeforkids.com/

  41. Resources • http://tncore.org/trainingmaterials • Fisher, Douglas and Nancy Frey. “Close Reading in he Elementary Schools.” The Reading Teacher, Nov 2102, p. 179-87.

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