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Teaching Students to Read Like Detectives: The Common Core Way. Douglas Fisher www.fisherandfrey.com YouTube Channel fisherandfrey. 4 Domains Reading Writing Speaking and Listening Language . Anchored K-12. Where to start . . . . Reading standard 1 Reading standard 10
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Teaching Students to Read Like Detectives: The Common Core Way Douglas Fisher www.fisherandfrey.com YouTube Channel fisherandfrey
4 Domains • Reading • Writing • Speaking and Listening • Language Anchored K-12
Where to start . . . . • Reading standard 1 • Reading standard 10 • Speaking and Listening standard 1
10. Read and comprehend complex literary and informational texts independently and proficiently.
State standards were forward-mapped Existing State Standards
Anchor standards are backward-mapped Backward design of CCSS-ELA standards
Assessing Texts • Quantitative measures • Qualitative values • Task and Reader considerations
Levels of Meaning and Purpose • Density and complexity • Figurative language • Purpose
Levels of Meaning and Purpose Is it about talking animals, or the USSR? Is it entertainment, or political satire? Is it straightforward, or ambiguous? 1370L Grades 11-12
Author’s Purpose • Allegory for tolerance • Mirrored events of early Civil Rights movement (1961) “Now, the Star-Belly SneetchesHad bellies with stars.The Plain-Belly SneetchesHad none upon thars. Those stars weren’t so big. They were really so smallYou might think such a thing wouldn’t matter at all..” But, because they had stars, all the Star-Belly SneetchesWould brag, ‘We’re the best kind of Sneetch on the beaches.’With their snoots in the air, they would sniff and they’d snort‘We’ll have nothing to do with the Plain-Belly sort!’And whenever they met some, when they were out walking,They’d hike right on past them without even talking.” 530L Grades 2-3
Complex themes • Relationship between love and pain • Masculinity • Loyalty and war 730L Grades 2-3
Structure • Genre • Organization • Narration • Text features and graphics
Structure Changes in narration, point of view Changes in font signal narration changes Complex themes 560L Grades 2-3
Structure • Stream of consciousness narration • Unreliable narrators • Nonlinear structure • Time shifts written in italics 870L (grades 4-5)
Language Conventions • Standard English and variations • Register
Language Conventions Non-standard English usage “Out in the hottest, dustiest part of town is an orphanage run by a female person nasty enough to scare night into day. She goes by the name of Mrs. Sump, though I doubt there ever was a Mr. Sump on accounta she looks like somethin’ the cat drug in and the dog wouldn’t eat.” (Stanley, 1996, p. 2) AD 660L (Adult-directed)
British slang circa 1982 “The doorbell went. I put the blind back to how it was, checked I'd left no other traces of my incursion, slipped out, and flew downstairs to see who it was. The last six steps I took in one death-defying bound. Moron, grinny-zitty as ever. His bumfluff's getting thicker, mind. "You'll never guess what!" "What?” "You know the lake in the woods?" "What about it?" "It's only"--Moron checked that we weren't being overheard--"gone and froze solid! Half the kids in the village're there, right now. Ace doss or what?" ATOS 4.4 Grades 2-3 Bumfluff- light facial hair (“peach fuzz”) Ace doss-easy and fun
Knowledge Demands • Background knowledge • Prior knowledge • Cultural knowledge • Vocabulary
Knowledge Demands Domain-specific vocabulary (radioactive, acidity, procedure, vaccination) Background knowledge (diseases, safety risks, scientific experimentation) 1100L Grades 6-8
Cultural Knowledge Demands • Buddhist philosophy • Search for spiritual enlightenment • Eightfold Path to Nirvana 1010L Grades 6-8
It’s not enough to have complex text in the room. Students need to read and discuss complex text.
Teacher Responsibility “I do it.” Focused Instruction Guided Instruction “We do it.” “You do it together.” Collaborative “You do it alone.” Independent Student Responsibility A Structure for Instruction That Works
In Some Classrooms… Teacher Responsibility Focused Instruction “I do it.” “You do it alone.” Independent Student Responsibility
In Some Classrooms… Teacher Responsibility “You do it alone.” Independent Student Responsibility
And in Some Classrooms… Teacher Responsibility “I do it” Focused Instruction “We do it” Guided Instruction “You do it alone” Independent Student Responsibility
Teacher Responsibility “I do it.” Focused Instruction Guided Instruction “We do it.” “You do it together.” Collaborative “You do it alone.” Independent Student Responsibility A Structure for Instruction That Works
The established purpose focuseson student learning, rather than an activity, assignment, or task.
Students understand the relevance of the established purpose.
Relevance requires… …making connections between the subject and its application outside of the classroom walls.
Relevance requires… …opportunities to learn about oneself as a learner.
Relevance requires… … learning for learning’s sake.
Response to Instruction and Intervention (RtI2) • Tier 1: Quality core instruction • Tier 2: Supplemental intervention • Tier 3: Intensive intervention Tier 1: 70+% Tier 2: 20–30% Tier 3: 5–15% Manipulate variables…
Homework is NOT a progress monitoring tool!
26% Number of high school teachers who “often or very often” run out of time in classand assign the content for homework. (Markow, Kim, & Liebman, The MetLife Survey of the American Teacher: The Homework Experience, 2007)
Cleavers Slackers Cheaters Bewildered
Goals of Homework • Fluency building • Application • Spiral review • Extension (Fisher & Frey, “Homework and the Gradual Release of Responsibility: Making Responsibility Possible, English Journal, 2008)
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