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Against the Odds: Reading Critically in the 21 st Century

Against the Odds: Reading Critically in the 21 st Century. Reading Between the Lives I The Making Visible Project at Chabot College (18 minutes) As you watch the film, write down comments and/or situations to which you can relate. What did you write down?. Demystifying Reading.

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Against the Odds: Reading Critically in the 21 st Century

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  1. Against the Odds: Reading Critically in the 21st Century

  2. Reading Between the Lives IThe Making Visible Project at Chabot College (18 minutes)As you watch the film, write down comments and/or situations to which you can relate.

  3. What did you write down?

  4. Demystifying Reading

  5. Our Goals: define metacognition; describe how it is used by good readers; describe how lack of it creates poor readers; practice “Inquiry” in reading; learn to use Charting to improve reading skills; 6. learn a way to be a strategic, reflective, and self-regulating reader.

  6. Enter:The Metacognitive Dimension “meta” after or beyond “cognitive” mental process of knowing

  7. METACOGNITION IS “THINKING ABOUT THINKING” They help you: • be a person who has learned to learn; • know the stages in the process of learning and understand your preferred approaches to it; • identify and overcome blocks to learning so you can bring learning from academic to on-the-job/career situations.

  8. Readers with poor metacognitive skills: • often finish reading a passage without even knowing that they have not understood it; • are unable to process and use what they have read; • are unable to make adjustments in their learning processes and monitor their own learning; • approach reading with a negative attitude; • set themselves up to fail.

  9. Cool—how do I start?

  10. Practice INQUIRY in-kwuh-ree (n), inquiries • the act of seeking truth, information, or knowledge • an investigation • the act of inquiring or of seeking information by questioning

  11. A Reading Inquiry HOWyou read is as important as WHAT you read. Should we read everything the same?

  12. The Challenge • We read different texts in different ways. • Reading is an invisible process. • For effective readers (or when one is reading effectively) this is especially true. • In order to conduct an inquiry into what we do when we read, we need to make this invisible process visible.

  13. Chart the Text!

  14. Begin by Understanding the Difference Between Content & Form • Content is WHAT a text is about, • in the words, what the author is saying. • Form is HOW a text is written, • in other words, • what the author is doing.

  15. Let’s Practice…

  16. “Superman and Me” by Sherman Alexie I learned to read with a Superman comic book. Simple enough, I suppose. I cannot recall which particular Superman comic book I read, nor can I remember which villain he fought in that issue. I cannot remember the plot, nor the means by which I obtained the comic book. What I can remember is this: I was 3 years old, a Spokane Indian boy living with his family on the Spokane Indian Reservation in eastern Washington state. We were poor by most standards, but one of my parents usually managed to find some minimum-wage job or another, which made us middle- class by reservation standards. I had a brother and three sisters. We lived on a combination of irregular paychecks, hope, fear and government surplus food.

  17. “Superman and Me” by Sherman Alexie I learned to read with a Superman comic book. Simple enough, I suppose. I cannot recall which particular Superman comic book I read, nor can I remember which villain he fought in that issue. I cannot remember the plot, nor the means by which I obtained the comic book. What I can remember is this: I was 3 years old, a Spokane Indian boy living with his family on the Spokane Indian Reservationin eastern Washington state. We were poor by most standards, but one of my parents usually managed to find some minimum-wage job or another, which made us middle- class by reservation standards. I had a brother and three sisters. We lived on a combination of irregular paychecks, hope, fear and government surplus food.

  18. Charting Begins with the 1st Paragraph • Ask yourself: • What is the paragraph about? (content) • What is the author doing? • (form)

  19. For the first paragraph in Sherman Alexie’s “Superman and Me” Sherman Alexie introduces the concept that he learned to read from a Superman comic book by illustrating what he does and does not remember, and then he describeshow he grew up in poverty, but not without hope, on a Spokane Indian Reservation.

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