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Strategies for Close Reading

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Strategies for Close Reading Alicia Kubacki On the shoulders of Fisher and Frey as well as Beers and Probst Genre: Entertain? Explain? Inform? Persuade? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Strategies for Close Reading


1
Strategies for Close Reading
  • Alicia Kubacki
  • On the shoulders of Fisher and Frey as well as
    Beers and Probst

2
Review of Text Complexity
  • CCSS Appendix A
  • Doug Fisher and Nancy Freys work

3
What is complex text?
Page 4
4
http//www.fisherandfrey.com
5
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6
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7
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8
Close Reading
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v5w9v6-zUg3Y
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vJhGI5zdjpvc

9
Qualitatively analyze the book you selected
using the rubric.  
Summarize the factors that make the text complex
10
Levels of Meaning and Purpose
  • Density and complexity
  • Figurative language
  • Purpose

11
Levels of Meaning and Purpose
Is it about talking animals, or the USSR?
Is it entertainment, or political satire?
Is it straightforward, or ambiguous?
12
Structure
  • Genre
  • Organization
  • Narration
  • Text features and graphics

13
Structure
Changes in narration, point of view Changes in
font signal narration changes Complex themes
14
Language Conventions
  • Standard English and variations
  • Register

15
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 wouldnt eat. (Stanley,
1996, p. 2)
16
Knowledge Demands
  • Background knowledge
  • Prior knowledge
  • Cultural knowledge
  • Vocabulary

17
Knowledge Demands
Domain-specific vocabulary (radioactive, acidity,
procedure, vaccination)
Background knowledge (diseases, safety risks,
scientific experimentation)
18
Turn and Talk Using Sentence Stems
  • Fisher and Frey are saying that.
  • Qualitatively Measuring means.
  • I could use this in my teaching by..

19
View 5 minute intro
  • http//www.heinemann.com/shared/iPlayer.aspx?id17
    970

20
6 Sign Posts
  • Contrasts and Contradictions (setting too)
  • Aha Moment
  • Tough Questions
  • Words of the Wiser
  • Again and Again
  • Memory Moment

21
(No Transcript)
22
Lets Try It
  • Using Langston Hughes short story Thank You
    Mam
  • Find examples of the six sign-posts with your
    table group
  • Fill out a Graphic Organizer with your group
  • Share out to whole group

23
Progression of Text-dependent Questions
Whole
Across texts
Entire text
Segments
Paragraph
Sentence
Word
Part
24
Text-dependent Questions
  • Answered through close reading
  • Evidence comes from text, not information from
    outside sources
  • Understanding beyond basic facts
  • Not recall!

25
General Understandings
  • Overall view
  • Sequence of information
  • Story arc
  • Main claim and evidence
  • Gist of passage

26
General Understandings in Kindergarten
  • Retell the story in order using the words
    beginning, middle, and end.

27
Key Details
  • Search for nuances in meaning
  • Determine importance of ideas
  • Find supporting details that support main ideas
  • Answers who, what, when, where, why, how much, or
    how many.

28
Key Details in Kindergarten
  • How long did it take to go from a hatched egg to
    a butterfly?
  • What is one food that gave him a stomachache?
    What is one food that did not him a stomachache?

29
It took more than 3 weeks. He ate for one week,
and then he stayed inside his cocoon for more
than two weeks.
30
  • Foods that did not give him a stomachache
  • Foods that gave him a stomachache
  • Chocolate cake
  • Ice cream
  • Pickle
  • Swiss cheese
  • Salami
  • Lollipop
  • Cherry pie
  • Sausage
  • Cupcake
  • watermelon
  • Apples
  • Pears
  • Plums
  • Strawberries
  • Oranges
  • Green leaf

31
  • Foods that did not give him a stomachache
  • Foods that gave him a stomachache
  • Chocolate cake
  • Ice cream
  • Pickle
  • Swiss cheese
  • Salami
  • Lollipop
  • Cherry pie
  • Sausage
  • Cupcake
  • watermelon
  • Apples
  • Pears
  • Plums
  • Strawberries
  • Oranges
  • Green leaf

32
Vocabulary in Kindergarten
  • How does the author help us to understand what
    cocoon means?

33
There is an illustration of the cocoon, and a
sentence that reads, He built a small house,
called a cocoon, around himself.
34
Authors Purpose
  • Genre Entertain? Explain? Inform? Persuade?
  • Point of view First-person, third-person
    limited, omniscient, unreliable narrator
  • Critical Literacy Whose story is not
    represented?

35
Authors Purpose in Kindergarten
  • Who tells the storythe narrator or the
    caterpillar?

36
A narrator tells the story, because he uses the
words he and his. If it was the caterpillar, he
would say I and my.
37
Inferences
  • Probe each argument in persuasive text, each idea
    in informational text, each key detail in
    literary text, and observe how these build to a
    whole.

38
Inferences in Kindergarten
  • The title of the book is The Very Hungry
    Caterpillar. How do we know he is hungry?

39
The caterpillar ate food every day but he was
still hungry. On Saturday he ate so much food he
got a stomachache! Then he was a big, fat
caterpillar so he could build a cocoon and turn
into a butterfly.
40
Opinions, Arguments, and Intertextual Connections
  • Authors opinion and reasoning (K-5)
  • Claims
  • Evidence
  • Counterclaims
  • Ethos, Pathos, Logos
  • Rhetoric
  • Links to other texts throughout the grades

41
Develop Text-dependent Questions for Your Text
  • Do the questions require the reader to return to
    the text?
  • Do the questions require the reader to use
    evidence to support his or her ideas or claims?
  • Do the questions move from text-explicit to
    text-implicit knowledge?
  • Are there questions that require the reader to
    analyze, evaluate, and create?

42
Lets Dig into Anthony Brownes Voices in the
Park
  • Follow along while we read aloud
  • In complex text, we always have to read it more
    than once.
  • 1st as a reader
  • So what do you notice? Table talk
  • 2nd read We read to look at what the
  • author is doing

43
Progression of Text-dependent Questions
Whole
Across texts
Entire text
Segments
Paragraph
Sentence
Word
Part
44
Try writing one question at each level with
Voices in the Park
45
What Matters Reading Volume
  • Students who rank
  • 98ile, read on the average of 140 minutes
    per day.
  • 90ile, read on the average of 55 minutes
    per day.
  • 80ile, read about 40
    minutes per day.
  • 50ile, read about 15
    minutes per day.
  • 30ile, read about 6
    minutes per day.
  • That transfers to approximately
  • 10 million words read per year at the 98ile
  • 350,000 words per year at the
    30ile.
  • Richard Allingtons Research

46
http//www.youtube.com/watch?NR1featureendsc
reenviOcYfrZJWi8safeactive
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