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C'S'R' Collaborative Strategic Reading

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Title: C'S'R' Collaborative Strategic Reading


1
C.S.R. Collaborative
Strategic Reading
  • January 24, 2008
  • Becky Williams, AEA 267
  • Reading and Language Arts Consultant

2
Todays Agenda
  • Kindly refer to the lime green sheet on your
    tables for a peek at todays work
  • Weve got a busy day ahead of us!

3
The Pane on Hot Pink!
  • The Power behind the Windowpane
  • Refer to your notesand see if you can determine
    what each pane represents as it relates to CSR

4
Time for Group Sharing
  • In pairs
  • Student samples
  • Successes
  • Concerns
  • Questions

5
CSR Reading Materials
  • CSR was primarily designed to be used with
    expository text found in social studies, science,
    and other content area textbooks.
  • Select reading material with well-formed,
    interesting passages that are conducive to
    strategy application. Such material is
    characterized by
  • Clues that help students predict what they will
    be learning
  • Having one main idea per paragraph
  • Provide context that helps student connect
    information

6
A Thought
  • consider beginning/ introducing CSR with the
    Weekly Reader, Scholastic, or a similar
    nonfiction publication that captures students
    interest and can be read in a short time

7
Teachers Role in CSR
  • Teach the strategies and procedures to students
    through whole class and small group teacher-led
    activities. Use modeling and think-alouds.
  • Implement CSR 2-3 times a week with selected
    content area material.

8
More on the Teachers Role
  • Circulate and provide ongoing assistance.
  • Actively listen to students conversations
  • Clarify difficult words, model strategy usage,
    encourage students to participate, and model a
    helpful attitude.
  • Conduct a whole-class preview and /or a
    whole-class wrap up to introduce and/or review
    important concepts.
  • Conduct follow-up activities to reinforce
    learning.

9
Before Reading
After Reading
  • 1. Preview
  • Brainstorm
  • Predict

4. Wrap Up a. Ask Questions b. Review
During Reading
3. Get the Gist
  • Read
  • a paragraph
  • or section of text
  • Click Clunk
  • Cruise Control Traffic Jam

10
Think and Share
  • What is the relationship between automaticity and
    scaffolded instruction

11
Scaffolded Instruction
  • With any luck, we move this way over time.

0 Teacher Responsibility 100
But we are always prepared to slide up and down
the diagonal
Gradual Release of Responsibility
0 Student Responsibility
100
12
CSR Components
  • A Review
  • Preview
  • Click Clunk
  • Get the Gist
  • Wrap Up

13
PreviewingWhen How
  • Preview Before Reading
  • To prepare to engage in the Preview strategy, the
    teacher should have students look at the title,
    subheadings, pictures, and skim the text to look
    for key words.
  • What happens when you forget or skip
    previewinglets find out!

14
Previewing
  • Fill in the blanks
  • Complete the yellow sheet individually and then
    share your answers with a neighbor
  • DiscussWhy is it important that we activate
    background knowledge? How does it relate to the
    importance of schema or a network of ideas?

15
And the answers are
  • poultry men
  • chickens
  • incubation
  • Summarize
  • Farmers
  • Merchants
  • difficulties
  • promotion
  • egg
  • chicks
  • sunshine
  • feed
  • Banties
  • geese
  • barnyard
  • roost
  • dark

16
Lets Look at Previewing
  • Review pages 23/ 24 salmon sheet
  • Then well review the DVD / previewing section
  • Think RespondHow could you modify a preview
    lesson youve taught to reflect the teacher
    assisted phase?

17
  • Students are ready to move to the independent
    phase of the Preview Strategy when they
    demonstrate during the teacher assisted phase
    that they can preview short sections of text.
  • They should know what preview is, how to preview,
    when to preview, and why.

18
Goals of Click Clunk
  • Students click clunk while reading each section
    of the passage.
  • The goals of clicking and clunking are
  • For students to monitor their reading
    comprehension
  • To identify when they have breakdowns in
    understanding
  • To use fix-up strategies to figure out clunks.

19
Cruise Control Traffic Jam
  • Click Cruise Control
  • When you understand what you read, everything
    clicks along smoothly
  • Clunk Traffic Jam
  • When you dont understand what you read, clunk
    you stop. When you get to a clunk, use the fix-up
    strategies to try and figure out what the word or
    concept means.

20
On Clunks
  • Its not important for students to have the exact
    definition of the word. Rather, the power of
    using the fix-up strategies is to create enough
    meaning of the word so it no longer interferes
    with the overall information being studied.

21
Importance of Building Vocabulary
  • Young students who dont have large vocabularies
    or effective word learning strategies often
    struggle to achieve comprehension
  • Bad experiences cause frustration and failure
    that continues
  • Because they dont have sufficient word knowledge
    to understand what they read, they dont like to
    read
  • Therefore, struggling readers have fewer
    opportunities to learn new words

22
Importance of Vocabulary
  • Students vocabulary knowledge relates strongly
    to their reading comprehension and overall
    academic success
  • Vocabulary knowledge assists beginning readers
    with phonological awareness and decoding
  • Vocabulary knowledge is the bridge between
    word-level processes decoding and the cognitive
    processes of comprehension
  • PREL, 2004

23
The Matthew Effects
  • Good readers read more, become better readers,
    and learn more words
  • Poor readers read less, become poorer readers,
    and learn fewer words.
  • Stanovich, 1986

24
Need for Direct and Rich Vocabulary Instruction
  • Direct instruction in vocabulary can increase
    vocabulary learning and comprehension Baumann
    Kameenui, 2004
  • Vocabulary instruction is effective when teachers
    provide a variety of information about each word
    and actively involve students in the process
    Beck McKeown, 2004
  • Teaching students to use fix-up strategies
    i,.e., clunks is just one small piece of
    vocabulary instruction

25
Criteria for Selecting Level II Words
  • Importance and utility of words words that are
    used frequently in language by mature language
    users
  • Instructional potential words that can be used
    in a variety of ways so students develop a deep
    understanding of meaning
  • Conceptual understanding words related to
    concepts that students can understand and the
    meanings can be explained in simple terms
  • Beck, McKeown, Kucan, 2002

26
Vocabulary Lesson Planning Matrix
  • Assists teachers in determining vocabulary words
    to pre-teach
  • Provides students opportunities to practice
    their click clunk strategies
  • Assists teachers in identifying words that are
    unimportant for understanding the concept being
    taught

27
Time to Practice
  • Resources needed
  • Earth Friendly Fabrics goldenrod
  • Vocabulary Lesson Planning Matrix tan
  • Learning Log

28
Brazil
  • Work in pairsmake a list of challenging words
  • Place each word under one of the categories
  • presupposed, supported, or taught
  • Identify vocabulary words Level II
  • What activities or support would you provide?

29
Get the Gist
  • Students learn to get the gist by identifying
    the most important idea in a section of text,
    usually a paragraph
  • Students identify the most important who or what
    in the paragraph they have just read and then
    state in their own words the most important idea
    about the who or what.
  • Students provide the gist in as few words as
    possible.

30
Goal of GIST
  • Teach students to restate in their own words the
    most important point as a way of making sure they
    have understood what they read.
  • Improve students memories of what they have
    learned.

31
Your turn
  • Turquoise paper
  • The Structure of Chloroplasts
  • Work individually
  • Then compare answers with your tablemates
  • Lets look over the entire rooms work

32
Excerpts on Summarization
  • Take a few minutes to read the research on
    summarization
  • Then, kindly complete the structured response
    sheet

33
Final practice
  • Stone Age Genetics Ancient DNA Enters
    Humanitys Heritage
  • Choose groups
  • Assign roles
  • Use cue cards

34
Time to Plan
  • Use lesson planning and reflection form
  • Find and attach a piece of applicable subject
    material
  • Challenge work your kids through each of the
    strands of CSR
  • Reflect on their learning and your progress

35
For next time
  • Samples of student learning logs
  • What are your plans regarding building-wide
    implementation?
  • How might I be able to help?
  • Web site info
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