Title: Strategy Instruction for Making Predictions and Making Connections
1Strategy Instruction for Making Predictions and
Making Connections
2Todays Learning Objectives
- 1. Review key components of Metacognitive
Framework - 2. Review important considerations for teaching
students how to predict an make connections
while reading. - 3. Apply these strategies to your own reading of
a text and practice modeling for students in
preparation for your book activity
3Good Strategy Instruction
- What is it? (name it and define it)
- Why is it important?
- How do you use the strategy?
- When is it useful?
- (remember Explain Define Notice and Apply from
your textbook as the MODELING phase of strategy
instruction)
4Predicting
- Why do good readers predict?
- It gives a purpose for reading
- Helps build internal tension
- Helps anticipate a satisfying ending
- Connect prior knowledge new information
- Predictions serve as guideposts.
- We monitor our predictions from time to time to
see how they hold up (Thats what I thought! --
Wow, thats not what I thought!)
5Problems with Predicting
- Childrens predictions are often inaccurate,
because of the text or the reader. - Children underestimate the importance of text
features in informational text. - Many children dont take the time to predict
properly and never revisit to solidify or revise
their prediction. - Your Teaching Goal Help students make
predictions that are accurate and meaningful
6Define What is a prediction?
- A prediction is more than a guess an educated
guess perhaps. - What two things do we need to make a good
prediction?
BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE
CLUES IN TEXT
PREDICTION
7Explain How and when do good readers predict?
- See the Predicting Tally Sheet (p. 204) for CLUES
IN THE TEXT but be careful about being too
prescriptive! - 1. Title, headings, cover, pictures, captions
- 2. Ask questions
- 3. Knowledge of the topic
- 4. Knowledge about the author/genre/book
- 5. Text organization structure
- 6. Past events in the text
- 7. Meaningful connections
- 8. Knowledge of the character
8MODEL Define Explain Notice ApplyClarify
- Define and Explain
- How is a prediction different than a guess
- Good, so what I hear you saying is predicting is
- Explain (Clues BK Prediction)
- Good readers make predictions using clues from
(THE TALLY SHEET). youre going to think about
what you used to make that prediction. What
clues in the text? What background knowledge in
your head? - Model Notice Apply
- Clarify (sum up at the end)
9Thinking Aloud in Action
- So, lets see how this all plays out in a real
read-aloud/think-aloud - Amos Boris by William
Steig - Look for
- Examples of me defining explaining how to
predict and why predicting is useful - Examples of me thinking aloud to model
- Examples of me asking you to notice how I
predicted and how it was useful - Examples of me gradually inviting you to predict
WITH me (but also offering support and
clarification)
10You Try Now
- Write your Think-Aloud
- Ask students to Notice Apply
- You will do more of this for Book Activity 3 (you
can choose predicting or connecting)
11Making Connections
- Good readers actively relate ideas in print to
their own knowledge, experiences, and other
texts. - Making connections helps readers to
- Relate to characters with links to their own
experiences - Visualize particular details
- Help pay attention and remember (store) main
ideas for later recall - Ask questions to better make sense of or clarify
the ideas from a readers own perspective (So,
is that like when?)
12Problems with Teaching Connecting
- Childrens connections may be irrelevant.
- Childrens connections may pull attention away
from the main ideas of the new text. - Children need help understanding that connections
are helpful for understanding new material (not
just for sharing their own experiences) - Your Teaching Goal Help students make relevant
connections in ways that help them to better
understand the current text
13What types of connections can I make?
- Text-to-self connections
- This reminds me of a time when I
- Text-to-text connections
- This book/character/event is a lot like/very
different from ___ because - Text-to-world connections
- I once heard about
- Text-to-author connections
- This reminds me of how this author always
14When can I make useful and relevant connections?
- See the Connecting Tally Sheet (p. 207) but
dont get tied down to these - 1. Connect to characters
- 2. Connect to plot
- 3. Connect to the setting or place
- 4. Connect to visualize, taste, feel, or hear the
text - 5. Connect to predict or infer what will happen
- 6. Connect to what I know about a topic or word
- 7. Connect to help me feel emotions
- 8. Connect to what I know about text structure
15After ModelingActivities to Practice/Apply
Predicting
- Think back to the tally sheet of clues to use for
predicting - TitleAnticipation Guide (p. 86-see next slide)
- Topic/VocabPredict-o-gram (see next slide)
- Questions..Sticky Note Questions (p. 88)
- Questions..Preview, Read, Question (p. 88)
- Author/GenreStory map genre features (p. 93)
- Predict what youd find in types of expository
texts ABC books, magazines, newspapers, ads,
brochures, invitations, menusfairy tales (e.g.,
Cinderella) - (All ideas for your own lesson plan)
16Anticipation Guide Tuck Everlasting by Natalie
Babbit
- Identify major themes write several statements
students discuss react before reading and
then revisit after
Agree Disagree
It would be wonderful to live forever.
You should never do something that your parents have forbidden.
People should have the right to sell products even if they are harmful.
Some secrets are so important that it is acceptable to do anything in order to keep them.
17Predict-o-gram Crow Boy by Tara Yashima
- How would Taro Yashima use each vocabulary word?
forlorn, interesting, trudging, imagine,
graduation, attendance, admired, announced,
charcoal, rejected
Setting Where the story took place
Characters People in the story
Problem or goal of the main character
Solution to the problem or attainment of goal
18Story Map/Genre- Use to predict story elements in
Cinderella for example
19Activities to practice/apply Making Connections
- Use sticky-notes to make connections while
reading - Tally them up after and encourage students to
expand the types of connections they make the
next time - Connections Continuum
- Generate a list of connections on sticky notes
and ask students to sequence in order from most
meaningful to least meaningful (encourage
students to remember this when they make their
own connections) - Story Maps
- Anticipation Guides
- Compare and contrast across a genre (e.g., fairy
tale) or across several variants of one story
(e.g., Cinderella)
20Elements of Story
- Exposition background of characters setting
- Characters protagonist and antagonist
- Conflict the problem
- Rising Action building the tension
- Climax the turning point of the story (not most
exiting) - Resolution the problem is solved
- Falling Action tie up loose ends/provide closure
- Theme message or lesson conveyed (not just a
topic)
How do these play out in the traditional
Cinderella story?
21Homework
- Tuesday, Oct. 11 NO CLASS
- (tip pretend Book Activity 3 due here)
- Read Hancock Ch. 4 Modern Fantasy (elements)
- Study for quiz on Thursday
- Thursday, Oct. 13
- Book Activity 3 Strategy Script due
- Finish reading Vacation Under the Volcano (will
be on quiz) - Quiz 1 (see wiki homepage link for quiz topics)
should take about 30 minutes