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All-Learner Curriculum for Reading Documents

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All-Learner Curriculum for Reading Documents Mark Newman, Xiuwen Wu, Costas Spirou, National-Louis University All-Learner Curriculum Meeting the needs of all learners ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: All-Learner Curriculum for Reading Documents


1
All-Learner Curriculum for Reading Documents
Mark Newman, Xiuwen Wu, Costas Spirou,
National-Louis University
Meeting the needs of all learners is a growing
concern in education. While many strategies
exist, most highlight the use of visuals as
learning resources. While the Teaching with
Primary Sources (TPS) project focuses on using
primary sources as texts to improve student
content mastery and skills, it stresses visual
images. It also emphasizes employing graphic
organizers as instructional aids. The TPS
All-Learner curriculum combines ideas from
primary-source-based instruction, visual
literacy, and universal design for learning. The
goal is provide teachers with easy to implement
strategies that will help improve the document
reading skills of all students, including second
language learners and those with special
needs. The curriculum focuses on reading a
document and has three stages as shown in the
chart to the right. While the chart divides
identifying important information and making
inferences into two distinct steps, the activity
and graphic organizer combine these two stages.
Teachers have the option of dividing or
combining. Either way, students can improve
content learning while building important
literacy skills.
All-Learner Curriculum
Identifying Important Information Guided by
questions, students identify and highlight
important information in the document and on a
graphic organizer
Making Inferences Guided by questions and
information identified in the document, students
make inferences
Summarizing Learning Guided by questions as well
as information and inferences identified in the
document, students summarize what was learned
from the document relating that learning to the
topic of study
The All-Learner curriculum has been created as a
PowerPoint file so that teachers can customize
the materials to meet the individual needs of
their students. We recommended that teachers
model and scaffold learning based on student
proficiency.
For more information, contact Mark
Newman mnewman_at_nl.edu Xiuwen
Wu xwu_at_nl.edu Costas Spirou cspirou_at_nl.edu
2
Reading a Document Identifying important
information
  • Introduction
  • The first step in using a primary source document
    to increase content knowledge and literacy skills
    involves reading to identify pertinent
    information. This exercises focuses on having
    identify pertinent context and content
    information in the text of a document and demark
    that information by various means on the document
    itself.
  • An important note is that this process focuses
    solely on identifying information. It does
    include general reading strategies and has been
    developed for use with those strategies as
    needed.
  • Generally documents have two type of information
    students need to identify
  • 1. Context title, creator, place of creation,
    date of creation.
  • In some instances, the context information will
    be incomplete. The teacher can decide whether the
    missing information is needed or not, providing
    it to students or having them conduct research to
    find it. Often, missing information is just
    that, missing and cannot be found.
  • 2. Content important items relevant to the topic
    of study.
  • Reading to identify content information requires
    guidance so students know what to look for in the
    document. Having students answers pertinent
    questions about the document and the topic of
    study facilitates the identification process.
    Typically, the questions cover the relevant four
    Ws and 1 H who, what, when, where, and how.
    In some cases, not all these questions are asked.
    For some exercises, the why is also asked, but
    that question is not included here and can be
    added by the teacher as needed. To help all
    students in their reading, a series of icons
    are provided that students can use to demark
    information that answers the questions as
    follows
  • Who
  • What
  • When
  • Where

3
Reading a Document Identifying important
information
  • Introduction
  • Using the questions below, identify how the song
    on the accompanying page describes the first
    Battle of Bull Run. For the context questions,
    write your answers on the spaces provide. For the
    content questions, use the iconsprovided to
    highlight your answers on the song sheet itself.
  • Context
  • What is the name of the song? The Retreat of the
    Grand Army from Bull Run
  • 2. Who is the composer? Ernest Clifton
  • 3. Where was it published? Baltimore, Maryland
  • Content
  • On the song sheet, highlight all the information
    that answers each of the following question,
    using the icons provided. In some cases, the
    information is in more than one place on the song
    sheet.
  • 1. Who was involved?
  • Identify all the people involved by drawing a
    circle around their names on the song sheet. If
    their names appear more than once, just circle
    the name the first time it appears.
  • 2. What happened?
  • Identify what the people involved were trying
    to do at the battle and what happened at the
    battle, by drawing a rectangle around the
    appropriate lines of the song.

4



5
Reading a Document Organizing information
Old Lincolns Grand Army Abe Lincoln McDowell The
Bull
They all ran away
The Retreat of the Grand Army from Bull Run
Ernest Clifton
Baltimore, Maryland
Unknown
Manassas, Virginia
Sunday
Lincoln blamed McDowell, Lincoln superseded
McDowell McClellan new leader Grand army in bad
state
6
Reading a Document Organizing important
information and making inferences
  • Introduction
  • Depending upon student ability, it is possible to
    connect the organization of information and the
    making of inferences tasks.
  • Making Inferences is an important step in reading
    a document. An inference is a conclusion that
    students reach based on information obtained from
    the document and their own reasoning. The task
    involves students using the information they
    identified and organized from the document as
    well prior knowledge to state what they think
    about the documents content.
  • The organizer on the following page has students
    perform several tasks
  • They organize the context of the document
    including the title, creator, date of creation,
    and place of creation.
  • They organize the information identified from
    reading the document by writing their answers to
    teach question in the appropriate place.
  • They make an inference about the answer to that
    question.
  • Setting up the making inference exercise
  • Make sure the students know what an inference is
    and how the process of making one works. The
    teacher might stress the need to base an
    inference on information form the document, prior
    knowledge, and their own thoughts. An inference
    is not just opinion, but informed opinion.
  • Instructions
  • These instructions refer to students completing
    the Organizing important information and making
    inferences graphic organizer on the following
    page
  • 1. On the lines below What does the document
    say?, copy the information highlighted on the
  • document to answer each question.
  • 3. On the lines below What do you think?, make
    an inference regarding who was involved, what
  • happened, and the effect of the outcome on those
    involved.

7
Reading a Document Organizing important
information and making inferences
8
Reading a Document Summarizing what was learned
Instructions Referring to the Organizing
important information and making inferences
graphic organizer, write a summary of what you
learned from the document about the topic you are
studying.
9
Organizing important information and making
inferences graphic organizer template
Where did it happen?
When did it happen?
Who was involved?
What does the document say?
What do you think?
What happened?
What does the document say?
What do you think?
How did the outcome affect those involved?
What does the document say?
What do you think?
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