rigorous reading: accessing complex texts

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Rigorous Reading: Accessing Complex Texts Doug Fisher www.fisherandfrey.com

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Rigorous Reading: Accessing Complex Texts. Doug Fisher www.fisherandfrey.com. The teacher needed to…. Establish learning goals Check for understanding Provide feedback Align future instruction with student performance. TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY. “ I do it ”. Focused Instruction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Rigorous Reading:Accessing Complex Texts

Doug Fisherwww.fisherandfrey.com

The teacher needed to…

• Establish learning goals• Check for understanding• Provide feedback• Align future instruction with student

performance

TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Focused Instruction

Guided Instruction

“I do it”

“We do it”

“You do it together”

Collaborative

Independent “You do it alone”

A Structure for Instruction that Works

In some classrooms …TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Focused Instruction “I do it”

Independent

“You do it alone”

In some classrooms …TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Independent

“You do it alone”

And in some classrooms …TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Focused Instruction

Guided Instruction

“I do it”

“We do it”

Independent“You do it alone”

TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Focused Instruction

Guided Instruction

“I do it”

“We do it”

“You do it together”

Collaborative

Independent “You do it alone”

A Structure for Instruction that Works

10. Read and comprehend complex literary and informational texts independently and proficiently.

Assessing Texts

• Quantitative measures• Qualitative values• Task and reader considerations

• Background• Prior• Cultural• Vocabulary

• Standard English• Variations• Register

• Genre• Organization• Narration• Text Features• Graphics

• Density and Complexity

• Figurative Language

• PurposeLevels of Meaning Structure

Knowledge Demands

Language Convention and Clarity

Levels of Meaning and Purpose

• Density and complexity

• Figurative language

• Purpose

Levels of Meaning and Purpose

Is it about talking animals, or the USSR?

Is it entertainment, or political satire?

Is it straightforward, or ambiguous?

1370LGrades 11-12

530LGrades 2-3

Author’s Purpose• Allegory for tolerance• Mirrored events of early Civil

Rights movement (1961)

“Now, the Star-Belly SneetchesHad bellies with stars.The Plain-Belly SneetchesHad none upon thars. Those stars weren’t so big. They were really so smallYou might think such a thing wouldn’t matter at all..”But, because they had stars, all the Star-Belly SneetchesWould brag, ‘We’re the best kind of Sneetch on the beaches.’With their snoots in the air, they would sniff and they’d snort‘We’ll have nothing to do with the Plain-Belly sort!’And whenever they met some, when they were out walking,They’d hike right on past them without even talking.”

730LGrades 2-3

Complex themes • Relationship

between love and pain

• Masculinity• Loyalty and war

Structure

• Genre

• Organization

• Narration

• Text features and graphics

Structure

Changes in narration, point of view

Changes in font signal narration changes

Complex themes

560LGrades 2-3

870L (grades 4-5)

• Stream of consciousness narration

• Unreliable narrators

• Nonlinear structure

• Time shifts written in italics

Structure

Language Conventions

• Standard English and variations

• Register

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 wouldn’t eat.”

(Stanley, 1996, p. 2) AD 660L (Adult-directed)

Knowledge Demands

• Background knowledge

• Prior knowledge

• Cultural knowledge

• Vocabulary

Knowledge Demands

Domain-specific vocabulary (radioactive, acidity, procedure, vaccination)

Background knowledge (diseases, safety risks, scientific experimentation)

1100LGrades 6-8

1010LGrades 6-8

Cultural Knowledge Demands

• Buddhist philosophy• Search for spiritual

enlightenment• Eightfold Path to Nirvana

Simply assigning hard books will not ensure that studentslearn at high levels!

Close reading is

only a PART of high quality

instruction

Creating a Close Reading

Use a short passage

Re-reading

“Read with a pencil”

Text-dependent questions

Give students the chance to struggle a bit

A Close Reading of “Salvador, Late or Early”

(Cisneros, Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories, 1991)

Text-dependent Questions

• Answered through close reading

• Evidence comes from text, not information from outside sources

• Understanding beyond basic facts

• Not recall!

Progression of Text-dependent Questions

Opinions, Arguments, Intertextual Connections

Inferences

Author’s Purpose

Vocab & Text Structure

Key Details

General UnderstandingsPart

Sentence

Paragraph

Entire text

Across texts

Word

Whole

Segments

General Understandings

• Overall view • Sequence of

information• Story arc• Main claim and

evidence• Gist of passage

General Understandings in Kindergarten

Retell the story in order using the words beginning, middle, and end.

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.

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?

It took more than 3 weeks. He ate for one week, and then “he stayed inside [his cocoon] for more than two weeks.”

• Chocolate cake• Ice cream• Pickle• Swiss cheese• Salami• Lollipop• Cherry pie• Sausage• Cupcake• watermelon

Foods that did not give him a stomachache

• Apples• Pears• Plums• Strawberries• Oranges• Green leaf

Foods that gave him a stomachache

Vocabulary and Text Structure• Bridges literal and inferential

meanings• Denotation• Connotation• Shades of meaning• Figurative language• How organization

contributes to

meaning

Vocabulary in Kindergarten

How does the author help us to understand what cocoon means?

There is an illustration of the cocoon, and a sentence that reads, “He built a small house, called a cocoon, around himself.”

• Genre: Entertain? Explain? Inform? Persuade?

• Point of view: First-person, third-person limited, omniscient, unreliable narrator

• Critical Literacy: Who’s story is not represented?

Author’s Purpose

Author’s Purpose in Kindergarten

Who tells the story—the narrator or the caterpillar?

A narrator tells the story, because he uses the words he and his. If it was the caterpillar, he would say I and my.

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.

Inferences in Kindergarten

The title of the book is The Very Hungry Caterpillar. How do we know he is hungry?

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.

Opinions, Arguments, and Intertextual Connections

• Author’s opinion and reasoning (K-5)• Claims• Evidence• Counterclaims• Ethos, Pathos, Logos• Rhetoric

Links to other texts throughout the grades

Opinions and Intertextual Connections in Kindergarten

NarrativeIs this a happy story or a

sad one? How do you know?

InformationalHow are these two books

similar? How are they different?

Progression of Text-dependent Questions

Opinions, Arguments, Intertextual Connections

Inferences

Author’s Purpose

Vocab & Text Structure

Key Details

General UnderstandingsPart

Sentence

Paragraph

Entire text

Across texts

Word

Whole

Segments

8 & 9

3 & 7

6

4 & 5

2

1

Standards

Comprehension and Collaboration

1. Prepare for and participate in collaborations with

diverse partners, building on each others’ ideas and expressing their own clearly and persuasively.

Talk occurs on grade level

topics,

texts, and

issues.

K-2 Features• Following the rules of discussion• Moving from participation to turn taking• Sustaining discussion through questioning• Adult support

3-5 Features• Preparation for discussion• Yielding and gaining the floor• Posing and responding to questions• From explaining own ideas to explaining the

ideas of others

6-8 Features• Using evidence to probe and reflect• Collegial discussions include goals and deadlines• Questions connect ideas from several speakers• Acknowledge new information

9-10 Features• Use prepared research in discussion• Voting, consensus, and decision making• Ensure hearing full range of opinions or options• Summarize and synthesize points of disagreement

11-12 Features• Civil, democratic discussions• Questions probe reasoning and evidence• Resolving contradictions• Determine what additional info is needed

Thank you!