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NonFiction Reading, writing and truly understanding it

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Surround kids with compelling nonfiction of every type and form. ... A picture that tugs at the heart strings can be more effective than 1,000 words. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NonFiction Reading, writing and truly understanding it


1
Non-FictionReading, writing and truly
understanding it
  • Rahshene Davis
  • Cornerstone Winter Conference
  • Stamford, CT
  • January 2007

2
(No Transcript)
3
Mode VS. Genre
4
Nonfiction Genre
  • Most likely to spur childrens passion and wonder
    for learning.
  • The genre that best lets us explore and
    understand the real world.
  • Allows us to investigate the real world and
    inspires us to dig deeper to inquire and better
    understand.

5
As teachers we can
  • Share our own passion and wonder about the real
    world. Passion and wonder and contagious.
  • Surround kids with compelling nonfiction of every
    type and form.
  • Match the reading to the writing.
  • Emphasize short text for nonfiction reading and
    writing instruction and practice.
  • Engage in the inquiry process ourselves-modeling
    instruction, showing our thinking, demonstrating
    how we do things, and giving our students time to
    practice.
  • Build in long blocks of time for students to
    explore their thoughts and questions, to read
    text of their choice, to research topics of
    interest, and to practice reading and writing
    strategies.

6
Outside of school about 80-90 of the reading
adults do is nonfiction
  • Newspapers
  • Magazines
  • Memos
  • Manuals
  • Directions
  • Informational Trade Books

  • (Zinsser,1998)

7
We need to get more trade nonfiction into our
classes
  • So children can
  • Read it
  • Appreciate it
  • Learn from it
  • Write it more authentically

8
Its not enough to simply provide access!
  • We need to
  • Read nonfiction aloud
  • Explore nonfiction to satisfy curiosity
  • Use nonfiction for instruction
  • Read nonfiction to find out information
  • Read nonfiction to do research
  • Skim nonfiction to answer questions
  • Show particular features of nonfiction - titles,
    headings, bold print, graphs, charts, - and point
    out the purpose of these text elements
  • Read nonfiction to write it well

  • (Maxim,1998)

9
What we know about Nonfiction
  • Feature
  • Bold print
  • Caption
  • Table of contents
  • Heading
  • Subheading
  • Distribution map
  • Purpose
  • Make you stop and pay attention
  • Describe the photograph
  • Divide the book into sections / chapters
  • Tell you what the following text is about
  • Break the text up into smaller parts
  • Show where something occurs

10
Three Criteria for Book Choice
  • Content - books that relate to the curriculum or
    topic of study, that you are passionate about, or
    that we suspect will capture our childrens
    imagination.
  • Text Features - books that present text features
    such as maps, graph, charts, headings, which
    support readers as they read the information.
  • Writing Quality - books that are written in a
    compelling, visual way that engages readers and
    offers strong models for writing.

11
Children are naturally curious, with a great
thirst to know about the world around them. They
are not bored by facts, data or information they
are only bored by how such information is
presented or what they are expected to do with
it. (Doiron,1994)
12
Match the Reading to the Writing
  • Unless we are training our students for a career
    in encyclopedia writing, we need to search for
    better models of authentic nonfiction.
  • Teach our students that their best writing
    teachers are the authors they love, not the
    encyclopedias they need for beginning research.

13
Emphasize Short Text
  • Short text is
  • well crafted with vivid language and striking
    illustrations and photographs.
  • self contained and provides a complete set of
    thoughts, ideas, and information.
  • Focused on issues of critical importance to
    readers of varying ages.
  • easily read aloud giving a common experience to
    everyone in the room.
  • easily reread for deeper meaning
  • accessible to all kind of readers the length is
    less likely to intimidate.
  • a realistic model for writing.
  • authentic and prepares kids for real world
    reading (Harvey Goudvis, 2000)

14
Choosing Short text
  • For the following reasons
  • Content - search for pieces that will engage our
    children, support and build background knowledge
    of the content we are teaching.
  • Strategy Practice - search for pieces that push
    our thinking, demand that we question, visualize,
    infer, or synthesize to acquire information and
    understand.
  • Features - that signify importance, such as
    heading, bold prints, italics, captions, so that
    we can show authentic examples, discover their
    purpose, and better understand the genre.
  • Format - such as newspapers, magazines, and
    picture books and notice how they compare.
  • Form - including essays, letters,, feature
    articles, columns, to expose students to
    different characteristics of each form.
  • Text Structure - clip different short text forms
    to examine different cue words and text
    structures. ex. But, expect a chang.,
  • Writing Quality - delicious writing, our best
    writing teachers author the nonfiction texts we
    read.
  • Perspective - articles that might spark
    differences in opinion to enhance classroom
    discussion.
  • Surprising Information - unexpected information,
    a headline that read Misunderstood Sharks, Not
    feeding Machines, Kids love surprising
    information (Harvey Goudvis 2000).

15
Recount
16
Non-Chronological Report
17
Instructions Procedures
18
Explanation
19
Persuasion
20
Discussion
21
Creating a Culture of Thinking in our Classrooms
  • Thinking, understanding and engagement flourish
    in classrooms that foster real-world inquiry.
  • When we build in time to share our passion and
    encourage sincere questions surround our children
    with compelling nonfiction, match the reading to
    the writing, model how we learn and give students
    long blocks of time to delve into and practice
    with text of their choice, children come alive
    and learning explodes.

22
Nonfiction is the genre most likely to spur
enthusiasm
  • The real world has something for everyone.
    Life is nonfiction.
  • (Beverly Korbin 1990)
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