Title: Good Readers
1Good Readers
- Reading in the Upper Grades
2Good Readers
- Make connections
- Good readers relate what they read to their own
lives by connecting it to prior knowledge,
looking for similarities between the text and
what they have experienced.
3Good Readers
- Ask questions
- Good readers are engaged by clarifying understand
and making meaning out of what they are reading. - Why is this happening?
- What does this mean?
4Good Readers
- Visualize
- Good readers create pictures in their mind as
they read.
5Good Readers
- Draw inferences and predict
- Good readers take what they already know, gather
clues from text, make a judgment, and predict
what will happen next.
6Good Readers
- Determine important ideas
- Good readers focus on essential ideas and
important information or key ideas.
7Good Readers
- Synthesize information
- Good readers combine new information with
existing knowledge to form an original idea of
text gaining new insights.
8Good Readers
- Monitor comprehension and clarify
- Good readers know when they understand what they
read and when they do not, trying to correct the
misunderstandings as they arise.
9Good Readers Ask These Questions Before They Read
- What do I need to know before I read?
- What do I already know about this topic?
- How is the text organization going to help me?
- What is the reason I am reading this text?
- What is the authors purpose?
Good Reader Bookmark What do I need to know
before I read? What do I already know about this
topic? How is the text organization going to help
me? What is the reason I am reading this
text? What is the authors purpose? Am I reading
for my own pleasure? Am I reading for
school? Does the title tell me what I am going to
read about? Are there pictures, graphs, maps,
titles, or headings that can help me? Can I
create a graphic organizer that will help me
organize the text?
10Good Readers Ask These Questions Before They Read
- Am I reading for my own pleasure?
- Am I reading for school?
- Does the title tell me what I am going to read
about? - Are there pictures, graphs, maps, titles, or
headings that can help me? - Can I create a graphic organizer that will help
me organize the text?
11What Good Readers Do As They Read ---Text
Processing
- How does this connect to what I know?
- How does what I am reading compare to what I
thought I knew? - Does what I am reading make sense?
- Do I need to code the text and note what is
important, what I dont understand, and what I
need to reread? - Do I need to mark important words with highlight
or sticky notes?
12What Good Readers Do As They Read ---Text
Processing
- Do I need to go back and reread any part of the
text? - Do the pictures, charts, graphs or visuals help
me understand what I am reading? - Do I agree with the way the problem was solved?
Am I surprised about the information? - Are there clues to help me make predictions?
13What Good Readers Do As They Read ---Text
Processing
- What is the plot or theme?
- What mental pictures do I see?
- What connection can I make
- What or who is this story about?
- When and where does the story take place?
- How and why do the events happen?
- Is there a specific problem that is solved?
- Do I see words I dont understand?
14What Good Readers Do After They Read -- Reflection
- Did I find answers to the questions?
- Did I learn what I wanted to learn?
- Were there other questions I found?
- Where there questions or problems I didn't find?
- What do I know now that I did not know before?
- What is the most surprising or interesting think
I read?
15What Good Readers Do After They Read -- Reflection
- What new vocabulary did I learn?
- What do I remember?
- How do I feel about what Ive read?
- Does my graphic organizer make sense?
- Can I restate the main points in my own words?
- How can I apply what I read to my schoolwork and
life? - Is there a lesson in the story?
16Myths About Good Readers
- Good readers skip letters and words.
- Good reader look at all of the words and almost
all of the letter in words to seek familiar
letter patterns in words.
17Myths About Good Readers
- Hearing inner voices is bad.
- Good reader have an inner voice in their heads
that helps them create meanings. Different
characters have different voices.
18No Inner Voice?
- Students who do not hear inner voices should
think first when the teacher asks a question and
not blurt out answers. They should pause and
then ask a partner the same question. Then
respond when the teacher calls on one of the
partners for an answer.
19No Inner Voice?
- Students must be trained to think of an answer in
their heads before blurting it aloud.
Students who have no inner voice often read out
loud when others read silently.
20Myths About Good Readers
- Good readers always use context.
- Good readers recognize words without using
context. When the reader has to sound words out
letter-by-letter, they may have no chance of
figuring out the word. Good reader self-correct
their misunderstanding by using content.
21Myths About Good Readers
- Spelling patterns help all reader decode words.
- Good readers use spelling patterns and words they
already know to help figure out new words
(chunking breaking big words into manageable
parts).