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Predicting

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Title: Predicting


1
Predicting
  • A strategy that begins PRIOR to reading and
    extends into POST reading discussions

2
Making PredictionsWhy do it?
  • To become a strategic, active reader by
  • Activating prior knowledge about a topic
  • Seeing causal relationships
  • Making connections
  • Forming images/visualizing

3
Prediction Signals that help readers focus
  • If the text contains
  • A question
  • A subheading
  • Therefore
  • You might predict youll find
  • An answer
  • Details that describe it
  • A conclusion or outcome of previous text

4
  • If the text contains
  • For example
  • Such as
  • For instance
  • In fact
  • To illustrate this point
  • You might predict youll find
  • One or more examples that illustrate the main
    point of the paragraph or text

5
  • If the text contains
  • In other words
  • That is
  • Consists of
  • Means
  • You might predict youll find
  • A definition or simpler explanation

6
  • If the text contains
  • However
  • But
  • Whereas
  • On the other hand
  • In contrast
  • In comparison
  • Yet
  • You might predict youll find
  • A difference or unexpected outcome

7
Finally
  • If the text contains
  • Just as
  • Likewise
  • Also
  • Just like
  • Similarly
  • In the same way
  • Moreover
  • Furthermore
  • You might predict youll find
  • A continuation or comparison that shows
    similarities

8
Predicting Non Fiction Text
  • The Four P Process

9
The Four P Processof Predicting
  • Prior Knowledge
  • Patterns/Text Structure
  • Pictures? Graphs? Text Features?
  • Prove your prediction with proof from the text

10
Text features guide us through non fiction text
  • Charts
  • Diagrams
  • Labels
  • Pictures
  • Captions
  • Subheadings
  • Font
  • Bullets
  • White space
  • Layout

11
Use the title, headings, pictures and graphics to
activate PRIOR KNOWLEDGE
Heading
Subheading
Key Words
12
Picture
Caption
Caption
13
Label/heading
Graph
14
Sample Prediction Organizer
15
Text Structures/Organizational Patterns
  • Advanced Signal Words

16
CAUSE AND EFFECT
  • The authors purpose is to write about
  • Why something happens, i.e., the cause.
  • And explain
  • What happens because of the cause, i.e., the
    effect.

17
SIGNAL WORDS
  • Because
  • Since
  • Therefore
  • Consequently
  • As a result
  • This led to
  • So that
  • Nevertheless
  • Accordingly
  • Ifthen
  • Thus
  • One reason for that
  • For this reason

18
CAUSE
Why?
  • Drug abusers often start in upper elementary
    school. They experiment with a parents alcohol
    and enjoy its outcome. They keep doing this and
    become accustomed to the end result of alcohol

19
EFFECT
What?
  • Consequently, they start taking more and more
    of the alcohol to get the same level of buzz.
  • As a result, the child turns to other forms of
    stimulation including marijuana.

20
COMPARE AND CONTRAST
  • To achieve his/her purpose, an author makes a
    comparison by telling how things, people, places
    or events are alike and contrasts them to tell
    how they are different.

21
SIGNAL WORDS
  • However
  • Like
  • Unlike
  • Likewise
  • Both
  • As well as
  • On the other hand
  • Not onlybut also
  • Eitheror while
  • Although
  • Unless
  • Similarly
  • Yet
  • Nevertheless
  • In contrast
  • Too
  • As opposed to
  • Whereas

22
Compare/Contrast
  • Middle school gives students more autonomy than
    elementary school. While students are asked to
    be responsible for their learning in both levels,
    middle school students have more pressure to
    follow through on assignments on their own,
    rather than rely on adults.

23
Both asked to be responsible for learning
More pressure to complete assignments and follow
through
Less pressure to complete assignments and follow
through
24
PROBLEM AND SOLUTION
  • The authors purpose is to write about a problem
    and give a solution.

25
SIGNAL WORDS
  • Issue
  • Details
  • Possibilities
  • Trials
  • Reasons
  • Analysis
  • Selection
  • Result
  • Text focus
  • What is wrong and how it can be corrected
  • What needs to be changed, improved, fixed
  • Who is confronting problems

26
PROBLEM
  • The carrying capacity of a habitat refers to
    the amount of plant and animal life its resources
    can hold.
  • For example, if there are only 80 pounds of food
    available and there are animals that together
    need more than 80 pounds of food to survive, one
    or more animals will die the habitat cant
    carry them.
  • Humans have reduced many habitats carrying
    capacity such as housing development, road
    construction, dams, pollution, fires, and acid
    rain.

27
SOLUTION
  • So that they can maintain full carrying capacity
    in forest habitats, Congress has enacted
    legislation that protects endangered habitats
    from human development or impact.
  • As a result, these areas have high carrying
    capacities and an abundance of plant and animal
    life.

28
Problem Humans destroy habitats of animals and
plants through housing development, etc.
Solution Abundance of plant and animal life
Action Congress has enacted legislation that
protects endangered habitats from human
development
29
SEQUENCE or TIME ORDER GOAL/ACTION/OUTCOME
  • To achieve his/her purpose, the author arranges
    the facts in a special sequence or lists them in
    chronological or time order.

30
SIGNAL WORDS
  • On (date)
  • Not long after
  • Now
  • As
  • Before
  • After
  • When
  • Since
  • Until
  • First
  • Following
  • At the same time
  • Finally
  • During
  • At last

31
Time Order
  • Astronomy came a long way in the 1500s and
    1600s. In 1531, Halleys Comet appeared and
    caused great panic.
  • Just twelve years later, however, Copernicus
    realized that the sun was the center of the solar
    system, not the Earth, and astronomy became a way
    to understand the natural world, not something to
    fear.

32
  • In the early part of the next century, Galileo
    made the first observations with a new instrument
    the telescope.
  • A generation later, Sir Isaac Newton invented
    the reflecting telescope, a close cousin to what
    we use today.
  • Halleys Comet returned in 1682 and it was
    treated as a scientific wonder, studied by Edmund
    Halley.

33
Concept/DefinitionSignal Words
  • Who
  • What
  • Where
  • When
  • Why
  • How
  • Text focus
  • What something is or looks like
  • How something can be described
  • How something can be classified

34
Proposition/SupportSignal Words
  • Viewpoint
  • Opinion
  • Idea
  • Hypothesis
  • Theory
  • Proof
  • Evidence
  • Text focus
  • Why accept an opinion, theory, or hypothesis
  • What viewpoint is expressed in an editorial or
    persuasion
  • How conclusions are based on research results or
    studies

35
Proposition/Support
Opinion Proof
36
Resources
  • Tovani, Chris, Do I Really Have to Teach Reading?
  • Beers, Kylene, When Kids Cant Read What Teachers
    Can Do
  • Zwiers, Jeff, Building Reading Comprehension
    Habits in Grades 6-12
  • Strong, Silver, Perini Tuculescu, Reading for
    Academic Success
  • Literacy First training materials
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