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Close Reading in History and Social Studies 9-12

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Close Reading in History and Social Studies 9-12 A Professional Development Opportunity for Arkansas Educators * H.O. #7 Teaching Close Reading: Establishing a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Close Reading in History and Social Studies 9-12


1
Close Reading in History and Social Studies9-12
  • A Professional Development Opportunity for
    Arkansas Educators

2
Common Core State Standards
3
Agenda
  • Understand why close reading classrooms are
    important
  • Observe model of a close reading lesson
  • Understand how to teach close reading
  • Reflect on current teaching practice

4
NAEP Reading Framework
5
Read
  • The detective quickly reads the situation and
    decides upon an appropriate response.
  • The park ranger is always careful to read the
    skies when escorting hikers into the mountains.
  • The coach reads the opponents defense and
    immediately adjusts the next play.
  • The child tries to read his mothers reaction to
    see if he will be permitted to play with his
    friends.
  • Classroom Strategies for Interactive Learning,
    Buehl, p.3

6
What is Reading?
  • If we understand that reading is not just
    receiving a message, but actively building
    meaning upon prior knowledge using staged,
    strategic thinking, then we will teach
    differently.
  • Subjects Matter, Daniels Zemelman p.31

7
Reader Behaviors
  • Readers develop moves, which are actions to help
    readers understand and remember.
  • Developing Readers in the Academic Disciplines,
    Buehl, p.224

8
Close Reading is
  • a careful, deliberate reading of a text. It
    requires paying close attention to what you are
    reading and focusing on the details.

9
Close Reading is
  • sustained reading of grade-level appropriate
    complex texts to examine their meaning thoroughly
    and methodically, ultimately arriving at an
    understanding of the text as a whole.

10
Close Reading is
  • Reading to infer/interpret/draw conclusions
  • Supporting arguments with evidence
  • Resolving conflicting views encountered in source
    documents
  • Solving complex problems with no obvious answer
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

11
Close Reading is NOT
  • Skimming for answers
  • Surface processing
  • Reading and forgetting

12
  • Students can actively read textbooks without
    closely reading them. Close Reading is not
    necessarily active reading and just finding main
    idea or just annotating.
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in
    Education, Inc.

13
Going Into, Through, and Beyond
  • Getting students into a text includes a range
    of activities that create interest, motivation,
    and receptivity.
  • Students going through the text are annotating,
    highlighting, asking questions, and discussing.
  • After reading, students go beyond the text to
    deepen their understanding, gain new insights,
    and apply their new knowledge.
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

14
Towers of Literacy
  • Literary Math History Physical Biology
  • Fiction Science
  • Adapted from Developing Readers
    in the Academic Disciplines, Buehl p. 15

15
Expert is to NoviceasHistory Teacher is to
History Student
16
CCSS for Literacy in History/Social Studies
17
Close Reading in CCSS
read closely
thorough examination
work diligently to understand precisely
ability to discern
close attention to the text
Pointing to text
  • focusing reading

attention to precise detail
examine them deliberately
wide, deep, and thoughtful engagement
close, attentive reading
careful attention to specific passages
read like a detective
reading closely to draw evidence
read purposefully
close sustained reading
18
Close Reading with Complex text
  • http//avalon.law.yale.edu/15th_century/colum.asp
  • http//avalon.law.yale.edu/15th_century/colum.asp

19
Using Close Reading
  • What did you do to work or make sense of the
    text?
  • What makes this piece of text complex?

20
Unique Aspects of History/Social Studies Texts
  • Text Features Parts/components of a book that
    are created to help a reader locate and learn
    information
  • ?
  • Examples headings, graphics, maps, captions,
    main idea boxes, table of contents,
    illustrations, colors and symbols, timelines,
    bolded words
  • Text Structures
  • Various patterns of how the text is written
  • ?
  • Examples Cause/Effect, Compare and Contrast.
    Problem/Solution, Concept/Definition,
    Goal/Action/Outcome, Position or Argument

21
Disciplinary Lens
Traditional lens Historian Lens
Fact Collecting ? ? ?
Textbook ? ? ? ? Notice who, what,
and where, and chronology of events ?
? Truth statements ? ? ? ?
Why and how Texts as interpretive
arguments Organization and structure of
information (ex cause/effect) Critically
examine
pp. 60,61 Buehls Developing Readers in the
Academic Disciplines
22
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach the vocabulary and concepts
  • Set a purpose for reading
  • Model close reading (using various tools
    according to purpose for reading)
  • Provide guided practice and check for
    understanding
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions and debates
  • Have students write about the text
  • Adapted from the Consortium on Reaching
    Excellence in Education, Inc.

23
  • Close Reading Tools
  • S.O.A.P.S Identifying speaker, occasion,
    audience, purpose, and subject
  • Self-Questioning Taxonomy
  • Identifying arguments and evidences
  • Identifying assumptions

24
Model of Close Reading RoutineShare Our
Wealth -a speech by Huey Kingfish Long
  • United States History Social Studies Curriculum
    Framework
  • Strand World in Conflict
  • Content Standard 17 Students shall examine
    social, political, and economic changes during
    the Great Depression.
  • R.CCR.1
  • RH.11-12.1

25
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • pension
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

26
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

27
Purpose for Reading
  • Using various tools, we will closely and
    carefully read an excerpt from Huey Longs Share
    Our Wealth speech in order to understand one of
    several views on helping the poor during the
    Great Depression. We will read carefully to
    consider what the source says and the language
    used to say it.

28
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

29
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • SOAPS
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

30
S.O.A.P.S.
  • Speaker
  • Occasion
  • Audience
  • Purpose
  • Subject

31
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Self-Questioning Taxonomy
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

32
Self-Questioning TaxonomyMentoring students
reading through a historian lens
  • Levels of Thinking
  • Creating
  • Evaluating
  • Analyzing
  • Applying
  • Understanding
  • Remembering

33
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Arguments and Evidence
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

34
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Arguments and Evidence
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

35
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Assumptions
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

36
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Assumptions
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

37
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

38
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Preteach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • -Lincolns Second Inaugural Address
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

39
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

40
Discussion
  • I didnt know what I knew until I talked about
    it.
  • -seventh-grade science student

41
Establishing a Routine for Close Reading
  • Pre-teach vocabulary
  • Set purpose for reading
  • Model close reading using tools
  • Provide guided practice
  • Provide independent practice
  • Organize discussions
  • Have students write about text
  • Consortium on Reaching Excellence in Education,
    Inc.

42
Writing in Response to text
  • What did I discover about this text or what was
    reinforced after I did my own close reading?
  • adapted from the Consortium on Reaching
    Excellence in Education, Inc.

43
Reflection
  • Why are close reading classrooms important?
  • What does it mean to be a reader and thinker in
    your academic discipline?
  • Which steps of the close reading routine will I
    utilize?
  • Adapted from the Consortium on Reaching
    Excellence in Education, Inc.
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