Title: Close and Critical Reading Workshop
1Close and Critical Reading Workshop
2Todays Agenda
- 845-900 Continental Breakfast
- 900-930 Welcome Back
- 930-950 The Common Core and Close and
Critical Reading - 9501055 Experience Close and Critical Reading
- Made To Break
- Break
- The Story of Stuff
- Apple Beats Microsoft
- 1055-1125 Activity Experience Guided
Highlighted Reading - Dinosaur Sue
- 11251225 Lunch
- 1225125 Group Activity Practice with Guided
Highlighted Reading United States
Quarters - 125135 Break
- 135250 Web Resources
- Creating Grade Level Guided Highlighted
Reads - 250315 Wrap-up and Evaluations
3The Common Core and Close and Critical Reading
- The Common Core State Standards Initiative is a
state-led effort coordinated by the National
Governors Association Center for Best Practices
(NGA Center) and the Council of Chief State
School Officers (CCSSO) . - Governors and state commissioners of education
from 48 states, 2 territories and the District of
Columbia committed to developing a common core of
state standards in English-language arts and
mathematics for grades K-12.
4Key Take Aways
5Text Structures
6- ACT Reading Between the Lines
- Performance on complex texts is the clearest
differentiator in reading between students who
are likely to be ready for college and those who
are not. - And this is true for both genders, all
racial/ethnic groups, and all annual family
income levels. -
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8Close and Critical Reading
- Comprehension is not enough, critical analysis is
essential to determine the truth and value of the
message.
9The Four Questions - ALL Content ALL the Time
- What a text says restatement
- What a text does description
- What a text means interpretation
- So what does it mean to me application
10Close and Critical Reading - Bookmarks
11Experience Close Critical Reading
- The Story of Stuff Video
- Made to Break Technology and Obsolescence in
America Book Review - Apple beats Microsoft on Greenpeace environmental
index Art Work
12 Made to Break Technology and Obsolescence in
America Book Review
- Think About
- How many cell phones do you have in your house?
VCRs? old electronics? - Read Article
- Question 1 Summary (Most Important Point)
- Question 2 - Description
- Question 4 So What (Text Connections)
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14The Story of Stuff - Video
- View Video
- - Question 1 Summary
- - Question 3 - Theme
15Experience Close and Critical Reading The Story
of Stuff
- Theme
- Both perceived obsolescence and planned
obsolescence create the illusion of progress.
16Art/Picture
- Analyze Picture
- Question 2 - Perspective
17- The dirty little secret behind the
keyboard-tapping, button-mashing, cell
phone-yapping, Valley lifestyle? Electronics
manufacturing and waste are incredibly toxic. - The cycle of planned obsolescence may drive
profit growth. - It also drives continuing shipments of used and
broken electronics to places like Guiyu, China,
where workers like the one pictured here make
pennies picking over silica wafers for precious
metals, while drinking water polluted by lead and
other industrial contaminants.
18Guided Highlighted Reading
- Purpose Engage students in print Develop
fluent scanning Highlight most important
information Prepare text for substantive
conversation - Strategies for Questions 1 and 2
19Planning
- Select an article or piece of text that is
accessible to all the students. - Identify the vocabulary that needs to be taught
in advance. - Determine a context for the information that
could frame it for the students prior knowledge. - Consider what kind of discussion you want to come
out of the reading of the text. - Select the appropriate information to be
highlighted based on the goal for the discussion. - Map out the text paragraph by paragraph with
prompts to highlight the information.
20Procedure
- Build the context for the reading by activating
prior knowledge. - Have students find the vocabulary words in the
text and highlight them. - As you read the questions you prepared for each
paragraph, have the students scan through the
text, highlighting the answers. (Like finding
Waldo) - Have students go back to the text with partners
to determine the meaning from context or from
their prior knowledge. Have students share their
results. Use the definitions for your reference
as students share their results.
21Guided Highlight Activity
- Experience Guided Highlighted Reading as a
Strategy for - Questions 1 and 2
- Article My Visit With Dinosaur Sue
22Using Your Guided Highlighted Read
- Who?
- What?
- When?
- Where?
- Why?
- How?
- Summarization Paragraph Using the Highlighted
Words
Question 1
23Using Your Guided Highlighted Read
How does the text say it? What techniques or
craft does the author use in text? Question 2
- Genre
- Authors Point of View
- Author Craft
- Visualization
- Text Structure
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25LUNCH
- Resume at 1230 - 1 hour Lunch
-
- ENJOY!
26Developing a Guided Highlight Reading Using the
Six Step Guide
- Passage on United States Quarters
- Use lesson guide/outline
- Create guided highlight for questions
- 1 2
- Graphic Organizer
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28Grade Level Activity
- Creating Content Specific Guided Highlights
On Your Own
29Planning
- Select an article or piece of text that is
accessible to all the students. - Identify the vocabulary that needs to be taught
in advance. - Determine a context for the information that
could frame it for the students prior knowledge. - Consider what kind of discussion you want to come
out of the reading of the text. - Select the appropriate information to be
highlighted based on the goal for the discussion. - Map out the text paragraph by paragraph with
prompts to highlight the information.
30Web Resources
- Weekly Reader Connect
- www.wrconnect.com
- Urban Education Exchange
- www.ueexchange.org
- Supporting Comprehension
- http//delicious.com/cwozniak