Title: Teaching Text Structure
1Teaching Text Structure
- A quick guide for teachers
2Overview
- What is text structure?
- What are the common text structures?
- How does text structure help readers understand
nonfiction? - Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Where do I find texts?
- References and resources
3What is text structure?
- Text structure refers to the internal
organization of a text - As authors write a text to communicate an idea,
they will use a structure that goes along with
the idea (Meyer 1985)
4What is text structure?
- Suppose an author wanted to show how hawks and
owls compare - The author would help the reader to understand
the similarities and differences by using words
and phrases such as similarity, difference, on
the other hand, also, and as well
5What is text structure?
- The author would be using the text structure of
compare and contrast
6What is text structure?
- A nonfiction text can have one overall text
structure, or several different text structures - For example, a page from a social studies
textbook may be written in chronological order,
but contain a paragraph that explains a cause and
effect
7What are the common text structures?
- Its important to understand that there is no
official list of text structures - Different writers have different lists of text
structures - Check your state standards for the exact
terminology in your state
8What are the common text structures?
- Chronological order
- Also known as time order, sequence, or temporal
order - This structure is organized from one point in
time to another
9What are the common text structures?
- Chronological order
- Transition words such as first, next, later, and
finally are included to help the reader
understand how events relate to one another - Dates and times are also used
10What are the common text structures?
- Chronological order
- This is one of the easiest text structures for
students to understand, since it matches the way
that they experience the world
11What are the common text structures?
- Cause and effect
- This text structure shows how one or more causes
led to one or more effects - This text structure also has a strong time
component, since causes come before effects
12What are the common text structures?
- Cause and effect
- Transition words such as cause, effect, as a
result, consequently, and because are used - Time order transitions are also used, which can
lead to some confusion for students
13What are the common text structures?
- Cause and effect
- Another complication is that many texts do not
include just one cause leading to one
effectinstead, there may be several causes and
several effects
14What are the common text structures?
- Problem and solution
- This text structure presents a problem, and shows
how it can be (or has been) solved - This text structure can be confused with cause
and effect
15What are the common text structures?
- Problem and solution
- The key difference is that problem and solution
always has a solution, while cause and effect
does not - Transitions may include problem, solution, solve,
effect, hopeful, and so forth
16What are the common text structures?
- Compare and contrast
- This text structure shows how two or more ideas
or items are similar or different - This text structure is also fairly easy for
students to understand - The text may use a clustered approach, with
details about one topic followed by details about
the other - The text may also show an alternating approach,
with the author going back between the two topics
17What are the common text structures?
- Compare and contrast
- Transition words may include like, similar,
unlike, on the other hand, also, and too - Compare and contrast paragraphs are often
embedded in other text structures as an author
needs to explain a similarity or difference
18What are the common text structures?
- Description
- This text structure shows what an item or place
is like - Transitions in this structure might include
spatial words, such as next to, on top of,
beside, and so forth
19Where things get tricky
- Some texts will categorize typical main idea and
detail paragraphs as description - I find its easier to call them main idea and
detail with my students
20Where things get tricky
- Main idea and detail
- Some texts will also refer to these paragraphs as
statement and support - This kind of text makes a statement, and then
uses details to support it
21Where things get tricky
- Main idea and detail
- Transition words include for example, also, one
reason, and another reason - This is the typical paragraph structure thats
often taught in elementary school
22How does text structure help readers?
- Why bother with text structure?
- As it turns out, a knowledge of text structure
can be very helpful for readers
23How does text structure help readers?
- When readers do not have a strong knowledge of
the topic of a text, they depend more on the
structure (Cataldo and Oakhill) - A well-written text guides the reader through the
content
24How does text structure help readers?
- Research shows that efficient searchers use the
structure of the text to help them find specific
information
25How does text structure help readers?
- The structure of a text can help readers find
answers to questions, as well - For example, knowing that causes come before
effects can help students to narrow their search
as theyre trying to find the answer to a question
26How does text structure help readers?
- Text structure is also an important component to
summarizing - When readers summarize, they need to reflect the
text structure in the summary
27Suggestions for teaching text structure
- First, dont be discouraged if your students
dont understand at first - Text structure is a big concept
- Be prepared to spend serious time working with
this idea
28Suggestions for teaching text structure
- If you are working with students in grades 3-5,
be certain that they understand the word
structure - Without knowing this word, the metaphor of text
structure will be meaningless
29Suggestions for teaching text structure
- The picture book Word Builder by Ann Whitford
Paul is a great resource to reinforce the concept
that authors build with words
30Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Its also important to make sure that students
understand the thinking behind the structures,
especially cause and effect and compare and
contrast - It can help to work with this kind of thinking
using clear, concrete examples from students
lives
31Suggestions for teaching text structure
- For example, students understand cause and effect
very well when we connect it to student behavior! - Comparing and contrasting two rooms in the school
can also be easy for students to understand
32Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Once you are sure that students understand
structure, you can begin with an overview of the
text structures
33Suggestions for teaching text structure
- I have my students create a foldable flip book
with all of the text structures listed - Each day, we refer back to our books and add new
information about new text structures
34Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Plan to teach each text structure in depth
- At minimum, plan to spend one day introducing the
structure and an accompanying graphic organizer,
one day reading a text together, and one day for
independent practice
35Suggestions for teaching text structure
- To lend some continuity to your instruction, you
may want to use texts that are centered on a
given topic - Its interesting to see how the same topic can be
discussed in different text structures
36Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Its also helpful to give students copies of
texts that have the transition words highlighted - This will help them to match transition words to
text structures - Remember, though Its not just about finding the
text structure. The main point is to use the text
structure to build meaning
37Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Students also benefit from learning questions to
ask of each text structure - This helps them to use text structure to build
their comprehension
38Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Chronological order How are the steps organized?
What is the time span from the first event to the
last? How does the author signal the change from
one event to the next? What do all of the events
explain?
39Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Cause and effect What is the cause? What are the
effects? Were there several causes and several
effects? How did the cause lead to the effects?
How did people react?
40Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Problem and solution What is the problem? What
are the solutions? Who worked to solve the
problem? Has the problem been solved yet, or will
it be solved in the future? What caused the
problem?
41Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Compare and contrast What is being compared?
What are the similarities? What are the
differences? Which similarities and differences
are the most significant? Are the details
alternating or clustered?
42Suggestions for teaching text structure
- Description What is being described? How does
the author organize the description? Which detail
is the most important? How do all of the details
fit together?
43Finding Texts
- Finding the texts to teach text structure is
challenging! - I usually use a picture book to introduce the
text structure, and then follow up with a short
article for students to read - The books come from combing the shelves at the
local library
44Finding Texts
- The Scholastic book Teaching Students to Read
Nonfiction includes high interest articles with
different text structures - Toolkit Texts (from Heinemann) include texts with
different structures, sometimes organized around
a particular theme - Magazines like Click and Ask, available from
Carus, have articles that show a variety of text
structures
45Finding Texts
- Chronological Order
- Picture books about the life cycle of an animal
are high interest and show this structure quite
well - A short biography is also a good choice
- Because directions are also organized in
chronological order, its a good idea to also
have students work with directions or a recipe
46Finding Texts
- Chronological Order
- A House Spiders Life by John Himmelman is a nice
introduction to this text structure - I usually go a level or two down for teaching
text structure, so students do not have to cope
with difficult text and the new concept of text
structure
47Finding Texts
- Cause and effect
- Natural disaster books and articles often show
this text structure - Some paragraphs within biographies also use this
text structure, often to explain why someone
chose a particular path in life
48Finding Texts
- Problem and solution
- A River Ran Wild by Lynne Cherry is a good
example of a problem and solution text - This text also has a strong chronological order
component, which leads to interesting discussions - Many environmental books are organized in this
pattern
49Finding Texts
- Compare and contrast
- This text structure is often found embedded in
longer texts - However, the Backyard Books series by Judy Allen
(Are You a Grasshopper?) contain strong elements
of compare and contrast
50Finding Texts
- If you are in need of some short texts, you may
also write to me at elkissn_at_yahoo.com and Ill
send you some that I created for my classroom
51Resources
- A chapter about text structure can be found in my
first book, Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and
Retelling (Emily Kissner) - Information about how students can use transition
words to find details can be found in my second
book, The Forest AND the Trees Helping Readers
Identify Important Details
52Resources
- Toolkit Texts Heinemann Firsthand. Available at
- www.comprehensiontoolkit.com
53Resources
- A free Powerpoint for teaching text structure to
students is available at TeacherspayTeachers - Understanding Text Structures explicitly
teaches the different structures
54Resources
- Teaching Students to Read Nonfiction, by Alice
Boynton and Wiley Blevins, is an excellent
resource with short texts for students - Available from Scholastic
55Resources
- Nonfiction Passages with Graphic Organizers, also
available from Scholastic, is another good
resource
56Workshops by Emily Kissner
- Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Retelling
Nonfiction Focus - Making Inferences and Visualizing in Text
- Reading Strategies in the Intermediate Grades
- Summarizing in Every Class
- elkissn_at_yahoo.com
57References
- Cataldo, Maria and Jane Oakhill. 2000. Why Are
Poor Comprehenders Inefficient Searchers? An
Investigation into the Effects of Text
Representation and Spatial Memory on the Ability
to Locate Information in Text. Journal of
Educational Psychology 92 (4) 791-799. - Meyer, B.J.F. 1985. Prose Analysis Purpose,
Procedures, and Problems. In Understanding
Expository Text, edited by B.K. Britton, and J.B.
Black. Hillsdale, NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
58by Emily Kissner