Civics Non-Fiction Literature Circles - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Civics Non-Fiction Literature Circles

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Title: Civics Non-Fiction Literature Circles


1
Civics Non-Fiction Literature Circles
  • 8th Grade Social Studies

2
What are we doing?
  • You will be assigned to a group of 3-4 students
  • In your groups, you will be reading two
    non-fiction books about the era just before the
    Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s
  • You will also be taking notes, asking questions,
    looking up additional information, and talking
    about what you read
  • All you need to do is participate in class by
    reading, taking notes, and being a good group
    member

3
What books will we read?
  • During the first few days, everyone will read
    parts of Miles to Go for Freedom Segregation
    Civil Rights in the Jim Crow Years

4
What books will we read?
  • Then half of the groups will read Getting Away
    with Murder the True Story of the Emmett Till
    Case while the other half will read Freedom
    Walkers the Story of the Montgomery Bus Boycott

5
Why are we doing it?
  • To learn about Civil Rights
  • To learn about American History
  • To learn about civics concepts like the
    Constitution the Bill of Rights and the Supreme
    Court

6
Why are we doing it?
  • To gain experience reading non-fiction books
  • To learn some new habits when reading non-fiction
    books
  • To gain experience working in groups
  • To gain experience developing your own questions
    and answering them

7
New Reading Habits?
  • Skim materials before you read them
  • Read with a pencil in your hand (take notes not
    just on facts but on questions, comments,
    ideas, confusions anything that crosses your
    mind)
  • Use direct quotes from the material as evidence
    to support your discussions

8
New Reading Habits?
  • Address any questions or confusions by talking
    with others who are reading the same material
  • When the text is insufficient, go outside the
    text to get answers (look up unknown words, look
    up names/concepts mentioned by not explained)
  • Spot different kinds of information patterns
    (compare/contrast, pro/con, cause/effect,
    sequence of events)

9
How does it work?
  • Each day you will be told what chapter to work on
  • Each member of the group will fill in a
    Pre-Reading Notetaking Form for each chapter

10
How does it work?
  • Follow the instructions on the form.
  • Step 1 skim the chapter and record questions
    predictions

11
How does it work?
  • Step 2 Read the chapter. Write down direct
    quotes that make you think of questions, ideas,
    confusions personal connections.

12
How does it work?
  • Step 3 After reading is done, return to the
    Pre-Reading chart and record comments and quotes
    about your predictions

13
How does it work?
  • Step 4 Discuss your notes with the group. Try to
    answer questions or address confusions. Do extra
    research to fill in gaps in your knowledge or
    vocabulary.

14
How does it work?
  • Step 5 Staple all group members forms together
    and hand them in. Youre done with one chapter!
  • Each day you just repeat the process until the
    book is done.
  • Sometimes the teacher will have you take a little
    quiz or write a short answer to a question to
    make sure you are understanding the material.

15
How to quote text
  • When we ask you to quote the text, we are simply
    asking you to write down some exact words you see
    in the book, put them in quotation marks, and add
    the page number.
  • We are NOT asking you to find where the author
    has quoted other people. ANY text in the book can
    be used to make a quote for your notes.

16
Example of Quoting the Text
Quote
Comment
  • The author calls it a critical moment in
    American civil rights history (11).

Idea Now I see why we are reading this book!
17
Example of Quoting the Text
Quote
Comment
  • The murder and the sham trial were the last
    straw for African Americans (12).

Confusion Last straw before what? And what does
sham mean?
18
A Few Other Issues
  • Reading silently or aloud?
  • What if you have questions with no answers?
  • How is grading done?
  • Resources available
  • sample notes
  • Dictionaries
  • a few computers

19
Dealing with Racial Terms
  • Who is an African American?
  • Dealing with old, outdated, archaic, and
    offensive terms
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