2. Close Reading
Anchor Standard 1:
Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly
and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific
text evidence when writing or speaking to support
conclusions drawn from the text.
What is your definition of close reading?
What do you do when you chose to read closely?
What motivates you to read closely?
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3. How do you see
your students as readers?
How do they read?
How much support do they need?
When and what are they reading?
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4. Reflect On Instructional Practices
Name three ways you teach
students to understand the text they are reading.
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6. What do proficient readers do?
Understand text structure
Tolerate confusion
Expect clarity as they read on
Hold on to questions
Make and connect inferences to establish context
Develop hunches
Gather evidence to prove
Draft an understanding
Revise hunches when answers are revealed
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8. How to Steal a Dog
The day I decided to steal a dog was the same day
my best friend, Luanne Godfrey, found out I lived
in a car.
What We Know What We Wonder
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9. I had told Mama she would find out sooner or later,
seeing as how she’s so nosy and all. But Mama had
rolled her eyes and said, “Just get on up there to the
bus stop, Georgina, and quit your whining.”
What We Know What We
Wonder
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10. So that’s what I did. I stood up there at the bus stop
pretending like I still lived in Apartment 3B. I
pretended like I didn’t have mustard on my shirt
from the day before. I pretended like I hadn’t
washed my hair in the bathroom of the Texaco gas
station that very morning. And I pretended like my
daddy hadn’t just waltzed off and left us with
nothing but three rolls of quarters and a mayonnaise
jar full of wadded-up dollar bills.
What We Know What We
Wonder
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11. Know / Wonder Strategy
What strikes you about this strategy?
… as a reader
… for your students
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12. Know / Wonder
Students grounded in text
Ideas are changed based on text evidence
Structure creates visible thinking while reading
Allows for independent work that can be built on
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13. Tips to Introduce Know / Wonder
Teacher charts/Teacher models
Students try at places teacher stops
Students revise wonders when prompted,
teacher charts
Gradual release 1. Students do more charting
2. Whole Group k/w
3. Student k/w and chart
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14. Know/Wonder: Student Work
I tried keeping a journal once before, when I was twelve –
writing is my favorite thing – but it didn’t work. I guess I
didn’t have much to tell. But now I’m fifteen, going on
sixteen and, believe me, this time is different.
I’ll pretend I can see you – whoever you are reading this–
and tell myself you’re really listening, not just waiting for
me, Jenny Joslin to stop talking so much so you can start.
The thing is I need you! I’m scared. Somebody has to listen.
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15. Analyze Student Work
What did the student do well?
Did they identify the character,
what the character wants, problems?
Did their wonderings grow out of the text?
What did they miss? Why?
verbs, pronouns, vocabulary, words that convey emotion,
text structure…..
How well did they use the know/wonder strategy?
Next steps for this student?
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16. Where my students had trouble
K/W great for beginning,
but as story progresses students
needed a less tasking strategy
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18. Development of the Strategy
• Authors were middle school/university instructors
• Noticed students plowing through text with minimal
reflection; dependent on teachers for thought
• Considered the Common Core’s emphasis
• Read 25 most commonly taught books grades 4-8
• Found common elements (signposts) in text
• Developed lessons for and questions connected to the
“signposts”
• Lessons were tested with teachers and students
throughout the country
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19. Six Signposts
*1. Contrasts and Contradictions-- When a character does
something that contradicts expected behavior
*2. Aha Moment-- When a character realizes, understands or figures
out something
3. Tough Questions-- When a character asks herself a very difficult
question
4. Words of the Wiser-- When a character (probably an older or
wiser character) takes the main character aside and offers advice
5. Again and Again-- When you notice a word or phrase or situation
mentioned over and over
6. Memory Moment-- When the author interrupts the action to tell
you about a memory
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20. Contrasts and Contradictions
When a character acts in a way that is
different than you would expect.
Anchor Question:
Why would the character act this way?
Your answer may lead to a prediction or an
inference about plot or conflict
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21. AHA Moment
When a character realizes something that
changes his actions or his understanding of
himself, others or the world around him.
Anchor question:
How might this change things?
Your answer may lead to understanding the
conflict or the lesson learned.
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22. You Try It!
Find the Signposts in the short story
“Spaghetti”
from Every Living Thing
by Cynthia Rylant
Densely packed literature
Connected thematically
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23. Strategy #3
Anchor Standard #10 Range of Reading and level of Text
Complexity -- Read and comprehend complex literary and
informational texts independently and proficiently.
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24. Text Complexity
Consider Quantitative Measures
Levels of meaning, complexity of ideas
Structure or design of narrative/exposition
Language, vocabulary, sentence structure
Knowledge demands
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26. Strategy #3:
Reading Multiple Times with Purpose
1. First read: Students Read Independently
2. First discussion: Partner talk to check
meaning
3. Second discussion: Assessing
understanding
4. Second reading: Teacher-led shared
reading and think aloud
5. Third reading: Text dependent questions
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31. 4. Shared Reading
Teacher reads text
Students read along with copies of text
Teacher incorporates think aloud covering areas
students struggled with
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32. 5. Third Discussion:
Text Dependent Questions
Teacher designed text dependent questions
Purpose of question is to encourage re reading and
looking for text evidence
Two questions with “right there” evidence
Two questions that require inference or synthesis
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33. “Right There” or Literal Questions
for the Beyonce Article
1. Celebrities appear in a lot of advertising.
How much is a lot?
2. You try it: Create a “right there” question.
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34. Text Dependent Questions
Requring Synthesis or Inference
3. How do you think Beyonce justifies selling
soda?
4. You try it: Create a question that would
require synthesis or inference
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35. Next Steps: Debate
• Teacher re reads the text with the purpose of
students developing a point of view
• Students have the copy of the text
• Students mark evidence to prove their position
• After reading have students take a position then face
an opponent for debate
• Provide time for each side to prove their point with
evidence from the text
• Students rebut arguments by conferring with like
minded students
• Journal or essay writing
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36. Resources
Storyworks – Grades 3-5
Scope- Grades 6-7
Bi Monthly
Short Story, Poetry, Plays
Non Fiction, Opinion
High Interest, Lexiled Articles
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38. Resources: Short Story Collections
Every Living Thing. by Cynthia Rylant
All Together at One Time, by E.L. Konigsburg
What Do Fish Have to Do With Anything, by Avi
Friends: Stories about Old Friends, New Friends and Unexpectedly True
Friends, Edited by Ann M. Martin
Tripping Over the Lunch Lady, Edited by Nancy E. Mercado
Be Careful What You Wish for, Edited by Lois Metzger
Hey World Here I Am!, by Jean Little
The Year We Missed My Birthday, Edited by Lois Metzger
Dog to the Rescue, by Jeannette Sanderson (non fiction)
Sports Shorts, by Joseph Bruchac, David Lubar and 6 others
Girls Got Game, Edited by Sue Macy
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39. Resources: Short Story Collections
Baseball in April, by Gary Soto
Throwing Shadows, by E.L. Konigsburg
Twelve Impossible Things Before Breakfast, by Jane Yolen (fantasy)
Strange Happenings, by Avi (fantasy)
Unicorn Treasury, by Bruce Coville ( fantasy)
Americas Streets, A Multicultural Anthology, Edited by Anne Mazer
House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros*
13, Thirteen stories that capture the agony and ecstasy
of being thirteen, Edited by James Howe*
Dear Bully, Edited by Megan Kelly Hall*
Shelf Life, Stories by the Book, by Gary Paulsen*
* Middle School content
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Hinweis der Redaktion
Park Western/Magnet 50% students strugglers: they have a history of failure, they feel they are at the bottom, yet they are hard workers! My mission: get students to success with strategies that they use independently so that they believe in themselves and that the hard work is worth it. They will make it.
My Students Your Students 79% Hispanic 67% Spanish language at home 14% African American 7% White 24% Learning Disabled ADD/ADHD Visual/Audio Processing Deficits 100% Title 1