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What we don't want our students thinking reading is
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1. Constructing MeaningWritten by Nancy BoylesSouthern Connecticut State University Created for Parkview Elementary School Teachers
Mary Cooper, Literacy Specialist
3. Instead… “If our students are to become good readers, if they are to improve as readers, we must teach them to think about how they think while they read.”
Found on pg. ix
4. Welcome! Goals for this presentation:
Find out what kids say about these strategies
Have an understanding of the kid-friendly comprehension strategies in Nancy Boyles’ book, Constructing Meaning
Understand the importance of teaching all the comprehension strategies in an integrated fashion
Recognize the ways our integration of these strategies will help all teachers and students
5. What do kids Parkview students say about these strategies?
6. Kid-friendly Comprehension Strategies
The next six slides will define each of Nancy Boyles’ kid-friendly comprehension strategies
7. Connecting Finding something that is connected:
To my life
To another book
To things in the world
8. Picturing or Visualizing If I close my eyes,
I can see. . . .
I can hear. . . .
I can feel. . . .
I can smell. . . .
I can taste. . . .
9. Wondering or questioning What questions pop into my mind, such as:
What might happen next?
How will [the story] end?
Why did the author write this?
What else do I want to know?
10. Guessing or predicting What might happen next?
How will [the story] end?
What is the author trying
to tell me?
11. Noticing What are the important clues?
Have I guessed right or wrong?
Is there something I don’t understand?
Has the author done something crafty?
12. Figuring Out How do all the clues fit together?
When did that “little light bulb” go on in my head?
What do I understand better after this reading?
13. Why integrate comprehension strategies? (as opposed to teaching each in isolation) “Real readers don’t read by isolating a single strategy”
“Real readers don’t use just one strategy while reading to construct meaning from everything they read for six or seven weeks.”
“Competent readers have a repertoire of reading strategies available, strategies that they mix and match while they read.”
14. How will we help our students if we all use these strategies? Enhance student participation and engagement
Improve student reading comprehension
Teachers and students will share a common language
The language won’t change year to year—learning picks up where it left off the year before
15. Not an “Add On” “Teaching reading comprehension strategies should not be something you “add on” to your regular curriculum.”
Rather, teaching these strategies can and should be an important part of what happens every day in your classroom during:
Shared reading
Guided reading
Independent reading
Whether reading fiction or nonfiction
Found on pg. xiv
16. Special thanks to Nancy Boyles, who gave permission to use her materials for this slide show.