June Preszler Education Specialist, TIE August 15, 2007.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is one of the most powerful comprehension strategies?
Advertisements

Summarizing… in a nut shell. Summarizing is how we take larger selections of text and reduce them to their bare essentials: the key ideas the main points.
RDG 050 Active Reading and Thinking. ACTIVE READING Keys to success in College: Knowing how to study Liking the course Work hard Previous background in.
FOR THE EOCT IN 9 TH GRADE LITERATURE Test-taking Strategies…
6 Thinking Strategies Literacy Inservice March 2005
“Quick-Fix Workshop” Communications Centre
Instructional Strategies: Summarizing & Note Taking Facilitated By Sara Fridley Region 3 Education Service Agency
Standards ELACC8RI1: Students will be able to use close reading strategies to identify the main idea in selected articles. ELACCW9b1: Students will be.
AP Language and Composition Welcome Back AP Language and Composition is all about the art of finding and analyzing the language choices that.
June Preszler TIE September of  Positive Reinforcement and Providing Recognition rank as number three in percentile gain (following identifying.
Careers in Education Teaching Strategies. Learning Target: Students will be able to… – Explain in words the 3 different teaching strategies – Apply the.
SUMMARIZING Why and How.
Everything you need to know in order to set up your Reader’s Notebook
Making the Most Out of How You Are Taught.  Early course preparation  Preparing for lectures  During your lectures  Making effective use of your professors.
PARAPHRASE & SUMMARIZE. Paraphrase paraphrase --> express someone else's ideas in your own language A restatement of a text in another form or other words.
ATTENTION LANGUAGE LEARNERS ! THE SENIORS’ GUIDE FOR SUCCESS.
Building Meaning through Inferences and Summaries June Preszler Winner Elementary School March 28, 2007.
Fitness D. Crowley, Fitness  To be able to plan an investigation into the fitness of year 9 Saturday, August 08, 2015.
How can I help my child with reading at Home? 1. Motivating Kids to Read Studies show that the more children read, the better readers and writers they.
Bishop Loveday CE Primary School Help Your Child with Reading Year Six.
Marzano’s Classroom Instruction that Works Robyn Lopez and Anne Laskey July 22, 2015.
Lecturer: Gareth Jones Class 2: The Writing Process.
INDEPENDENT WRITING Andrew Richardson & Taylor West.
Summarizing is when larger selections of text are reduced to their bare essentials: the gist, the key ideas, and the main points that are worth noting.
Module 1: Unit 1, Lesson 3 Inferring about character: Analyzing and discussing points of view (Chapter 2)
How to do Quality Research for Your Research Paper
Reflect on Note Taking On a post-it on your table… Write one note taking strategy you have tried with your students Place it on the closest chart paper.
Listen and learn!. * “Read all the books.” * “As long as you read the books and pay attention in class, you will be well prepared for the IB exam.” *
Newcomers Session for Educators
Behavior Modification Shasta Cole AmeriCorps Member Sept
June Preszler, TIE, Spearfish School District Jan. 18, 2010
Learning Target As a result of this presentation I can:
Summaries June Preszler TIE April 21, Summarizing  When we summarize, we take larger selections of text and reduce them to their bare essentials.
SUMMARY WRITING You should be able to: 1.take Cornell Notes on the presentation 2.summarize what you have read about in sentences.
Exam and Test Preparation Exam preparation happens all term, starting with the skills we have been discussing: –Paying special attention to the syllabus.
1. Reading 2. Writing 3. Listening 4. Speaking Listening and Speaking are used a lot…
June Preszler, TIE, Wall School District Dec. 7, 2007
Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that.
June Preszler Education Specialist, TIE August 23, 2007.
DayAssigned Reading (Chapters or Pages) Homework Book Club Planner First, look at your book, and find the number of chapters.
CITW for Tuesday PLC: Note Taking Laurie Bonja Shannon Marasco Sonal Patel Christina Spiezio.
QUOTING, PARAPHRASING & SUMMARIZING Quoting: – repeating or copying something spoken or written, always indicating that it’s not original by who’s writing.
June Preszler, TIE, Spearfish School District Jan. 18, 2010
June Preszler TIE Aug. 21,  Revisit the traits  Three-Minute Write  Think-Ink-Pair-Share  Summaries  The Picture Worth a Thousand Words  RAFTS.
SUMMARIZING.  In what situations is it important for our students to summarize?
You have 2 minutes. Start NOW. You took A large amount of information reduced it to key ideas or main points reduced it to key ideas or main points.
Evaluation and Diagnosis of Reading Rachel Henrich 4/15/14.
Building a Model. What is a MODEL? Set of ideas that explains a natural phenomena Always subject to change –New discoveries/New data.
Power of Choice Literacies for All Summer Institute June Preszler Education Specialist, TIE July 14, 2007.
Unit 4: Finding the Evidence 2016 Intro Video: In-Text Citations.
Katie Thomas 12/2/12.   “Write something to suit yourself and many people will like it, write something to suit everybody and scarcely anyone will care.
1 INSIGHT ON EFFECIVE READING SKILLS Rotimi Taiwo (PhD)
Bumble Bee Class Supporting Your Child with Reading 15 th January 2015.
This I Believe Essay Writer’s Workshop: Introductions, Juicy Details, & Conclusions 8 th ELA St. Joseph School.
Bumble Bee Class Supporting Your Child with Reading 4 th February 2016.
The Missing Link Decoding True Reading Comprehension and between.
Bring- Blue tape Print out multiple copies of slideshow Post- it paper for objective, concept and skill steps.
Standardized Test Practice
AP Language and Composition
Comprehensive Balanced
Marley Maharrey Tupelo Middle School
ELD Rhetorical Approach
Instructional Strategies: Summarizing & Note Taking
Developmental Reading Assessment
Reading Objectives: Close Reading Analyze visuals. RI.4.7
Developmental Reading Assessment
Reading Objectives: Close Reading
Thinking About How You Read
How to Write a Summary Text Read Annotate Write
Summarization.
Presentation transcript:

June Preszler Education Specialist, TIE August 15, 2007

 Not a person  But a thing  “The biggest enemy our children have are those things sitting in front of you and they’re called books.”—Gerard Baker

 “What do you do with your enemies? You conquer them.”  “We have to redefine our enemies and conquer them.”

 “We have to count coup on books.”  Three-Minute Pause (Struggling Readers, page 21)

 Identifying the enemy  Empowering the student  Becoming a warrior  Conquering the enemy

 Choice Theory (Glasser and Erwin)  All behavior is purposeful  Five basic needs that drive all behavior:  Survival  Love and belonging  Power  Freedom  Fun

 Power over  Power within  Power with

 Reading Strategies to Guide Learning, page 7  Virtual World of Second Life

 Text to self  Text to text  Text to world  More Strategies to Guide Learning, pages 5-7

 Thin: How many planes were involved in 9- 11?  Thick: How did 9-11 change our lives?  More Strategies to Guide Learning, pages 22-24

 What is a custodian?  Read the story. As you read make notes to yourself. Write any questions you may have. Jot down any ideas or thoughts that come to mind.

 Discuss with a partner.  Consider the following questions: Who is the custodian? What is the custodian’s motivation? Why can’t the custodian “do it anymore…hardly step inside the room”? Think of one word that best describes this story. Why is your chosen word apt?

 Three Facts and a Fib  Strategies to Help Struggling Readers, page 25

1.When I took my son to college, I camped out in the dorm parking lot for the first night…just in case. 2.I played soccer for a championship youth team in Brazil in the 1970s. 3.In one month, I traveled over 3000 miles for education-related business, had one accident in a BHSSC/TIE vehicle, and received two undeserved speeding tickets. 4. I began my professional career as a recipe writer for the Aberdeen American News.

 When we summarize, we take larger selections of text and reduce them to their bare essentials.  Bare essentials: the gist, the key, the main points worth remembering.  Bringing Writing in Content Area Classrooms, pages 16-23

When working with struggling students, we need to understand that summarize academic learning doesn’t come automatically. In fact, we need to provide students with a variety of approaches to use as students attempt to summarize.

 Summarizing and note taking are identified as two of the most useful academic skills for all students.  Summarizing and note taking are grouped together since both require students to distill and then synthesize.

Students must delete, substitute and keep information. Students must analyze information at a deep level of understanding. Students must be aware of the information’s structure in order to effectively summarize.  Marzano, et al: Classroom Instruction that Works, pages 30-32

 So, why is the task of summarization such a difficult task for students?  What does the student need to do in order to be able to adequately summarize text?

 Write down everything  Write down next to nothing  Write way too much  Don’t write enough  Copy word for word

 Pull out main ideas  Focus on key details  Use key words and phrases  Break down larger ideas  Write only enough to convey the gist  Take succinct but complete notes

 Keep in mind—it’s not easy  Hard to learn/hard to teach  Model repeatedly  Give students practice time

It is often said that the heart is the hardest-working muscle of the body. It has to be. The primary job of the heart is to pump blood throughout the body, and to do this job, it must beat steadily from long before you are born until the time you die. The heart may slow down occasionally, but it never totally rests. Did you know you have more than 90,000 miles of blood vessels throughout your body? And your blood must travel this entire 90,000- mile course more than one thousand times each day. Each time your heart beats, it pumps about two ounces of blood through your system. This adds up to more than a gallon of blood pumped per minute. If you exercise hard—if you run for instance, or swim or play football—your heart may work up to twice this hard. By getting into good condition, you can prepare your heart to pump more blood with less effort. This has to do with the amount of oxygen your heart uses. A normal heart uses about three-fourths of all the oxygen your body takes in. Your other muscles use the rest. But as your heart grows stronger, from exercise, it requires less oxygen to pump the same amount of blood. This is why a person who is out of shape gets breathless going up one flight of stairs, while a person in good shape can run up a big hill and scarcely breathe hard.

 Quick Summaries Don’t Look Back 1 Sentence Paraphrase One-Word Summaries Refine and Reduce  Jones, Lawwill, Wormeli

 Students imagine they are placing a classified ad or sending a telegram.  Each word costs 10 cents, and then tell them they can spend "so much." For instance, if you say they have $2.00 to spend, then that means they have to write a summary that has no more than 20 words.  Adjust the amount they have to spend, and therefore the length of the summary, according to the text they are summarizing.  Pat Widdowson of Surry County Schools in North Carolina