 Why I am reading  Defines what is important  Creates motivation  Determines speed  Increases memory of material.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Beginning Readers Strategies to Build Strong Foundations
Advertisements

Reading Comprehension Strategies
The Magnificent Seven Reading Comprehension Strategies Richard Staton
Using Picture Books to Teach Adolescents Reading Strategies
Active Reading Strategies
The Reading Process.
READING COMPREHENSION STRATEGIES
Reading in the Upper Grades
Thinking About How You Read
Make Connections while they read
By CLY Reading Skills Pre-reading While Reading Post-reading.
Strategies to Achieve Reading Success
Comprehension Keys The strategies and tools to help unlock reading comprehension.
Reading Strategies.
INFERRING, TEXTUAL SUPPORT, THEME, AND AUTHOR’S PURPOSE.
Mrs. Maxwell. What does it mean to be proficient? Definition: Having or showing knowledge, skill and aptitude; well advanced or competent. (dictionary.com)
How Do We Focus Our Instruction on Comprehension Strategies to Help Our Students Become Proficient Readers? ( Iowa Core Literacy Standard IA.1) Carol Duehr.
Asking Questions While Reading Copyright 2012 Wise Guys.
Reading Comprehension Strategies Jeanne Novak-Egan.
 Seven Keys to Comprehension How to help kids READ and GET IT! Monroe County Schools August 2011.
LITERACY SUCCESS 11 Part A A PROVINCIAL DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION INNITIATIVE It is recommended that you view the Literacy Success 10 PowerPoint before viewing.
OWL: Oswego Works for Literacy Oswego Community School District #308 Secondary Reading Comprehension Program.
Thinking About How You Read
Literacy Strategies There is no such thing as a child who hates to read; there are only children who have not found the right book.” ― Frank SerafiniFrank.
7 HABITS OF EFFECTIVE READERS RWWS | Mr. Smith. Journal: Reading  What do you do when you read? Do you do anything special to think about what you’ve.
Thinking Notes to Improve Reading Comprehension. Question Questions can be effective because they: -Give students a purpose for reading -Focus students'
Think About It! How to Help Your Kids Read it and Get it!
Creating Life Long Readers Carol Morreale ENGL Cope July 7,2004.
Who: All Pre-K-8 faculty and students What: SIX THINKING STRATEGIES –Connecting –Questioning –Visualizing –Making Inferences –Determining Importance/Summarizing.
Reading Stratgies Hosted by Mrs. B Reading strategies 1 Reading strategies 2 Reading strategies 3 Reading strategies
What good readers do….
Make Connections! Connect to what you already know -text to self -text to text -text to world Activate your background knowledge.
LITERACY LINKS FOUNDATIONS COMPREHENSION. Comprehension is the reason for reading.
What is an inference?  An inference is a guess based on evidence.
7 Habits of Proficient Readers. Activate Schema Students make connections to what they read from their own experience or memories. This helps them become.
EXTENDING COMPREHENSION ELICITING ENCOURAGING ELABORATING INFERERENCE SKILLS.
Main Idea and Details -A sentence identifying the point that the text is about. What is the author specifically saying to the reader? What details are.
Reading Tips Power Point THE MAIN IDEA Main Idea What is the story MOSTLY about Supporting details.
Cross-Curriculum Reading Strategies Non Traditional Education Conference 4/15/2013.
Good Readers How to interact with a text. Good Readers Make connections Good readers relate what they read to their own lives by connecting it to prior.
Prediction and Inference: A Reading Strategy
CREATING AN ACTIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT Using Inquiry and Primary Sources.
Melissa Horn Katie Laver Jody Shaughnessy. Proficient readers use a number of different cognitive strategies in the process of interacting with texts.
Active Reading and Annotation. Active Reading Strategies  Make Connections  Text to Self  Text to Text  Text to World  This reminds me of…  I’ve.
To improve reading comprehension Six Reading Strategies.
13 Key Reading Strategies Skilled readers do these things—that's why they're skilled!
Reading Comprehension Strategies Making reading meaningful in content area classes Rebekah Paine READ 3463.
By Christine, Katlin G, Kailee, Ashley, Brittany and Melissa.
The Seven Habits of Proficient Readers What do “good” readers do when they read?
PREDICTIONS AND INFERENCES: A READING STRATEGY.  A prediction is what you think will happen next based upon the text, the author, and background knowledge.
Reading Strategies We Use Every Day. 1. Creating Mental Images Good readers:  Visualize and create pictures in their mind  Organize details in a “mental.
How to Read and Analyze a Short Story Short pieces of fiction can challenge a reader’s comprehension as much as an epic novel. Even a concise short story.
Top 10 Reading Strategies. Reading Strategies: 1- Connect to the Text. 2- Ask Questions. 3- Expand Vocabulary. 4- Predict & Prove. 5- Sense It. 6- Decide.
The following comprehension strategy posters are formatted to 11”x17” paper to be printed and then drawn in front of students as a pictorial for brain.
Thinking About How You Read
Inference.
Visualize Make a Movie / Visualize
Reading Comprehension Strategies
They think about things that happen in the world.
Thinking About How You Read READING STRATEGIES
A Guide to Reading Comprehension Strategies
Reading Comprehension Strategies
Active Reading strategies
Creating an Active Learning environment
Thinking About How You Read READING STRATEGIES
Metacognitive Strategy: Think Alouds
Use Background Knowledge
Ask yourself these questions to help you understand what you read:
Reading in the Upper Grades
Effective Reading Strategies.
Presentation transcript:

 Why I am reading  Defines what is important  Creates motivation  Determines speed  Increases memory of material

 I wonder…  Ask before, during, and after reading  How we interact with text and create meaning  Motivates us to read  Help us infer  Helps us understand  We all ask questions of text

 Use what we already know to understand new material  Remember more material  Increase ability to pay attention  Increases interest in text  Allows visualization  Allows reader to relate to character/people  I wonder…  Ask before, during and after reading  How we interact with text and create meaning  Motivates us to read  Help us infer  Helps us understand  We all ask questions of text

 Creates mental images  Enhances meaning  Links new and old knowledge  Heightens engagement  Can place self in story  Stimulates imagination

 Draw conclusions based on clues in the text  Make predictions before and during reading  Incorporates background knowledge and facts to answer questions  Surfaces underlying themes  Creates new background knowledge  Use implicit information from the text to create meaning during and after reading  Ability to remember and apply increases  Use the pictures to help gain meaning

 Remember important information  Learn new information and build background knowledge  Distinguish what’s important from what is interesting  Discern a theme, opinion, or perspective  Answer a specific questions  Determine if the author’s message is to inform, persuade or entertain

 Stop and collect their thoughts before reading on  Sift important ideas from less important ideas  Summarize the information by briefly identifying the main points  Combine the main points into a larger concept or bigger idea  Make generalizations about the information they read  Make judgments about the information they read  Personalize their reading by integrating new information with existing knowledge to form a new idea, opinion, or perspective