Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Today’s objective I can select the strongest evidence in an informational text about who the refugees were, where they fled from, and why they had to flee.”

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Today’s objective I can select the strongest evidence in an informational text about who the refugees were, where they fled from, and why they had to flee.”"— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Today’s objective I can select the strongest evidence in an informational text about who the refugees were, where they fled from, and why they had to flee.”

3 Introducing the Research Guide (5 minutes)
Please have a look at the research guide handout. Think pair share: Look at the left-hand column of the Research Guide. What do you think you are going to record in each row of this column? Why? What do you think you are going to record in the right-hand column of the Research Guide? Why?

4 Reading All Research Texts for Gist (15 minutes)
Please look at the research folders on your tables. In this lesson, you get to dig into the research to find out more about a specific group of refugees. As a research team, you are going to find the gist of the materials within the Research Folders so that you can figure out what the text is mostly about before you begin looking for particular details. Look at the Research Task Cards and focus on Part A: Reading for Gist. Listen as I read the directions aloud as you read silently in your heads.

5 Reading One Research Text to Identify “Who. Where. Why
Reading One Research Text to Identify “Who? Where? Why?” Details (8 minutes) Remember the “Who?” “Where?” “Why?” questions on the Research Guide. Now that you have gotten a sense of the gist of the various texts in their folders, you will work in pairs to read just one text in more detail.

6 Take out colored pencils and follow the Part B directions to identify and underline in colored pencils the specific information to answer the Who? Where? Why? questions.

7 Gathering Evidence on Research Guides (10 minutes)
in Unit 3, you are going to use the answers from your Research Guide to be creative and write “inside out” and “back again” poems. Please watch as I fill out the first row of the Research Guide using the information from the text was underlined. Focus first on the Who? information underlined in red. Transfer the information underlined in red onto the first row of the Research Guide. You can notice that underlining in different colors should make scanning the text for this evidence easier.

8 Move on to the next Where. Column
Move on to the next Where? Column. Recorded the information underlined in that column Listen as I read and follow along silently in your heads as I read Part C: Gathering Evidence on Research Guides. follow the directions to record evidence in each of the sections of the Research Guide. You will finish collecting this evidence to answer the Who? Where? Why? questions for homework.

9 Sharing Evidence (5 minutes)
bring you texts and Research Guides and get into your 1-4 (this is so students who are studying different refugee contexts get to share with one another). Make pairs in your groups. Share your answer to the following question, based on the evidence you have collected so far on your Research Guides: Now that you have looked through the stories of refugees, who are the refugees from this specific time and place in history? What do you know about them? Share out!! keep thinking about the strongest evidence you collected as you researched today: Which details seem most relevant given the poems you are preparing to write? Why?

10 Homework For the text you read with your partner, finish recording the strongest Who? Where? Why? evidence onto your Research Guide. Read other texts if you choose.

11


Download ppt "Today’s objective I can select the strongest evidence in an informational text about who the refugees were, where they fled from, and why they had to flee.”"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google