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Close Reading Lesson “How the brain reacts” by Marcel just & tim Hayer

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Presentation on theme: "Close Reading Lesson “How the brain reacts” by Marcel just & tim Hayer"— Presentation transcript:

1 Close Reading Lesson “How the brain reacts” by Marcel just & tim Hayer

2 First Reading: First Impression
Read the passage silently. Your focus is on understanding the meaning of the passage. Think about the words that are unfamiliar to you. Use context clues to try to figure out their meanings. Circle words you don’t know. Paraphrase meaning of any of the text that you understand on the left hand side.

3 Teacher Model…I do… Behavioral studies have shown that talking on a cellphone diverts the driver’s attention and disrupts driving performance. We investigated that question by looking at brain activity that occurs during driving. In our study, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we examined the effects of listening to someone speak on the brain activity associated with simulated driving.

4 Rate Your Understanding of the Text
1- No idea what the passage is about 2- Kind of understand what the passage is about 3- Have a fairly good understanding what the passage is about 4- Have a solid understanding what the passage is about 5- Completely understand everything in the passage

5 Accountable Talk Stems / Group Discussions
Linking Contributions I would like to build on what _____ said… I respectfully disagree. This is how I am thinking… I’d like to follow up by saying… I’d like to piggy-back on that thought…   Clarifying So, are you saying… What did you mean when you said…? Explain that some more… Let’s make sure we understood what you said… Pressing for Reasoning Why do you think that? How can we check that? I want to push back a little about that… I’m having trouble understanding that point…. How does this connect…?  

6 Discussion You will now have three minutes to discuss the text with your group. Each person should get a turn to: 1. Share a word they do not know If someone knows the word, explain the word and add this to your notes OR Go back into the text and see if the group can figure it out using context clues 2. Share their summary notes If you learn something, write it down Timer

7 Second Reading: Vocabulary in Context
Listen and follow along. As you read along with the video, use The Metacognitive Markers that have been provided to you. Remember if you make a mark, you should make a note. _____________ IMPORTANT ! Aha moment; now I get it * I have a comment to make ? I don’t understand this

8 Teacher Model…I do… Behavioral studies have shown that talking on a cellphone diverts the driver’s attention and disrupts driving performance. We investigated that question by looking at brain activity that occurs during driving. In our study, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we examined the effects of listening to someone speak on the brain activity associated with simulated driving.

9 Rate Your Understanding of the Text
1- No idea what the passage is about 2- Kind of understand what the passage is about 3- Have a fairly good understanding what the passage is about 4- Have a solid understanding what the passage is about 5- Completely understand everything in the passage

10 Discussion You will now have three minutes to discuss your metacognitive markers. Each person should get a turn to: 1. Share a mark they made and 2. Explain why they made that mark If you learn something, add it to your notes. If you agree, disagree, or would like to add to what the person sharing has said, make a comment. Timer

11 Third Reading: key ideas & details
How does the author make sure you understand the scientific nature of their findings? In this article, what is the counterclaim to the idea that using cellphones leads to distracted driving? Explain the relationship between the transitions “first”, “second”, and “third”, and the point the writers are making.

12 Rate Your Understanding of the Text
1- No idea what the passage is about 2- Kind of understand what the passage is about 3- Have a fairly good understanding what the passage is about 4- Have a solid understanding what the passage is about 5- Completely understand everything in the passage

13 Discussion You will now have three minutes to discuss your thoughts about the questions. Each person should get a turn to respond to each question. Begin with question one and hear all voices on the question. Then, proceed to questions 2 & 3. If you learn something, add it to your notes. If you agree, disagree, or would like to add to what the person sharing has said, make a comment. Timer

14 Synthesize Your Understanding
Writing Prompt: Using the examples from question 12, write a paragraph for an argumentative essay in support of the claim. Paraphrase the first piece of information. For the second piece of information, smoothly combine quoting and paraphrasing. Then add your own commentary to explain the quote. Be sure to: • Carefully paraphrase the quote to avoid changing its meaning. • Choose a relevant quote that fully supports the claim and smoothly incorporate it into your paragraph, citing the author or the article. • Write insightful commentary that adds your own interpretation and meaning to the evidence and how it supports the claim.

15 Differentiated Paragraph
The article “_______________” by ___________ explains why ______ ______________________________. First, trying to drive while ____________ _________________________________________________________________. In fact, according to Just and Keller, “__________________________________ ________________________________________________________________.” This highlights the fact that _________________________________________. Clearly, _________________________________________________________.


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