29
Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text-Based Questions

Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Reading like a DetectiveDeeper Reading with Text-Based Questions

Page 2: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Objectives• Understand the purpose and format of

text dependent questions• Experience close reading with text

dependent questions• Create text dependent questions for

complex texts• Use text dependent questions in your

own classroom to help students read closely and analytically

Page 3: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Common Core Shifts for ELA/Literacy Regular practice with complex text

and its academic language

Reading, writing, and speaking grounded in evidence from the text, both literary and informational

Building knowledge through content-rich nonfiction

www.achievethecore.org

Page 4: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

80-90% of (CCSS) reading standards require text-dependent analysis yet over 30% of questions in major textbooks do not.

Page 5: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

How do we address these shifts? Close and Critical Reading Process

What does the text say? How does the author say it? What does the text mean? What does the text mean to me?

Depth of Knowledge

Text-Dependent Questions

Page 6: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Teaching Students to Read like Detectives “A text-based discussion approach

challenges students to extract information from the text, consider their own experiences and background knowledge, and engage in academic talk about ideas and concepts. But it does not stop there. This approach demands that students read, write, and think rhetorically in order to interrogate the text itself.”

Page 7: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Text-Dependent Questions… Can only be answered with evidence from

the text

Can be literal (checking for understanding) but must also involve analysis, synthesis, evaluation

Focus on word, sentence, and paragraph, as well as larger ideas, themes or events

Page 8: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Focus on difficult portions of text in order to enhance reading proficiency

Can also include prompts for writing and discussion questions

Page 9: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Text-Dependent Questions are NOT: Low level, literal, or recall questions Focused on comprehension strategies Just questions…

These are still necessary

processes in helping students

understand text.

www.achievethecore.org

Page 10: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Three Types of Text-Dependent Questions Questions that assess themes and

central ideas

Questions that assess knowledge of vocabulary

Questions that assess syntax and structure

Page 11: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Which of these questions requires students to read the text closely?

1. In “Casey at the Bat,” Casey strikes out. Describe a time when you failed at something.

2. What makes Casey’s experience humorous?

Page 12: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

How about this one?1. In “The Gettysburg Address” Lincoln

says the nation is dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Why is equality an important value to promote?

2. “The Gettysburg Address” mentions the year 1776. According to Lincoln’s speech, why is this year significant to the events described in the speech?

Page 13: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Teaching Students to Read like Detectives “Text-based discussions are fostered by

the purposeful instructional moves of the teacher. By modeling the ways in which we interpret, reread, and consult the text, we demonstrate habits of mind for our students.”

Page 14: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Guiding Students through Close Readings Establish purpose Read Independently Assess for Understanding Teacher-Led Reading Small/Large Group Discussion Additional Reading Culminating Task

Fisher, Frey, and Lapp: Text Complexity: Raising Rigor in Reading

Handout

Page 15: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Close Reading Read “On the Death of Friends in

Childhood” keeping in mind the essential question:

How do we cope with the loss of friendships?

Handout

Page 16: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Close Reading #1 Read the text on your own, making

annotations as you read Underline major points Use brackets to emphasize a passage Star to emphasize the most important

statements Circle important vocabulary Record questions, comments, or

visualizations in the Notes section

Page 17: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Close Reading #1 Small group discussion for meaning

Which sections did you star? Why? Where did you underline? Why? Where were you confused? What message is the author trying to

convey? Large group discussion

Page 18: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Teacher-Led Reading and Think Aloud Model how skilled readers construct

meaning from a text

With your partner: Explain whether hearing the text altered your understanding

Page 19: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Text-Dependent Questions Transition to Higher Level Text-Dependent

Questions Guide a discussion using higher level text-

dependent questions referring to the text for additional rereading as needed

Encourage the use of textual evidence to support answers

Initial questions should be designed to highlight the explicit meaning of the texts, progressing toward more challenging and implicit meaning

Page 20: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Close Reading #2 Read the text on your own looking for

the tone of the piece. How does the tone begin? How does the tone end? At what line does the tone shift? What parts of the poem support your

answer? Small group discussion Large group discussion

Page 21: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Close Reading #3 Read the text on your own keeping in

mind the following question: Would the author suggest that we

attempt to hold on to memories of lost friendships or let them go?

Small group discussion Large group discussion

Page 22: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Culminating Task Write a perfect paragraph answering the

following question: How does the poem “On the Death of

Friends in Childhood” relate to Lord of the Flies?

Use evidence from the poem to support your answer.

Page 23: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Progression of Text-Dependent Questions

Handout

Page 24: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Planning Text-Dependent Questions Step 1: Start with a high quality, complex

text and identify the desired student learning objectives.

Step 2: Create questions/activities to ensure that students have a general understanding of the text and recognize key details.

Step 3: Target vocabulary, syntax, and text structure.

Handout

Page 25: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Step 4: Draw attention to literary devices and figurative language.

Step 5: Delve into challenging areas of the text, paying special attention to author’s purpose and inferences.

Step 6: Ask students to either state their opinions, create arguments, and/or make intertextual connection. This could be part of the culminating task.

Step 7: Arrange questions in appropriate order for instruction.

Page 26: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Text-Dependent Questions Planning Map

General Understandings

Key Detail Questions

Vocabulary & Text Structure

Author’s Purpose Inferences

Opinions, Arguments, Inter-textual Connections

Handout

Page 27: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Depth of Knowledge

Webb, Norman L. “Web Alignment Tool”

Page 28: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Summary Text-Dependent Questions…

Can only be answered with evidence from the text Allow students to build knowledge rather than

rely on background knowledge Require an understanding that extends beyond

recalling facts Often require students to infer Focus on word, sentence, and paragraph, as well as

larger ideas, themes, or events Require time for students to process Are worth asking

Rhode Island Department of Education

Page 29: Reading like a Detective Deeper Reading with Text- Based Questions

Additional Resources “Asking Questions that Prompt Discussion”

Fisher & Frey “Engaging the Adolescent Learner” Fisher &

Frey Teaching Students to Read Like a Detective

Fisher, Frey & Lapp Text Complexity: Raising Rigor in Reading

Fisher, Frey, and Lapp www.achievethecore.org www.ride.ri.gov