Group Norms for Professional Development

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Group Norms for Professional Development We will encourage each other to take an active part in discussion We will listen to each other in an effort to examine our own teaching beliefs We will not engage in sidebar conversations or actions that detract from our task to grow professionally We will keep time boundaries regarding beginnings, ending, and breaks We will turn off cell phones, email, and use computers for note-taking only

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Group Norms for Professional Development. We will encourage each other to take an active part in discussion We will listen to each other in an effort to examine our own teaching beliefs We will not engage in sidebar conversations or actions that detract from our task to grow professionally - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Group Norms for Professional Development

Page 1: Group Norms for Professional Development

Group Norms for Professional Development

We will encourage each other to take an active part in discussion

We will listen to each other in an effort to examine our own teaching beliefs

We will not engage in sidebar conversations or actions that detract from our task to grow professionally

We will keep time boundaries regarding beginnings, ending, and breaks

We will turn off cell phones, email, and use computers for note-taking only

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Agenda Your expectations Faculty meeting review Round Robin Comprehension strategies SAS reminders Wrap up

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Your expectations

Post it note it- What do you want out of your

professional development today and/or in future days?

Focus – Content AND process

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Interesting statistics-redux More than eight million adolescents are unable to

read at grade level (NCES, 2005).

94% of American children about to graduate from high school cannot independently read and gain information from specialized text (a.k.a. content area textbooks) (NCES, 2006).

Decades of validated research shows that integrating literacy instruction into content area classes improves academic outcomes for adolescent learners (Cantrell, Burns & Callaway, 2009).http://www.aabri.com/manuscripts/10519.pdf

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So now what?

•We would need 575 days in the school year to cover all the content standards in the state of PA…

•3% of instructional time is devoted to helping adolescent readers make sense of text (Ness, 2008)

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Round Robin reading A definition: Round robin reading is a

teacher directed strategy where students read one after the other during the first reading of a text

Pros and cons With the people at your table, list at least 4 pros

and 4 cons of Round Robin reading

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Round Robin is Still Doing the Rounds- Power Point Slides Handout

Read the information on the slides

Highlight what stands out to you

Use text codes with slides of your choice ! = I agree! = I don’t know this word OR I don’t know how to

pronounce this word ? = I have a question ** = I didn’t know this

Text: Round Robin is Still Doing the Rounds

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When you finish reading the slides

1. Write a 5 line summary of what you read

2. Go back to the last slide and circle the 3 reasons that are the most convincing reasons to stop using Round Robin Reading

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Find a partner1. Read your summary verbatim to your partner

2. Partner responsibility – listen quietly. Respond with a question or comment

3. Switch roles and repeat the process

4. Then compare your circled reasons from the last slide 1. Do you agree with each other? 2. Discuss

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Debrief Content-

children must process the text themselves repeated readings last slide

Process highlighting what stands out text coding verbatim reading to partners

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Partner reading A very effective way to read text

Read the article “Popcorn and Round-Robin Reading: a critique of whole-class, oral reading techniques” aloud to one partner

Use voices that are loud enough just for you and your partner to hear

Stop at the end of each section Then go back to the section you just read and highlight

anything new that you did not already know Continue this process until you finish the article

Text: Popcorn and Round-Robin Reading: a critique of whole-class, oral reading techniques

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Reflect… Complete the 4-3-2-1 handout by

yourself. This will not be shared with

anyone-this is for your own personal reflection

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Debrief Content

“illusion of covering content” “combat reading” active reading/meaning making concerns

Process partner reading technique stop at the end of each section highlighting only new information revisiting text 4-3-2-1 as a reflective tool

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Two column note taking Read the article “Alternatives to Popcorn or Round-

Robin Reading” silently to yourself

Complete the two-column notes as you read

When you finish, find a partner

Compare your notes Make changes as needed

Text: Alternatives to Popcorn or Round-Robin Reading

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Debrief Content

differentiate by using multiple texts small group reading -multiple texts v. single text partner reading opportunities independent reading opportunities uses of oral reads when they are not “cold reads”

Process format of 2-column notes scaffolding opportunities – main idea and/or details side extra white spaces

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A cautionary tale 1 minute and 35 seconds of entertainment

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-FDe84BYxoE

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Comprehension Strategies

What effective readers use automatically

in order to completely and fully understand

difficult text

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Inquiry Chart As you see the slides for comprehension

strategies, complete the inquiry chart

Ahas!/Validations Teaching ideas Questions you have Barriers/potential pitfalls

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Why teach strategies? Reading is a process of thinking Readers must be taught the process of

thinking

One way to teach that process is to show strategic ways to derive meaning from text

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The 3 kinds of reading strategies BEFORE- Things a reader does before actually

reading the text

DURING- Things a reader does while reading the text

AFTER- Things a reader does when finished reading the text

They are all forms of ACTIVE READING

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BEFORE READING…Previewing

From the text, find out the following:

What chapter is this text from? What is the title of the chapter? How many headings are there? What color font are the headings written in? What are the titles of the two headings?

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BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE This could be the MOST overlooked strategy It’s what a reader already KNOWS about the

topic. Effective readers take the time to collect their

thoughts on the topic they are reading before they start to read the text.

This is a BEFORE reading strategy

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MAKING CONNECTIONS Connections help readers relate what is read or is

about to be read to something they already know.

Connections can be based on: something in the reader’s own life (TEXT-TO-SELF) or something they’ve read or seen in the movies (TEXT-

TO-TEXT) or something that happened in the world (TEXT-TO-

WORLD) This is a usually BEFORE reading strategy but can be a

DURING reading strategy too!

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QUESTIONING Effective readers ask questions all the time

to: find out more information make things clearer (clarity) understand more deeply figure out what you don’t know

This is a BEFORE, DURING, and AFTER reading strategy

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INFERRING or Making Inferences

Readers make inferences when they can figure out hidden messages in the text even though it doesn’t exactly say it

It is reading between the lines but it is MORE than a prediction. Inferences should be accurate in order to improve understanding

Inferring provides the basis for strong comprehension

This is a DURING reading strategy

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VISUALIZING Effective readers create a picture or movie in

their minds when they read text

Having these pictures help readers “see” the text which is proven to help comprehension

This is a DURING reading strategy

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DETERMINING IMPORTANCE An effective reader is able to figure out what details

are the MOST important, those that are somewhat important, and those that are the LEAST important.

This is the KEY to understanding the main idea This is often the most difficult strategy to master

This is a DURING reading strategy

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How to do it Look for KEYWORDS. Keywords are words that are said

more than once in a paragraph (excluding “the, a, it,” etc.)

Highlight or write the keywords down. Try to make a logical sentence using all the keywords.

This logical sentence you made from the keywords will most likely contain the most important information from that paragraph

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Self-monitoring/Fix up strategies

Effective readers realize when they no longer understand what they’re reading.

Fix up strategies are used by effective readers to help them when they stop understanding the text.

Many effective readers do this automatically-without even realizing that they are using a fix up strategy.

This is a DURING reading strategy

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List of Fix up strategies Stopping and going back to clarify

thinking (Reader says, “Wait. I think that just said “xyz.” Am I right about what I think? Let me check.)

Rereading to understand more or better (Reader says, “Wait. I’m going to read that over. The first time didn’t make sense.)

Reading ahead to clarify meaning (Reader says, “That didn’t make much sense. Let me see if this next sentence helps me understand the last one.)

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Still more! Questioning what the author thinks or is saying

(Reader says, “So, what is the author really saying here? Does the author really think this way?)

Disagreeing with the author (Reader says, “I don’t think the author is right here. Let me see if I have all the facts straight).

Talking to another reader about what they understand (If you both think the same things, then your understanding is accurate. If not, somebody might have misunderstood the text).

 

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And more! Sounding out the unknown words (effective

readers do NOT skip unknown words. Find out how to pronounce them AND what they mean by consulting another person or listening to the word on dictionary.com, etc)

Reading the text out loud (When you read out loud, you use another sense [hearing]. Research shows that the more senses you use, the better your comprehension)

Going slow or slowing down (Very effective strategy. Not all text is meant to be read at the same rate of speed)

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SUMMARIZING Effective readers take the time to think about the most important details and retell what

they just read in summary form.

Summaries should contain the 5 Ws and 1H (who, what, where, when, why and/or how)

KEYWORDS can be used in a summary as well!

This can be done after: every sentence (if the text is particularly dense and difficult); every paragraph (this is when it usually happens); every page; or at the end of a piece of text that is easily understood by the reader.

This is an AFTER reading strategy

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SYNTHESIZING Effective readers synthesize when they have new, different,

or changed thinking based on what they just read. Effective readers develop their own ideas and thoughts

about the text after they take all those thoughts, mix them together, “bake” them in their brain, and develop their own ideas.

An effective reader might say…“At first I thought, but NOW I think…” or “My thoughts are changed now that I read. Here’s how…”

This is an AFTER reading strategy

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Debrief Content

BDA ideas effective readers automatically use many of these explicit teaching – using the reading vocabulary

Process choose which slides to respond to variety of emotions to consider

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Standards Aligned System http://www.pdesas.org

Materials & Resources Keyword- reading Grade level – 10th

Flip book creator Comic book creator

Karpeles documents Materials and resources Keyword – Karpeles Scroll down – interactive document

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Standards Aligned System-Part II http://www.pdesas.org

Fair assessments – Assessment creator

Materials & Resources Keyword – Thinkfinity Keystone icon means PA educator content

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Break the habit!

Teachers are most likely to use or teach reading strategies that require the least engagement and preparation from them

(Alger, 2009)

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Thank you! Resources:

www.suite101.com www.pdesas.org www.aabri.com/manuscripts/10519.pdf www.reading.org/.../

Round_Robin_Reading_is_Still_Doing_the_Rounds. pptx Strategies that Work by Stephanie Harvey and Anne

Goudvis