South Dakota Literacy in the Content Areas By Marcia Torgrude [email protected].

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South Dakota Literacy in the Content Areas By Marcia Torgrude [email protected]

Transcript of South Dakota Literacy in the Content Areas By Marcia Torgrude [email protected].

Page 1: South Dakota Literacy in the Content Areas By Marcia Torgrude mtorgrude@tie.net.

South Dakota Literacy in the Content Areas

By Marcia Torgrude

[email protected]

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OutcomesBegin 1:00 p.m• Integrate CCSS for Informational Literacy

into math• See the value of close reading in math• Experience annotating text in math• Ask and develop text dependent questions

• Use visual literacy to promote deeper understanding of the math

Dismiss 3:00 p.m.

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CHALLENGE TODAYHow does literacy help your students access math?

Empower THEM with comprehension skills

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THE LITERACY STANDARDS WILL ENHANCE MATHEMATICAL LEARNING!

Through the use of close reading, text dependent questions, graphic organizers, and visual literacy, we will start the journey of addressing the literacy standards and the shifts in the CCSSM.

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CCSS MATHEMATICAL PRACTICES1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving

them

2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively

3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others

4. Model with mathematics

5. Use appropriate tools strategically

6. Attend to precision

7. Look for and make use of structure

8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning

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PARTNER WORK

Highlight the phrases that refer to citing evidence or communication (writing, talking)Be prepared to justify your choices

Why Literacy Standards links

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WHAT DOES LITERACY LOOK LIKE IN THE MATHEMATICS CLASSROOM?

Learning to read mathematical text Communicating using correct mathematical

terminology Reading, discussing and applying the

mathematics found in literature Researching mathematics topics or related

problems Reading appropriate text providing explanations

for mathematical concepts, reasoning or procedures

Applying readings as citing for mathematical reasoning

Listening and critiquing peer explanations Justifying orally and in writing mathematical

reasoning Representing and interpreting data

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READING STANDARDS

Read grade level texts Determine central ideas; provide

accurate summary Determine meaning of key terms,

symbols Follow multi-step procedures Compare and contrast information

from reading with that found in experiments, media sources

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CLOSE READING?Close reading of a text involves an investigation of a short piece of text, with multiple readings done over multiple instructional lessons. Through text-based questions and discussion, students are guided to deeply analyze and appreciate various aspects of the text, such as Key vocabulary Attention to form, tone, imagery or rhetorical

devices Word choice or syntax Different levels of meaning through multiple

readings Pearson & Gallagher, 1983 as cited in Brown and Kappes, 2012

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ATTRIBUTES OF CLOSE READING LESSONS

1. Selection of brief, high quality complex text. 2. Individual reading of the text (when possible). 3. Group reading aloud. 4. Text-based questions and discussions that focus on discrete elements of the text. 5. Discussion among students. 6. Writing about the text.

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Close ReadingWe want students to be

“text detectives”

who gather

evidence to

support the conclusions

they draw.–Catherine Thome

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STRATEGY ONE: ANNOTATING TEXT

OUR SYMBOLS FOR ANNOTATING TEXT

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DIGGING INTO THE PROBLEM

What is important in the problem? What are keywords or details? What do you already understand? Is there something unfamiliar we should

talk about whole group? Did you have any surprises? What connections could you make? What are you thinking about this

problem?

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• Questions that can only be answered by referring explicitly back to the text in front of them

• 80 to 90 percent of the Reading Standards in each grade require text dependent analysis

• Aligned curriculum materials should have a similar percentage of text dependent questions

• http://achievethecore.org/page/396/professional-development-understanding-text-dependent-questions-detail-pg

from achievethecore.org…….

STRATEGY TWO: TEXT DEPENDENT QUESTIONS

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TEXT DEPENDENT QUESTIONS…

Can be used to… Identify key ideas in complex text

Should cause students to think at higher levels by… Make logical inferences Draw conclusions Engage in arguments based on what the text

says

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TEXT DEPENDENT QUESTIONS Characteristics:

Questions must originate from the text itself

Questions focus on a word, sentence, paragraph(s)

Open, not leading questions Provide learning opportunity for students Require thought/discussion about the

question (no right answer immediately provided)

Cause students to linger over portions of the text, looking for specific answers, not just “getting the gist”

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How are you going to solve the problem?

What have you already done in the past?

How did you get your answer?

Identify details from the problem that would give you clues about how to solve it.

How do the experiences with other questions—similar to this story problem —help us to solve? Cite textual evidence to support your response.

How would you justify your answer using the context of the problem?

Not Text-Dependent Text-Dependent

Non-Examples and Examples

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Text Dependent QuestionsGood text dependent questions will often linger over specific phrases and sentences to ensure careful comprehension.

“How would you interpret the data shared within this statement?”

Throughout the 1960s, the world's population was growing at a rate of about 2% per year. By 1990, that rate was down to 1.5%, and by the year 2015, it's expected to drop to 1%.

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CREATING TEXT-DEPENDENT QUESTIONS

Step One: Identify the Core Understandings and Key Ideas of the Text

Step Two: Start Small to Build Confidence Step Three: Target Vocabulary and Text

Structure Step Four: Tackle Tough Sections Head-on Step Five: Create Coherent Sequences of Text

Dependent Questions Step Six: Identify the Standards That Are Being

Addressed Step Seven: Create the Culminating Assessment

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CREATE TEXT DEPENDENT QUESTIONS

Return to our problem or your content that you brought with you.

Create text dependent questions to cause the students to read more deeply to find meaning in the problem.

Share out

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VISUAL LITERACY

What does visual literacy look like in math?

Turn to your partner and develop a list of visual literacy tools and strategies for math

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3-2-1 VISUAL LITERACY Examine the picture On a sticky note

List 3 things you observe List 2 things you can claim with supporting

evidence and reasoning List 1 thing you want to explore further to gather

more evidence to prove your claim Share at your table How does this fit with content rich

informational text? How does this fit with using evidence to

support statements?

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Visual Literacy Science

3 = Observe

2 = Claim

1= Explore

Where is the math?

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GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS AS VISUAL LITERACY

Provide visual representation of facts and concepts and their relationships helping students to: Organize ideas Represent abstract ideas more

concretely Illustrate the relationships among facts

and concepts Store and recall information

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GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS

Explain the purpose and benefits Importance of organization Assists in comprehension and recall

For each organizer : Explain purpose and form Model with familiar information Model with new information Let students apply to familiar information Let students apply to new information

Let’s try one!

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Model, A

ssess

ment

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Flow Charts - Create one for the integer rules

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Back to Your Text

• Consider the text you brought with you today or our problem. What types of images/mediums might you use to engage your students with the text you are presenting? What constitutes a visual image?

• How could a visual cause your students to engage in high-level thinking?

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VOCABULARY

________ ultimately _____ whether _______ _____ _____ or _____ of_____. If _____ have already _____ a _____ _____yet we _____ to _____ them more of the same_____, they _____ no _____ in _____ _____ _____. They _____ _____, they _____ _____as boring and hum-drum_____, their _____ _____ , and their _____ _____. The _____ here _____ for the _____ to _____ _____ and _____ _____ of the _____ _____ or _____to _____ _____and_____, key _____ or_____. And even more so, the _____ _____ to _____ how much _____ each ______ _____ to show_____, and no more.

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________ ultimately decide whether _______ is full or devoid of_____. If _____ have already mastered a mathematical _____yet we continue to give them more of the same_____, they see no purpose in completing repetitive_____. They lose_____, they see _____as boring and hum-drum_____, their _____drops, and their _____ slump. The _____here is for the _____ to find different and meaningful _____ of the mathematical _____ or _____to maintain _____and_____, key _____ or_____. And even more so, the _____ needs to recognize how much _____ each ______ needs to show_____, and no more.

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Teachers ultimately decide whether mathematics is full or devoid of novelty. If adolescents have already mastered a mathematical operation yet we continue to give them more of the same assignments, they see no purpose in completing repetitive practice. They lose interest, they see mathematics as boring and hum-drum work, their motivation drops, and their grades slump. The key here is for the teacher to find different and meaningful applications of the mathematical operation or concept to maintain interest and attention, key components or motivation. And even more so, the teacher needs to recognize how much practice each student needs to show mastery, and no more.From: How the Brain Learns Mathematics Novelty and Mathematics © 2008 David A. Sousa

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CONSIDER…."Which information literacy strategies would provide your students support to deepen their understanding of the math and math tasks….

• Close reading • Annotating text • Asking text dependent questions• Visual literacy

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Thanks so muchPlease complete this survey -

http://goo.gl/ks2yfQ for more help – [email protected]