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Whats the Fuss About Informational Text IT

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Model the difference in the speed with which you read IT ... Learn to draw while you talk. Provide frequent opportunities for retell. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Whats the Fuss About Informational Text IT


1
Whats the Fuss About Informational Text (IT)?
  • Principals Literacy Institute
  • September 2009
  • Dr. Reed F. Spencer

2
Why the fuss about Informational Text (IT)?
  • 86 of what adults read are IT
  • 50 to 85 of all passages in tests are IT
  • However, only
  • 9.8 of books found in classrooms are IT
  • 16-20 of passages in basals are IT

3
Why IT (cont.)?
  • IT has significantly fewer cultural and language
    barriers (more on this later).
  • IT is more motivating to some students who may
    otherwise not be motivated to read.
  • IT always has the opportunity of two
    instructional goals content AND reading.
  • IT is much more dense in vocabulary and concept
    development than fiction.

4
Why IT (cont.)?
  • Listening to IT is not like listening to fiction
    or narrative.
  • Reading IT, each different kind, is not like
    reading fiction or narrative.
  • Writing IT is not like writing fiction or
    narrative.

5
Reading Development is Genre Specific
  • The research of Nell Duke, Michigan State
    University, suggests that we understand that
    reading development is genre specific. Reading
    fiction will not necessarily help you be better
    at reading a cookbook, directions, or a computer
    manual. (p. 39)

6
Use the term informational text, rather than
non-fiction, with students
  • Informational text communicates more clearly
    the purpose of the text to gain information,
    rather than to be entertained.
  • Also, saying non-fiction tells what it is NOT,
    rather than what it is.

7
Selections fromMake It Real
  • Strategies for Success with Informational Texts
  • By Linda Hoyt, Heinemann

8
  • In this Information Age, the importance of
    being able to read and write informational texts
    critically and well cannot be overstated.
    Informational literacy is central to success, and
    even survival, in schooling, the workplace and
    the community.
  • -Nell Duke

9
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10
Read Aloudswith Informational Text
  • Reading aloud to students is about several
    important things, including
  • First and foremost, it is about modeling
  • comprehension strategies.
  • 2. Providing comprehensible input
  • 3. Motivation and enjoyment

11
BEFORE Read Aloud
  • 50 fiction and 50 non-fiction
  • Make a plan to read many kinds of IT
  • - book reviews - sections of texts
  • - magazines - model use features
  • - newspapers - TV Guides
  • - recipes - menus
  • - directions - travel brochures
  • - dictionaries - web navigation

12
DURING Read Aloud
  • Model thinking in terms of information rather
    than entertainment.
  • Model strategies of dipping in and out,
    searching, referencing of text rather than
    start-to-finish reading.
  • Model the difference in the speed with which you
    read IT
  • Make connections (text-to-text, text-to-self,
    text-to-world)
  • Model your thinking metacognition
  • Model use of IT text and layout features

13
Teach and use specific strategies that can be
used for read alouds, shared reading,
guided reading, and independent
reading.
14
Strategy Stop and Retell
  • Students are told in advance that they will be
    retelling a piece of the text. When directed,
    they turn to a partner and retell the passage in
    their own words.

15
Strategy I Remember!
  • Encourage students to listen carefully as you
    read.
  • Tell them they need to remember something that
    they think is interesting or important.
  • Tell them that each you stop reading they will
    share I Remember information with their
    partner.
  • Students learn that recalling facts and
    information is different than keeping track of a
    story line in fiction.

16
Strategy Say Something!
  • This works the same as I Remember! except that
    students begin making connections to the text and
    discussing those connections. The discussion
    gets much broader than a simple retell or
    restatement of facts.

17
Model use of text and layout features
  • Title Captions near pictures
  • Table of Contents Labels on pictures
  • Photographs Different kinds of print (bold,
    italic)
  • Drawings Drawings that compare things
  • Lists Diagrams
  • Descriptions Cross-section drawings
  • Directions Glossary
  • Headings Questions/answers
  • Index Bullets
  • Charts Info about the authors research
  • Maps Insets

18
AFTER Read Aloud
  • Chart on the wall the kinds of texts you are
    reading aloud.

19
Shared Reading
  • Shared reading experiences provide an
    opportunity to model language and fluency as in
    read alouds, but with a higher level of
    intensity. Because the students can actually see
    the text, strategies for using picture clues,
    boldface headings, titles, captions, and other
    textual features become visible.
  • (p. 19)

20
Shared and Guided Reading Strategies with IT
  • Use the strategies you taught in read alouds
  • Stop and Retell
  • I Remember!
  • Say Something!
  • Create Wall Stories

21
Big Books and Overheads
  • Use a big book or make an overhead of a page
    from an IT book. Focus on your lesson objective
    (layout feature).
  • What has the author done to support our
    understanding of the text?
  • If we were to make a plan for reading this
    page, what would that be? What would we do
    first? Next?

22
Headings
  • Cover the text and have students predict what
    will be in it from the heading.
  • Cover the heading, read the text, and then have
    students write a heading for the section.

23
Independent Reading with IT
  • Provide students a log to record books read
  • and genres of each. Color code the genres (red
    for fiction, green for poetry, blue for How-to
    books, yellow for books about animals, etc.)


24
Independent Reading with IT
  • Provide students a form on which they
  • track IT layout features.

25
Independent Reading with IT
  • Conference with another student after independent
    reading. Share
  • Something I remember
  • How I used a reading strategy
  • What text feature was in my book and how it
    helped me understand.

26
Supporting English Language Learners with IT
  • IT offers more supportmore comprehensible
    inputto English Language Learners than narrative
    fiction.
  • How?
  • IT crosses cultural boundaries better than
    narrative fiction.
  • Why?

27
Strategies for Using IT with ELL
  • Use small groups more often. BE sure not to
    structure the group to take the talking away from
    the ELL student.
  • It is even more important that you use guided
    reading settings daily.
  • Reading with partners.
  • Jigsaw groups are marvelous ELL strategies! IT
    books are a natural for jigsaw activities.

28
Strategies for Using IT with ELL
  • Label pictures more than the author has.
  • Learn to draw while you talk.
  • Provide frequent opportunities for retell.
  • Use graphic organizers often.
  • Remember to stop often when reading.
  • Use wordless IT books to have ELL students
    dictate or write responses.
  • Review visual information before reading text.

29
Strategies for Using IT with ELL
  • Engage in planned repeated reading of IT so ELL
    students can connect text to photographs, charts,
    etc. First time for main idea, second time for
    specific detail, next for specific vocabulary
    words, etc.
  • Tell the book first, page by page! Then go back
    and read the text. This helps ELL students to be
    more able to connect.

30
Strategies for Using IT with ELL
  • Deliberately teach the vocabulary of IT, e.g.
    First, second, third, then, next, finally, also,
    in addition to, on the other hand, however,
    because, as a result of,
  • Create cloze activities with well-known texts.
  • But all s________ have eight l_______
  • and two body p________.

31
Some books
32
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