Hello Lit Land Readers! I hope you're enjoying a happy Sunday, but if you're like me, you are most likely chained to your laptop today to fine tune your plans for the week. I'm here today from my home blog, Comprehension Connection, to gather and share my thoughts on Close Reading. In a few weeks, I am presenting a workshop for the staff at my school, so putting together this blog post will hopefully help me narrow down the important points I need to and want to share.
Last spring, Chris Lehman, author of the book, Falling in Love with Close Reading, presented at the Virginia State Reading Association conference which I attended. At the time, Close Reading was certainly becoming the rage in reading instruction, and although I'd read blog posts and purchased materials to use with my students, I wanted to know more. Of course, I left with his book and a clearer picture of what I needed to do and how.
First Reading-Lenses
Ø Briefly assess schema for the text.
Ø Set the purpose for the reading lesson. Tell your students the text evidence they are to record.
Ø Keep each student actively engaged with the text by questioning their thinking. Flush out confusions and help the student clarify the meaning.
Ø Allow time for discussion and debriefing about the reading afterwards. Students need to share their observations and respond to each other.
Second Reading-Patterns
Ø Review previous observations briefly.Ø Set a new purpose for the reading lesson. During the second reading, students begin to rank the importance of text information and observe how ideas are connected.
Ø Read and record new evidence to match the purpose. (and improve reading fluency).
Ø After reading is completed, the response is the best assessment of understanding. Students need to independently record their thinking and share it for clarification.
Third Reading-Ideas
ØSet a new purpose for the reading lesson. During the last reading, students use high level thinking skills and observation to analyze the ideas shared.ØReread all or part of the text to gather ideas.
ØAfter reading is completed, students respond with their learning via a written prompt or through discuss about their learning.
Lesson ExampleI am sharing a sample lesson today with this post to show how I work with my students with a Close Read. To begin, I use a before/during/after approach with every lesson, and Close Reading is no exception. I build schema for the reading with my students typically with an organizer, anchor chart, or response form of some sort and a key question for them. For this lesson, I plan to begin with a Penguins Tree Map for brainstorming prior knowledge followed by our first read. During the first read, students are asked to find penguin characteristics.
On day 2, we will read to respond to the Four Squaring Thinking organizer.
On the final day, students may reread the full article, but with the final day, the focus is using the information gathered to develop a writing plan that uses the information. Students will explain how they'd use the information to protect endangered penguins.
To download the Close Reading set I made, just click the collage below, and remember, throughout the process to talk less and observe your students' thinking.
Have a wonderful Sunday, and now...I'm off to get my own plans done. Until next time..