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| Overview |
The lesson supports readers of a range of abilities and experience
through the use of text sets. A text set is a collection that focuses on one
concept or topic and includes multiple genres such as books, charts and maps,
informational pamphlets, poetry and songs, photographs, non-fiction books,
almanacs or encyclopedias. In this lesson, the class community will put together
a collection of text sets on topics of keen interest. They will then explore
these texts using three key reading strategies: (1) graffiti boards, (2) browsing for key information, and (3) uninterrupted reading/focused freewriting.
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| From Theory to Practice |
Experienced readers are active in their pursuit of resources to support their
learning. Text sets—collections of resources from different genre, media,
and
levels of reading difficulty—are more supportive of the learning of learners
with a range of experiences and interests than any single text. They are particularly
supportive of less-experienced readers, as NCTE leader, Laura Robb, notes in
her Voices
from the Middle article, “Multiple Texts: Multiple Opportunities for Teaching
and Learning.”
Richard Allington points out that schools typically exacerbate the challenge
faced by less-experienced readers by relying on a single-source curriculum design—purchasing
multiple copies of the same science and social studies textbooks for every student.
He contends that this “one-size-fits-all” approach fails miserably
if the
goal is high academic achievement for all students. Allington goes on to propose
that even texts written at grade level are simply too hard for assigned content-area
reading. Learners of any age who are pursuing
new information seldom turn to difficult books. Schools can address this issue
by supplying textbook reading at students’ independent reading level—hardly likely
in this era of “high standards”—or they can address this issue by using textbooks
as just one source of content information. This latter option is the focus of
this lesson. Linda Crafton is the original author of the “text set” strategy,
although many resourceful educators have invented versions of it.
Further Reading
Allington, Richard. “You
Can’t Learn Much from Books You
Can’t
Read.” Educational Leadership 60.3 (November 2002): 16-19.
Robb, Laura. “Multiple
Texts: Multiple Opportunities for Teaching and Learning.” Voices
from the Middle 9.4 (May 2002): 28-32.
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| Student Objectives |
Students will
- identify topics of interest.
- contribute resources to sets of varied resources for each topic.
- explore
the text sets through the use of three targeted reading strategies: graffiti
boards, browsing for key information, and uninterrupted reading/focused
freewriting.
- provide evidence of their learning.
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| Instructional Plan |
Resources
Preparation
- Think about how you would organize text sets in your own classroom. The November
2002 English
Journal article “Blending
Multiple Genres in Theme Baskets” gives
readers some insight into how such sets can be organized in a secondary classroom.
- Read the Creating Text Sets
for Your Classroom guide
which includes additional information on creating and arranging text sets.
- Gather appropriate materials for the text sets in your class
(e.g., containers, labels) as well as markers and butcher paper.
- Prepare yourself for this lesson by assembling your own text set. Model the
process by choosing a concept that interests you and for which you will later
have a purpose. If you’ll be roofing your house this summer, make that
a focus! If you’ve always wanted to develop a unit on the Harlem Renaissance,
now is your chance. A sample text set on China: Then
and Now has been compiled for this lesson.
It is not meant to be duplicated, but to serve as an illustration of the range of resources
that can
be included.
- Create sign-up sheets for the groups, so that all you have to add is the
topics that students have selected for their projects.
- Schedule the sessions, including time for you and for your students
to visit the library. The project works well when begun on a Thursday (Session
One) and followed up with library time on Friday (Session Two). Following this
structure,
students have their text sets gathered early in the following week and can
spend the remainder of the week exploring the reading strategies in this lesson
plan (Sessions Three through Five).
- Test the Letter Generator
Student Interactive on your computers to familiarize yourself with the
tool and ensure that you have the Flash plug-in installed. You can download
the plug-in from the technical
support page.
- Prepare text and overheads for Session Four, which focuses on the second
reading strategy, Browsing for Key Information, developed by Carolyn Burke.
This strategy
helps students process longer or denser texts,
such as
encyclopedias
or nonfiction
written
above their
independent
reading
level.
If one of the
text sets contains such a text, use it for the teacher demonstration part of
this lesson. If not, you will need to locate such a text that contains information
that addresses the students’ questions. Copy at least 4-8 pages of the text
onto transparencies. If you would like students to work with the same information
midway through the lesson, make paper copies for them as well.
Instruction and Activities
Session One: Introduction
- Begin the lesson by telling students that the purpose of the lesson is to explore texts through the use of reading strategies. Because the strategies, rather than the topic of the text sets, is the focus, and because we know that choice relates to being engaged as a reader, the class will help determine the topics of study.
- Share your text set as one example of a collection, briefly talking about
how and why you made the selections. Let students know that they will be creating
similar collections, and then proceed with one of the topic selection options
below.
- If you are already working with a unit of study, you can help students
identify personal interests within that study. For instance, working with the
topic of earthquakes, a class generated these interests: What causes earthquakes?
What can you do to be prepared? What should you do in case of an earthquake?
Each question can become the basis for a text set, and several sets can contain
copies of the same resource.
- Generate a list of topics that are of interest
to your students. One way to begin such a list is to start with several topics
that you already know about (e.g., firefighting, because one student’s
uncle is a firefighter, or capital punishment because a local case dominates
the
news). Then open the list for the students’ recommendations. It is preferable
to generate a few too many topics or questions, and then select five to seven
for this lesson. Save the others for another exploration.
- Ask students to select the question or topic that most interests them and indicate their choice on the sign-up sheets as they come in or leave the classroom. Establish groups of four to five students each to facilitate discussion and participation.
If space is for popular topics is limited and disappointment surfaces, reconfigure the groups so that two groups are addressing the same question.
- After this session, pull together
a couple of resources for each collection and prepare to share them during the
next session. If you can find textbook excerpts on any of the topics, copy
that particular section or chapter, include the text book in the set, or in
the case of an outdated book, cut it apart
and bind the excerpt with a cut-to-size file folder. Have a container with
these starter texts labeled and ready for students before the beginning of
the next class session.
Session Two: Gathering Text Sets
- Share the
initial
resources you’ve gathered with students and invite them to participate
in the collecting. Free time to explore and collect resources in the library
as well as using Internet resources is ideal during this class session.
- As the sets come together during this session, as well as over the course
of the next week, encourage brief “text talks” to pique interest.
- After students have had time to add to their text sets using the library
resources, explain that families can share resources for any
of the text
sets.
- If desired, as a class compose a note
home to families that explains the project and the resources that students
are gathering. Students can create one generic letter for the entire class
or individualized letters that focus on their group’s text set focus. Use the
Letter Generator
Student Interactive to format and print the letters.
Session Three: Strategy One—Graffiti Boards
- Begin with each group sitting at a table around a large sheet of butcher
paper. You or one of the students can write the focus of the group in the
center with a bold marker.
- Ask students to spend the next 15-20 minutes talking informally about
what they already know or wonder about their topic then to write and/or
sketch
some of that information. Some groups may talk
together, and others may hold two or three conversations simultaneously.
The author of this strategy, Wayne Serebrin, invented it so students could
be “free
of everyday constraints, so that learners have an opportunity to more thoughtfully
and critically expand their thoughts alongside those of others and to share
ideas that have attracted their attention. [The focus is on] ideas that most
intrigue them, puzzle them, and propel their need to know more” (2004).
- After students have gathered their initial thoughts, place the text sets
in the center of the paper and invite students to explore them. Don’t worry
if there are only three or four items in a set, as exploring what is available
will
inspire
students
to secure additional resources to address their interests. Again, students
write and sketch as they work, adding new information or revising earlier
entries.
- As the groups work, take the opportunity to walk among them and take
anecdotal notes. Listen for active engagement, students’ abilities to capture
their ideas in a focused, informal way, and for questions the group finds
compelling.
- At the end of the work session, invite groups to briefly share. An example
of the responses from a fifth/sixth
grade class is available for comparison.
Twenty
to thirty seconds per student works well. The sample prompts below can
guide the discussion:
- Share the most interesting idea or question that you heard
today.
- Share the idea that you want to know more about.
- Share the value you found in this experience.
- Post the graffiti boards so that students can refer to them during
the course
of the study.
Session Four: Strategy Two—Browsing for Key Information
- Begin the lesson by talking about the challenge that all readers face when
they’re
looking for key information in demanding texts. As encyclopedias are the only
resource beyond textbooks in some classrooms, and as no one reads such texts
in their entirety, this strategy help learners locate key information more quickly.
- Ask several of the group members what questions or ideas they have been
discussing.
- Then ask what key words they think that they'll find if the text contains the information that they’re
looking for. (In an exploration of the thirteen colonies in an encyclopedia
entry on one of the New England states, for example, students generated these
key words: Colonial America,
1700s, colonies, runaway slaves, Boston, and “life, liberty or death!” This
list helped them locate three to four pertinent pages within a 40-page entry
on Massachusetts.)
- Write the key words your students generate on the board or on chart paper.
- Place the first transparency on the projector without turning it on.
- Explain the process of browsing for key information to students. Explain
that the process begins with running your
finger slowly down the very center of
the text, top to bottom, for about 15 seconds while you scan the text
for any of the key words.
- Before turning on the projector, designate a manageable way for students
to share their discoveries (e.g., raising hands, calling out, thumbs up).
- Turn the projector on and proceed through the browsing for key information
process with the transparencies. Pass out paper copies of
the text, if you have elected to use them, at the point when you want students
to participate more actively. Highlighters or pens can be used to mark key
words or passages.
- If desired, extend this strategy by having students convene
in their groups and try it out with their own texts. It’s also a great
strategy for a teaching librarian to use in support of your classroom teaching.
Again,
key to the success of
the lesson is that students identify information they are seeking, that they
generate the key words, and that the lesson is followed by meaningful use
of the strategy.
Session Five: Strategy Three—Uninterrupted Reading/Focused Freewriting
- This strategy helps readers put new information into their own words. Think
about using the strategy three or four times during a unit of study.
- Schedule 15-20 minutes of uninterrupted reading time. Each student should
have a couple items from the text set to read. Don’t forget that maps, Web
sites, and videos are viable texts to read.
- Set a timer or designate one
of the students
as timekeeper [a stopwatch is helpful here].
- At the end of the reading time, students put away the texts and prepare
to write. Working in inquiry/research journals can contribute to more serious
writing, but notebook paper is also fine, as is working on computers.
- Again,
designate a number of minutes that everyone will write and keep time.
- Ask students to
title their papers with the focus of their writing and then to begin writing
and/or sketching information they have learned framed by that focus.
- Alternately,
choose one of the variations below, which are supportive options for English
language learners or students who struggle to write. Please note that by
keeping your focus
away
from how
to spell individual words, less confident writers are freed to take more
risks. Spelling does not need to be
conventional when students are preserving new learning in note form.
- In this strategy from writing researcher, Donald Graves, a more experienced
writer, such as a teacher, intern, or parent, asks the student what s/he
wants to say. As the student talks, the teacher writes down short phrases,
rather
than entire thoughts, from the conversation. The paper is then passed back
to the student, with a comment like, “If you would like to use some of
your ideas, here they are.” This strategy could be used with a small group
of students, as well as with an individual student. The student then uses
the notes in support of his or her own writing.
- Students can dictate new ideas they’ve picked up during the reading
into a tape recorder. It helps to have a supportive adult prompting them
with statements like, “Say more about that” or “Really? How does that
go again?” so that quieter students add more detail to their reporting.
If there is time, the reader can listen back to the tape, and sketch
or take notes from the recording.
Web Resources
Students can use any of the following search engines to locate resources that
match their text set collections:
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| Student Assessment/Reflections |
Anecdotal Notetaking
Teacher takes anecdotal notes of the learning, particularly that of the less
experienced readers, while using reading strategies. Watch for active engagement, ability to focus questions, and the degree of success in finding texts to add to their sets. Read graffiti notes and focused freewritings for details that support your observations of students' interactions.
Student Self-Assessment as Evidence of Learning
- Ask students to copy a book jacket or identify a URL and write an accompanying
reflection that explains why the jacket or Web site is their “One Best
Resource” on the text set topic.
- Ask students to write which of the resources in their text set was most supportive of their learning and why on a Post-It® note; then, attach the note
to the resource in the text set.
- Use reflective responses to photographs to prompt student self-assessment.
As shown in the Graffiti
Board example, ask students to reflect on how the
photographs of their text set discussions demonstrate what they were
doing as well as why they were doing it. Keep your questions as open-ended as
possible. As the focus
of
this lesson
is particularly
on supporting
less experienced readers, these students could be interviewed individually.
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1 - Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
3 - Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
4 - Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.
7 - Students conduct research on issues and interests by generating ideas and questions, and by posing problems. They gather, evaluate, and synthesize data from a variety of sources (e.g., print and nonprint texts, artifacts, people) to communicate their discoveries in ways that suit their purpose and audience.
8 - Students use a variety of technological and information resources (e.g., libraries, databases, computer networks, video) to gather and synthesize information and to create and communicate knowledge.
10 - Students whose first language is not English make use of their first language to develop competency in the English language arts and to develop understanding of content across the curriculum.
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