The Common Core State Standards have put close reading in the spotlight as never before. While middle and high school teachers want and need students to connect with, analyze, and learn from both literary and informational texts, many are unsure how to foster the skills students must have in order to develop deep and nuanced understanding of complicated content. Is there a process to follow? How is close reading different from shared reading and other common literacy practices? How do you prepare students to have their ability to analyze complex texts measured by high-stakes assessments? And how do you fit close reading instruction and experiences into an already crowded curriculum? Literacy experts Barbara Moss, Diane Lapp, Maria Grant, and Kelly Johnson answer these questions and more as they explain how to teach middle and high school students to be close readers, how to make close reading a habit of practice across the content areas, and why doing so will build content knowledge. Informed by the authors’ extensive field experience and enriched by dozens of real-life scenarios and downloadable tools and templates, this book explores • Text complexity and how to determine if a particular text is right for your learning purposes and your students. • The process and purpose of close reading, with an emphasis on its role in developing the 21st century thinking, speaking, and writing skills essential for academic communication and college and career readiness. • How to plan, teach, and manage close reading sessions across the academic disciplines, including the kinds of questions to ask, texts to use, and supports to provide. • How to assess close reading and help all students—regardless of linguistic, cultural, or academic background—connect deeply with what they read and derive meaning from complex texts. Equipping students with the tools and process of close reading sets them on the road to becoming analytical and critical thinkers—and empowered and independent learners. In this comprehensive resource, you’ll find everything you need to start their journey.
Provides strategies for close reading narratives, informational texts, and arguments using a three-step close-reading ritual.
From soaring to high heights and seeing great sights to being left in a Lurch on a prickle-ly perch, Dr. Seuss addresses life’s ups and downs with his trademark humorous verse and whimsical illustrations.
Michael L. Kamil, Peter B. Mosenthal, P. David Pearson, and Rebecca Barr (Mahwah, N.J.: Erlbaum, 2000), 3:269–284. 10. David Coleman and Susan Pimentel,Bringing the Common Core to Life: Ten Essays on the Anchor Reading Standards ...
90 children's books are s-t-r-e-t-c-h-e-d five different ways with lively learning activities.
Ever wished for comprehension lessons that get students where they need to be in reading?
This book explains the relationship between comprehension and close reading and offers step-by-step guidelines for teaching both of these key elements of literacy.
Presents lessons intended to help students read literature with deeper understanding, introducing signposts that help them identify significant moments in literature and anchor questions that encourage them to read more closely.
DIVA reader intended for courses, presenting the continuity of close reading from New Criticism through poststructuralism./div "This is an important anthology that challenges the assumption of a radical break between formalism and the ...
Stretching Readers With Texts and Tasks Douglas Fisher, Nancy Frey, Diane Lapp. Figure 9.3 Question-Answer Relationships Source: Adapted from Fisher, Frey, & Young (2007). Source: Beck, McKeown, Hamilton, & Kucan (1997).
This book is the ideal guide to the practice, providing a methodology that can be used for poetry, novels, drama, and beyond.