What’s good in nonfiction?
Two key points that stood out to me while reading
chapter two were the idea of teaching students text structures to support their
reading of expository text and how one must evaluate nonfiction materials to
put into their classroom. (stay tuned for the next blog on evaluating
materials)
Text Structure:
From
my experience, young children LOVE reading nonfiction material, and I have had
amazing success from incorporating interest/inquiry reading groups into my
daily reading block. While sometimes, students select fiction materials to
study (i.e. fairy tales, chapter series) most wanted to read about “stuff they
could learn more facts about.” I felt overall the students did a great job
navigating Wikipedia (even some with some reading struggles and I feel it was
related to their desire to figure it out) to some text that would be
categorized as inconsiderate. But there are students who just don’t understand
the writing patterns that are used in expository text. “Insensitivity to text
patterns hinders not only students’ comprehension and recall but also their
abilities to write well-developed content material” (Richards & Gipe, 1995,
667). With that being said, I know this upcoming school year, I want to do a
better job of teaching my students how to recognize signal words and phrases
that deem the text to be expository. Knowledge of text structure can improve
learning from content area texts (Harvy, 1998; Allen, 2000). The authors listed
the following expository text structures in writing as follows:
·
Description
·
Simple
listing
·
Sequence
or time order
·
Cause-effect
·
Comparison
and contrast
·
Problem-solution
·
And
question/answer.
In
the book, they authors provide examples of lessons to support teaching each
structure. They believe that by supporting students’ recognition of the writing
of expository text patterns aids in students understanding and help students to
recall and retain material.
So if we were looking at some of the framing questions for this course, your post answers many of them!
ReplyDeleteFor example: What are the most important things students need to learn to become more
literate in our disciplines? You list the expository text structures that must be taught to students in order for them to be literate in the information presented through the text.
Another example of one of our framing questions being answered by your blog: How do we know that a student is able to read or that a reader is struggling? In here you talk about the example of Rachel. The teachers were in tune with where her needs are, even though she initially presents as being completely understanding. this is where a good teacher with a deep understanding of what comprehension really means and how to pay attention to student cues.
Minda I loved how you tied the Mosaic of thought into your readings. I have been doing the same with mine and can see how that reading correlates with Gee and how Gee was our scaffold. I have to agree that the Common Core is going to be something that most teachers are going to have to make adjustments to. However, you list is basic and it's something that teachers of all grade levels need to go back and refresh with students. It's a very basic thing as you mentioned that gets left out many times. I look forward to reading how to implement this in the classroom setting.
ReplyDeleteThe question becomes how do we go about helping kids understand text structures. I believe that inquiry is the best approach--what does this text do, how is it organized to accomplish its purpose, what do you notice about how it unfolds....
ReplyDeleteGreat point! It really begins with a big idea, big question of how something works to teach students about the content, text, etc.
DeleteI really love the idea of teaching text structure and text patterns with students, and it works equally well at the high school level. With high school juniors analyzing historical speeches (to learn rhetorical devices and to identify figurative language), I sometimes ask those questions: "Why would the author organize the speech this way? What do you notice about how the arguments are arranged?" I think reading this section on text patterns could help me to better organize this type of inquiry.
ReplyDelete