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E-raamat: Diving Deep Into Nonfiction, Grades 6-12: Transferable Tools for Reading ANY Nonfiction Text

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Corwin Literacy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Sep-2016
  • Kirjastus: Corwin Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781506344058
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Corwin Literacy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Sep-2016
  • Kirjastus: Corwin Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781506344058
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This guide helps teachers instruct students in grades six through 12 on how to read complex nonfiction by noticing the cues in a text that help them recognize what authors expect them to pay attention to and use to construct meaning. It emphasizes the importance of teaching how to read complex nonfiction, transferring learning, practice, and promoting a growth mindset. It contains lessons to help students notice the conceptual conversation, key details, genre, and text structure in a piece of writing, focusing on reading visual texts, thinking aloud, practice, questioning, writing and responding, applying lessons outside of class, and putting it all together, with step-by-step instructions and extensions for each, along with readings and handouts. Annotation ©2017 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

“General reading strategies and teacher-developed questions will only take our students so far—with our approach, students gain astounding independence because they engage directly with the nonfiction author, and with how that author used specific details (moves) and structures to communicate meanings and effects.”
—Wilhelm and Smith

All nonfiction is a conversation between the writer and the reader, an invitation to agree or disagree with compelling and often provocative ideas about some aspect of the world we live in. At the end of the day, it’s our responsibility to decide if the argument is sound. With Diving Deep Into Nonfiction, Jeffrey D. Wilhelm and Michael W. Smith deliver a revolutionary teaching framework that helps students read well by noticing the rules and conventions of this dynamic exchange.

The classroom-tested lessons include engaging short excerpts and teach students to be powerful readers who know both how authors signal what’s worth noticing in a text and how readers connect and make meaning of what they have noticed.

No matter what they are reading, students learn to be on high alert, and highly curious about how texts work and what they mean, as they learn to notice direct statements of principle, calls to attention, ruptures, and readers’ rules of notice:

  • Notice the topics and the textual conversation: Who is speaking and how might he or she be responding to another’s ideas? What is the idea that gives “heat” to this text?
  • Notice key details: What attracts my attention? How does the author signal both direct and implicit statements of meaning? How does the author use the unexpected? How can I interpret patterns of key details to see overall meanings?
  • Notice varied nonfiction genres: What are the essential features of this kind of text? How does the author employ them? What effects are they designed to have on the reader?
  • Notice text structure: How does the author structure the text to connect details and ideas? What patterns of thought does the author use along the way?

With Diving Deep Into Nonfiction, Wilhelm and Smith upend current practices, and it’s high time. Once your students engage with these lessons, you’ll never go back to the same old tired approach— and reading across content areas enters a whole new era.

List of Videos
ix
Acknowledgments xi
1 What Skilled Readers Do
1(8)
What This Noticing Means for Us as Teachers
3(1)
Principles of Effective Instruction
3(2)
The Current Educational Climate
5(2)
How This Book Works
7(1)
How to Use This Book
8(1)
2 Noticing the Conversation
9(52)
Lesson 1 Noticing the Conversation: Reading Visual Texts
10(12)
Handout 2.1 Beer Street and Gin Lane
16(2)
Handout 2.2 Two Views of Children's Play
18(4)
Lesson 2 Noticing the Conversation: Thinking Aloud
22(8)
Handout 2.3 Intelligence: A Brief History (Excerpt)
29(1)
Anna T. Cianciolo
Robert J. Sternberg
Lesson 3 Noticing the Conversation: Practice in Miniature
30(9)
Handout 2.4 Noticing the Conversation
34(3)
Handout 2.5 More Practice Noticing the Conversation
37(2)
Lesson 4 Noticing the Conversation: Questioning
39(9)
Handout 2.6 Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written by Himself (Excerpt)
45(3)
Lesson 5 Noticing the Conversation: Writing and Responding
48(4)
Lesson 6 Noticing the Conversation: Search and Find
52(3)
Lesson 7 Noticing the Conversation: Putting It All Together
55(6)
Handout 2.7 The Gettysburg Address
59(2)
Abraham Lincoln
3 Noticing Key Details
61(60)
Lesson 1 Noticing Key Details: Reading Visual Texts
63(7)
Lesson 2 Noticing Key Details: Thinking Aloud
70(8)
Handout 3.1 The Great Fire (Excerpt)
77(1)
Jim Murphy
Lesson 3 Noticing Key Details: Practice in Miniature
78(11)
Handout 3.2 Movie Review: Avengers: Age of Ultron (Excerpt)
86(1)
Cary Darling
Handout 3.3 Harriet Tubman: Conductor on the Underground Railroad and Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written Himself (Excerpts)
87(2)
Lesson 4 Noticing Key Details: Questioning
89(6)
Lesson 5 Noticing Key Details: Writing and Responding
95(14)
Handout 3.4 Mentor Sentences Based on The Great Fire (Excerpt)
104(5)
Jim Murphy
Lesson 6 Noticing Key Details: Search and Find
109(3)
Lesson 7 Noticing Key Details: Putting It All Together
112(9)
4 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres
121(46)
Lesson 1 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres: Reading Visual Texts
123(6)
Handout 4.1 Thinking About Photographic Portrait Genres
128(1)
Lesson 2 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres: Thinking Aloud
129(6)
Handout 4.2 Sample Abstract: "Which AA Battery Maintains Its Voltage for the Longest Period of Time?" by Student Author
134(1)
Lesson 3 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres: Practice in Miniature
135(3)
Lesson 4 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres: Questioning
138(9)
Handout 4.3 Letters to the Editor
140(4)
Handout 4.4 Letters of Recommendation
144(2)
Handout 4.5 Using Genre Knowledge to Evaluate a Text
146(1)
Lesson 5 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres: Writing and Responding
147(4)
Lesson 6 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres: Search and Find
151(2)
Lesson 7 Noticing Varied Nonfiction Genres: Putting It All Together
153(14)
Handout 4.6 Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address
160(2)
Handout 4.7 Kennedy's Inaugural Address
162(5)
5 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts
167(62)
Lesson 1 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts: Reading Visual Texts
172(9)
Lesson 2 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts: Thinking Aloud
181(9)
Handout 5.1 Noticing Comparisons: Camping
185(1)
Handout 5.2 Noticing Comparisons: Class Election
186(2)
Handout 5.3 Noticing Comparisons: Spring Dance
188(2)
Lesson 3 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts: Practice in Miniature
190(12)
Handout 5.4 Noticing Comparisons: More Practice
196(6)
Lesson 4 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts: Questioning
202(11)
Lesson 5 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts: Writing and Responding
213(5)
Handout 5.5 Cuing Comparisons
216(2)
Lesson 6 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts: Search and Find
218(2)
Lesson 7 Noticing the Text Structures in Nonfiction Texts: Putting It All Together
220(9)
Handout 5.6 "Troposphere" (Excerpt)
225(2)
Bill Bryson
Handout 5.7 Hillocks Hierarchy Questions
227(2)
6 Why This Method Works
229(4)
Motivating Deep Learning
229(1)
Developing Cultural, Critical, and Identity Literacies
230(2)
A Final Word
232(1)
Appendix: General Reader's Rules Of Notice For Nonfiction 233(6)
Works Cited 239(4)
Index 243
A classroom teacher for fifteen years, ?Jeffrey D. Wilhelm? is currently Professor of English Education at Boise State University. He works in local schools as part of a Virtual Professional Development Site Network sponsored by the Boise State Writing Project, and regularly teaches middle and high school students. Jeff is the founding director of the Maine Writing Project and the Boise State Writing Project.  Michael W. Smith, a professor in Temple Universitys College of Education, joined the ranks of college teachers after eleven years of teaching high school English. His research focuses on understanding both how adolescents and adults engage with texts outside school and how teachers can use those understandings to devise more motivating and effective instruction inside schools.