Friday, July 17, 2009

The Importance of Background Knowledge


First: A picture of a hickory tree over at Oakside Park, just a mile from our house and easily walkable with a new fitness trail.

On the IRA page at Facebook, teachers are discussing how they can build background knowledge for students. Check out the conversation here:

http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/International-Reading-Association/81491751082?ref=nf


I've been intrigued by background knowledge for a long time. I've started being more explicit with my students as I teach them about using their schema, trying to help them see that they are in charge of organizing their thoughts. I'm also intrigued by the role that schema plays in making inferences. I created a Powerpoint to model this process for students. You can find the Powerpoint over at Slideshare:

http://www.slideshare.net/elkissn/using-schema-to-make-inferences

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Retelling or Summarizing?

In a recent workshop, several teachers shared with me that their administration discouraged them from using retelling in the classroom. Apparently, they were told that by the intermediate grades of 4-6, they should be focusing on summarizing, and should not use retelling at all.

I think this is misguided. Telling teachers to avoid retelling keeps them from a wonderful strategy that helps students to understand text, make connections, and build background knowledge. I think that retelling is a suitable activity for all classrooms, from kindergarten and up. Here’s why.

Retelling is authentic
Summarizing gets all the press as being a great thinking strategy. But having kids write formal summaries for every text is overkill (and just plain mean!) In real life, readers are far more likely to retell a text than to write a summary to share. Providing students with opportunities to retell every text, and write formal summaries of SOME texts, is more realistic.

Retelling builds multiple representations of text
Graham Nuthall, a researcher from New Zealand, performed extensive studies of how kids learn in a classroom. He found that information that is represented in multiple ways—visual, auditory, and so forth—is far more likely to be remembered. (Elementary School Journal, v99 n4 p303-41 Mar 1999)


When students retell, they are using many representations. They are talking, they are listening, they are moving little figures around to show the action, they are pointing to pictures. These representations will help them to remember not only the information and details from the text, but also the key points that a retelling should include.

Retelling builds connections
Retelling helps students to make inferences and build connections. If you doubt this, pay attention to your own processes as you retell a story or a nonfiction article. Retelling brings the ideas from the text into the working memory, where they can be linked to old information to form inferences. When students retell together, they can pool their schema and learn from one another.

Retelling helps students to see what’s important
As students work on summarizing, they struggle with figuring out which ideas are important. Their summaries often go on and on, even getting to be as long as the original text. (And they look so proud when they show these super-long summaries to you!) It’s easy to help kids figure out what’s really important with speed retellings. Can you retell the story in 2 minutes? One minute? Which ideas should you leave out? Which do you have to include?

Retelling is fun!
I hate a silent classroom. There is something about it that just makes me edgy. So I like the productive hum of retelling. Kids like it, too.

So, just because your students are past the primary stage is no reason to give up retelling. Try it out in your classroom!

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Great Spangled Fritillary


I saw this at Nixon County Park, a great little park near York. This website helped me with the identification:

http://www.phab001.com/

With the bee balm in bloom, there are butterflies everywhere!

Projectable books

I can't escape from school. As I sit on the beach, dig a sand castle, or peer into a stream to catch creatures, teaching thoughts just enter my brain.

One of the thoughts was about how I can use projectable books in my instruction. I like the idea of projectable books for several reasons. Not only do they make text visible to all of the students, but they also allow us to highlight key features.

I'm working my way through several questions about projectable books. How do I deal with the issue of students reading at different rates? Would timing the slides be useful, or would it leave some kids behind? Where can I find projectable books? Will they be useful in the long term, or will the novelty wear off quickly for students?

I decided to try adapting a book that I had already written for emergent readers to use as a projectable book. Here is the link to the book at Slideshare:

http://www.slideshare.net/elkissn/polar-bears-and-black-bears-highlighted

Other projectable books can be found at Reading A-Z.com.

What do you think? How do you plan to use projectable books this fall?

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Steve Jenkins books at Kohl's!

I love to check out the new $5 books that Kohl's sells by the cash registers. I was thrilled to see this month's choices, three books by Steve Jenkins. This author creates books that include lovely artwork and true animal facts. There are three books available, plus stuffed animals to go along with them. But get them fast...I learned this lesson with their last offering, Duck Soup, which I missed.

Biggest, Strongest, Fastest: Full page collages show animals that break records for speed, strength, and size.

http://www.amazon.com/Biggest-Strongest-Fastest-Steve-Jenkins/dp/0395861365/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247356620&sr=8-2

What Do You Do With A Tail Like This?: Great book for teaching adaptations, with facts about how different animals use their ears, eyes, and of course tails.

http://www.amazon.com/What-Tail-Like-Caldecott-Honor/dp/0618256288

Actual Size: I've noticed that kids will pore over this book for hours...it shows pictures of different animals, depicting their actual sizes.

http://www.amazon.com/Actual-Ribbon-Nonfiction-Award-Awards/dp/0618375945/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpt_5

Thursday, July 9, 2009