UPDATE: Glossary of Terms | Principal Strategy Books 08-09 | The Literacy Block | Reading Strategies | 6+1 Traits of Writing | Wall of Words-3rd | Wall of Words-2nd | Wall of Words-1st | Wall of Words-K | What does a scientist do? | Scientists use tools. | Sticking to Magnets | Asset Map Goals | CALENDAR1 | FAQ | What is Cornerstone? | Links for Kids | Links for Parents | Links for Teachers | Teacher | TABLE5 | UpdateIndex | Help
VIEW: Home | Glossary of Terms | Principal Strategy Books 08-09 | The Literacy Block | Reading Strategies | 6+1 Traits of Writing | Wall of Words-3rd | Wall of Words-2nd | Wall of Words-1st | Wall of Words-K | What does a scientist do? | Scientists use tools. | Sticking to Magnets | Asset Map Goals | CALENDAR1 | FAQ | What is Cornerstone? | Links for Kids | Links for Parents | Links for Teachers | Teacher | TABLE5
You are currently using the Homework With Text Formatting page type. This is an old page type with limited formatting options. We would recommend switching to the Enhanced Text page, a more advanced page type with many more options. Click here for more information on the different page types. Please note: You may continue to use this page type if you desire.
Making Connections/Schema
For readers, there must be a million autobiographies, since we seem to find,in book after book, the traces of our lives. --Stan Persky
Schema or background knowledge is all that you as a reader bring to a book: your personal history, all you've read or seen, your adventures, the experiences of your day-to-day life, your relationships, your passions. All of this becomes your schema. Schema helps the reader to understand the story better.
Text to Self: With text-to-self connections, what you read reminds you of something from your own life. These types of connections are particularly important because brain research shows that "emotions drive attention, create meaning, and have their own memory pathways." Making an emotional connection helps us remember what we read.
Text to Text: With text-to-text connections, what you read reminds you of something else you have read or seen.
Text to World: When text-to-world connections are made, what you read reminds you of something in the broader world. Books, articles, and stories that make you think about something beyond your own life help you create text-to-world connections.
Crafting Session Tips for Making Connections
Questioning/Why, What, Where, Who, and How
The most important questions don't seem to have ready answers. But the questions themselves have a healing power when they are shared. An answer is an invitation to stop thinking about something, to stop wondering. Life has no such stopping places. Life is a process whose every event is connected to the moment that just went by. An unanswered question is a fine traveling companion. It sharpens your eye for the road.
--Rachel Naomi Remen, M.D.
Asking questions is indispensable for creating and strengthening the reader's ongoing dialogue with the page. Questions help a reader clarify ideas and deepen understanding. Questions lead readers deeper into a piece, setting up a dialogue with the author, sparking in the reader's minds what it is they care about. If you ask questions as you read, you are awake. You are thinking. You are interacting with the words.
Wonder keeps the imagination alive and curiosity well-tuned. Asking questions is part of remaining open to wonder and alert to the world around you. Asking questions is how we make sense of the world around us. Asking questions is about taking risks and furthering passions and satisfying curiosities. Questions indicate engagement. They are a key ingredient in building superb readers.
Language to Use with Questioning:
Crafting Session Tips for Questioning
Questions can be thin questions or thick questions. Thin questions are easy to clarify by reading further or looking up a word. Thin questions can be answered with one or two words. Thick questions are deeper questions that deal with more ideas and imponderables. Thick questions often require the reader to infer the answers. Thick questions are answered with more than one or two words. To really get the readers to comprehend and think, we need to be asking a lot more thick questions than thin questions.
Drawing Inferences/Inferring
When the mind is thinking , it is talking to itself.
--Plato
By using inference, you elaborate upon what you read, drawing conclusions, going beyond what is printed on the page. The voice inside your head doesn't simply parrot back the author's words, but instead makes guesses, finds connecting points, asks questions. You predict what might happen next, see a scene more clearly in your mind, figure out an unknown word, answer questions. You personalize what you read to build a deeper meaning.
Language for Drawing Inferences
Crafting Session Tips for Inferring
Mental Images/Visualizing
All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened and after you are finished reading one, you will feel that all of that happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you: the good and the bad, the ectasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was.
--Ernest Hemingway
This stragtegy focuses on the creation in your mind of sensory images--pictures, smells, tastes, sounds, feelings--a vital ingredient if reading is going to be vivid, exciting, memorable and fun. As you muse over a poem, read a novel, or pause over a newspaper story, a picture forms in your mind. Certain smells, tastes, sights, and feelings emerge, depending on what you're reading and what life experiences you bring to it. Information comes to you through your senses. This technique or strategy which is called visualizing or creating mental images, triggers a wide range of memories and feelings. These sensory images are critically important to children, because they make reading vivid and fun. When sensory images form in a child's mind, it helps him organize them to help the story make sense.
Crafting Session Tips for Mental Images/Visualizing
Determining Importance and Synthesizing
I know of nothing more inspiring than that of making discoveries for one's self.
--George Washington Carver
These two strategies focus on two skills: the ability to distinguish what's important in text and the ability to synthesize it, or determine the overall meaning and significance. Determining importance has to do with knowing why you're reading and then making decisions about which information or ideas are most critical to understanding the overall meaning of the piece. The ability to figure out what's most important in text starts with several simple actions you should take before reading: deciding your purpose for reading; consciously searching for new facts; reading with specific questions in mind; and understanding that layout, particularly in nonfiction text, gives valuable clues to what's important. When in place these are powerful tools for determining what's important.
Synthesizing is closely linked to determining importance. Basically, as we identify what's important, we interweave our thoughts to form a comprehensive perspective to make the whole greater that just the sum of its parts. Synthesis is the process of ordering, recalling, retelling, and recreating into a coherent whole the information with which our minds are bombarded every day. It is the uniquely human trait that permits us to sift through a myriad of details and focus on those pieces we need to know and remember. Synthesizing is about organizing the different pieces to create a mosaic, a meaning, a beauty, greater than the sum of each shiny piece.
Crafting Session Tips for Determining Importance and Synthesizing