Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Reading Comprehension Strategies at Work!

Room 24 students are working hard to get to know characters in the books we are reading. As third grade readers who have crossed the threshold from learning to read to reading to learn, we have started working hard to utilize reading comprehension strategies. The strategies for comprehending text are: Predicting, Questioning, Connecting, Visualizing, Inferring and Summarizing. A brief description is:
Predicting: Using clues from the text to make good guesses about what might happen next in the story.
Questioning: Asking and answering questions about the text while reading.
Connecting: Making connections helps bring meaning to the text. There are three types of connections. Text to Text, Text to Self and Text to World. These are likenesses drawn between another text or the world and the book being read.
Visualizing: Readers create a picture in his/her mind based on the author's words.
Inferring: Using what was read in the text and the reader's background knowledge to figure out messages that are not directly stated.
Summarizing: Paraphrasing a section of the text to verify your own understanding.

Each day during our whole class lesson I model the use of reading comprehension strategies that a good reader should do while reading. Slowly students take over and begin to share their thinking, about our whole class reading and then practicing this by jotting think notes about his/her independent reading. As we read we are using these reading comprehension strategies to better understand the text and "figure out" the characters we are reading about. Your child will be familiar these strategies and can explain how he/she uses each one during at home reading time
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Thursday, October 8, 2015

Following Characters Into Meaning

Gooney Bird Greene
One of the most important ideas we discuss in our character study unit is that the big ideas in the text center on the people. After all, don't we all read stories to slip into another person's life and experience what the characters are experiencing.

As we begin our unit on Following characters into meaning, we have started a shared reading of Gooney Bird Greene. This book, written by Lois Lowry, introduces us to a delightful character that has a lot to teach us about being your own unique self. Gooney Bird takes over Mrs. Pidgeon's class of second graders and shares unusual stories such as, How Gooney Bird Greene Came From China on a Flying Carpet and How Gooney Bird Greene Got Her Name. These sound like fictitious titles but, Gooney Bird professes she tells only "Absolutely True Stories" and we as readers discover she does!
Lois Lowry makes it easy for readers to become part of Miss Pidgeon's class and really get to know Gooney Bird well.  Her incredible writing has not only helped us come to truly know Gooney Bird Greene, but it has also provided many opportunities for us to discuss the way a reader comes to know any character. The big idea we are discovering is when you follow a character into meaning you grow ideas about the character by noticing: 
  • how the author describes the character's appearance and personality
  • what the character says and how it is said
  • the characters actions 
  • how other characters treat the main character
We are realizing some characters are round characters, or fully developed characters and secondary characters are usually flat characters, or we only learn a bit about them.


When you are discussing characters in fiction reading with your child see how they respond to these ideas with their at home independent reading.