Ch 15: Comp (Inst and Assess) Exp/Info Texts and Study Skills (23%) Flashcards
content-area literacy
reading and writing tasks that students complete while learning content
includes social studies, science, math, health, and vpa
expository texts
information-based texts
example: social studies textbook, information book on lions, a how-to manual on how to build something
skimming vs. scanning
- skimming - a fast reading of the text, usually to preview or review - reader is looking for key words, subtitles and important sentences
- scanning - a rapid reading to find specific information, sweeping across the text to find a path to the details
pre-reading strategies using graphic organizer
- kwl chart
- selective rereading
- graphic organizer (prepared by the teacher, has few words and summarizes, examined by students prior to reading
during reading strategies using study guides
emphasize essential information
resembles a graphic organizer, points to the key info in a story using text structures with either questions or fill in the blanks
more complex study guide can be a three level “interlocking guide” – includes literal, inferential, and evaluative (applied)
instructional strategies for struggling readers
- assist students with reading the textbook (record a chapter, teacher read aloud, additional vocabulary instruction)
- focus on key content, re-teach
- more scaffolding on key processes
- teach vocab using real objects, illustrations, diagrams
instructional strategies for EL
- explicit modeling
- use oral language and writing activities to support content-area knowledge
- build background knowledge with L1 resources (first language)