Moody Learning Log April 6, 2014
Chapter 7
“The Directed Reading-Thinking Activity fosters critical
awareness and thinking by engaging learners in a process that involves
prediction, verification, interpretation and judgment.” (p.225)
I think the most
important part of this comprehension strategy is the judgment part. Being able to judge whether you are right or
wrong is a necessary life skill. Also,
being able to judge and accept everyone’s point of view is a critical reading
strategy to have.
“In think-alouds, teachers make their thinking explicit by
verbalizing their thoughts while reading orally.” (p.201)
Thinking out loud
helps me to analyze what I’m reading, the same is good to model to
students. Sometimes they don’t know what
to think or what questions to ask themselves when their reading, so if we model
what we are thinking it will become more real to the students and they will
begin to apply it on their own.
Chapter 8
“The oral interaction in team learning gives more students a
change to use terms. Students can
exchange ideas, share insights, and justify responses in a nonthreatening
situation.” (p. 259)
My students love to
talk to each other, so giving opportunities to learn from each other is what I
try to do every day. You still have to
guide them with what language to use and what they should talk about, but it
allows them to share their thoughts and be heard.
“Demonstrating how to use context, word structure, and the dictionary provides students with
several basic strategies for vocabulary learning that will last a lifetime.”
(p.269)
The hardest thing for
students to get past is not knowing what a word means. It will throw off the whole idea of a story
if they don’t know what a word means, so making sure we teach how to figure out
the meaning of a word is very necessary in the classroom.
Chapter 9
“Before reading, Writing to Learn activities help students
tap into prior knowledge and make connections between the “old” (what they
already know) and the “new” (what they will be learning about).” (p. 285)
I use this in my
classroom, because in order for students to become engaged in the learning they
have to have something to connect it to.
The learning then becomes their responsibility because they are
challenging what they already know in writing.
“Response journals create permanent records of what readers
are feeling and thinking as they interact with texts. A response journal allows students to record
their thoughts about text and emotional reactions to them.” (p. 291)
Keeping a journal is a
great reading comprehension tool because it brings your thoughts from your mind
to the paper (or computer.) The act of
writing what you are thinking makes you actually think and reflect on what you
are reading.
Vacca, R. T., Vacca, J. A., & Mraz, M.
(2014). Content area reading: literacy and learning across the curriculum (Eleventh
ed.). Upper Saddle River: Pearson.
Article on
Comprehension: Picture It!
“For younger readers or readers who find it difficult to
organize their thoughts in a story map - which is the sequential identification of each
of the five story elements noted previously, from setting to resolution - the
Picture It! strategy begins with a visual interpretation of story grammar - a
pictorial of the five elements of a story.” (p. 65)
I think this is a
great strategy because reading is often like watching a movie in your head,
encouraging drawing pictures of what they see will help them remember the story
as a visual and not just words on a page.
“In addition to providing a visual picture of a story's main
idea, Picture It! can be used to teach new vocabulary. As students struggle to
develop their art work, they'll find that certain emotions, motivations, and so
forth are hard to depict. Students may wish to incorporate vocabulary into
their pictures to exemplify these concepts.” (p. 67)
I big thing with the
younger children is labeling what they are drawing. They can use words to explain their drawing
and feelings that might be hard since the point isn’t to be an artist.
Naughton, V. M. (2008) Picture It! The Reading Teacher, 66(1), pp.65-68.
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