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Mrs. Ferrante |
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Reading StrategiesHow a parent can use coaching during reading: **All of the above coaching strategies are used in class and reinforced on Fridays when we do our Guess the Missing Word Activity. **Also, be sure to use the Guess the Covered Word Strategy tips that are on the back of the 2nd Grade Word Wall I inserted in your child's RED Homework Folder.
Reading Comprehension Strategies--- Note: The following are modeled throughout the year and are not second grade mastery. Your child is beginning the journey of literacy and over the next few years each of these strategies will be developed and or become natural (secure). Predicting: Prediction helps set the stage for reading for meaning. As we read, we use our past experiences and knowledge, or schema, to make “thinking guesses” about what will happen next in the story. We also use prediction to figure out the meanings of individual words or phrases. We begin by looking at the cover illustration and title. Have we read other books by this author? Does the illustration or title give any clues about the story? All predictions that use our schema are important and valuable. One method used in the classroom with nonfiction books is to have the child write down what they already know about the topic of the book. We discuss our "schema" the knowledge we already have about the topic and while reading the book Post-it notes are used to flag pages that confirm our predictions. Making Connections: When we read for meaning, we make connections to other texts, to ourselves, and to our world. A text-to-self connection helps you build understanding and make meaning from the story. We come to reading with many experiences and memories that help us make connections and bring meaning to what we are reading. Text-to-text connections are connections to meaningful story elements in another book. Text-to-world connections are connections to things happening in our world. Meaningful connections help us understand important story elements (character, setting, problem, solution). Visualizing: When readers combine their personal knowledge and experience with the author’s words and ideas to make mental images, they are visualizing. The author’s words “paint a picture in our minds.” Sometimes I ask the children to use their 'mental TV' to picture what is happening in the story. When the words help us make a picture in our mind that helps us understand a story element (character, setting, problem, solution), this is a meaningful visualization. The words must be important to the meaning of the story. Words, phrases and short passages can give us visualizations. Everyone’s visualizations are different because we are using the author’s words and our own experiences, to make a picture in our mind. Sometimes a visualization is so good, we can smell the flowers or taste the fruit that we see in our mind. :) Retelling: Good readers can tell all the important things that happened in a story in their own words. A retelling of a story should include important story elements (character, setting, problem, and events leading to the solution---plot). A retelling is NOT a reciting. Sometimes students want to copy all the dialogue. Again it should be in the students own words. Inferring: When readers infer, they use their prior knowledge and clues from the story to draw conclusions and form unique interpretations. “The story does not say, but we can decide. . .” Questioning: Good readers purposefully and spontaneously ask questions before, during, and after reading. Model this aloud when reading with your child. Encourage your child to do the same. :)
In fiction, thinking about the setting, plot, characters, problem and solution can lead us to the theme or main idea of the story. What is the author telling us? We can think about this for each paragraph or page of text that we read. What is important here? What does the author want me to know? What is the lesson?
Poetry: Students will explore the way poets use ryhme, choose words to evoke certain feelings in their readers and paint word pictures. All of these skills enable readers to better understand and appreciate the beauty and meaning of poems. |