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Techniques for Reading and Responding to Complex Informational Text

Techniques for Reading and Responding to Complex Informational Text Thomas Gunning, Professor Emeritus, Southern Connecticut State University. How well do elementary and middle schoolers comprehend complex informational text?. NAEP Results- released questions

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Techniques for Reading and Responding to Complex Informational Text

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  1. Techniques for Reading and Responding to Complex Informational Text Thomas Gunning, Professor Emeritus, Southern Connecticut State University

  2. How well do elementary and middle schoolers comprehend complex informational text?

  3. NAEP Results- released questions Questions similar to those on Common Core For 4th & 8th graders What questions do they have difficulty with? Combined comprehension & responding difficulties Test selections and answers on following slides are drawn from: National Center for Education Statistics (2013). NAEP Questions Tool. Available online at http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/itmrlsx/search.aspx?subject=reading

  4. The article describes male emperor penguins as "tough." Give two pieces of information from the article that show that male emperor penguins are tough.

  5. Full Comprehension 51% Responses at this level provide two pieces of information from the article that show that male emperor penguins are tough. They can survive a cold winter. They don't eat for two months. Partial Comprehension 32% Little or No Comprehension 14% little/no 3% omitted May lack foundational skills

  6. Explain how emperor penguins stay warm when they form huddles. One of the impressive ways emperors stay toasty when temperatures plummet or the wind blasts is to "huddle.” A huddle forms when hundreds, even thousands, of males crowd together. The birds move constantly, slowly rotating from the cold outside rings to the warm, wind-free center.

  7. Explain how emperor penguins stay warm when they • form huddles. • One of the impressive ways emperors stay toasty when • temperatures plummet or the wind blasts is to "huddle.” • A huddle forms when hundreds, even thousands, of males • crowd together. The birds move constantly, slowly rotating • from the cold outside rings to the warm, wind-free center. • Full Comprehension 27% • Responses at this level explain how emperor penguins • stay warm when they form huddles. Responses mention • one of the following: • They share body heat. • They rotate from the outside to the inside of the huddle. • _ They are blocked from wind.

  8. Partial Comprehension 33% Responses at this level provide a definition of huddles or information about huddles but do not explain how penguins stay warm when they form huddles. There are many penguins packed together. It is 77 degrees inside a huddle. You can see the steam rising off the penguins in the huddle. Little or No Comprehension or Omitted 40% Difficulty Comprehending or Failure to Explain How

  9. Partial Comprehension 33% Responses at this level provide a definition of huddles or information about huddles but do not explain how penguins stay warm when they form huddles. There are many penguins packed together. It is 77 degrees inside a huddle. You can see the steam rising off the penguins in the huddle. Little or No Comprehension or Omitted 40% Difficulty Comprehending or Failure to Explain How

  10. Describe the roles that male and female emperor penguins play in hatching and raising their young. Give information about the roles of both male and female penguins in your answer. Extensive- 7% Essential- 56% Four-part question: What is the role of the male in hatching? What is the role of the male in raising? What is the role of the female in hatching? What is the role of the female in raising? Failure to answer all parts of the question

  11. Describe the roles that male and female emperor penguins play in hatching and raising their young. Give information about the roles of both male and female penguins in your answer. Extensive- 7% Essential- 56% Four-part question What is the role of the male in hatching? What is the role of the male in raising? What is the role of the female in hatching? What is the role of the female in raising? Failure to answer all parts of the question

  12. Why is "A Voice for Civil Rights" a good heading for the section that follows it on pages 3–4? Use information from the article to support your answer. Full 10% Partial 41% Infer relationships- give reasons, explain why Mahalia Jackson was a voice for civil rights

  13. What does the author mean when she says, "Every species of bee has its own story" (page 3)? Use information from the article to support your answer. Difficulty: Medium (43.13% Correct) Responses at this level indicate that there are many different species of bees, but they do not support that statement with information from the article. Failure to explain why

  14. The last section of the article is called "A Message Home.” Is this a good heading for that section? Explain your answer using information from the article. A Message Home Before letting her go, scientists attached a special "pop-up " satellite tag to the white shark. A month later the tag automatically popped off the shark, floated to the surface and sent data to an orbiting satellite.The tag told scientists that the shark was alive and had swum 200 miles south since her release. This is as close as any shark gets to sending a postcard: "The water is fine. Wish you were here!” Full- 20% Partial- 22% Difficulty explaining why

  15. Describe a similarity and a difference between the way the two articles approach the subject of invasive species. Support your answer with references to both of the articles. Difficulty: Medium (48.09% Correct) Failure to use a similarity and a difference. Failure to use multiple sources.

  16. Key Difficulties on NAEP • Difficulty providing support for answers • Difficulty explaining how • Difficulty explaining why • Difficulty with multi-part answers

  17. Other Comprehension Difficulties • Making appropriate use of prior knowledge. May over-rely on prior knowledge and fail to consider the information in the text. . •  Integrating sentences. Students may understand each sentence, but might not integrate their meaning. • Seeing similarities and differences or making comparisons and contrasts. • Making inferences. This is especially important when the reader is expected to supply information that the author has not included. • Establishing cause-effect relationships. May have difficulty noting the effect of an event or action. • Organizing information. May have difficulty keeping key events in order or a series of steps in a process (Dewitz & Dewitz, 2003; Dewitz, 2012; Gunning, 2014; Wade, 1990)

  18. Along with traditional strategies, such as predicting, summarizing, questioning, inferring, visualizing, and monitoring, the following should be stressed:

  19. • Scaffolding • Asking Why and How • Using Text Structure • Using Organized Graphic Organizers • Paraphrasing

  20. Scaffolding Provide hints or clues in the questions or directions. These are gradually faded out.

  21. Why the Sea Level is Rising Glaciers are also melting and shrinking. Glaciers are made up of fallen snow that has turned into ice. They flow like rivers, only much slower. Lately, they have been speeding up. Many of them flow toward the ocean, then break off in chunks--sometimes huge chunks. In places such as Glacier National Park, the glaciers are melting and disappearing. The air is getting warmer, and less snow is falling during winter to renew the melted parts of the glaciers. As more sea ice and glaciers melt, the global sea level rises. But melting ice is not the only cause of rising sea level. As the ocean gets warmer, the water actually expands! Sea level has risen 6.7 inches in the last 100 years. In the last 10 years, it has risen twice as fast as in the previous 90 years. Source: Adapted from NASA (n.d.). Climate change. http:// climate.nasa.gov/kids/bigQuestions 3. Why is the sea level rising? Be sure to give two causes. Write your answers on the lines. If you don’t remember the causes, go back to the article. Cause 1: _____________________________________________________ Cause 2: _____________________________________________________

  22. Effect of Global Warming on Sea Ice Global air temperatures near Earth's surface rose one degree Fahrenheit in the last century. One degree may not seem like much. But when we are talking about the average over the whole Earth, lots of things start to change. For one thing, the oceans have gotten warmer. When the oceans get warmer, sea ice begins to melt in the Arctic and around Greenland. NASA's Earth satellites show us that every summer some Arctic ice melts and shrinks, getting smallest by September. Then, when winter comes, the ice grows again. But, since 1979, the September ice has been getting smaller and smaller and thinner and thinner. Source: Adapted from NASA (n.d.). Climate change. http://www.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/k-4/stories/ what-is-climate-change-k4.html How do we know that there is less ice around Greenland now than there was years ago? What fact in the article tells us this? Write your answer on the lines.

  23. What Air Is Made Of What’s in air? Air is made up mostly of nitrogen. Nitrogen is a colorless, odorless gas. We can’t see it and we can’t smell it. Nitrogen helps plants grow. Air also has a lot of oxygen. Oxygen is also a colorless, odorless gas. Oxygen is what we need to breathe. Air also has small bits of a number of other gases. Small bits of dust can be found floating on the air. And high up small particles of ice can be found. •When you come across a word whose meaning you do not know, look for clues to the meaning of the word. What clues from the article could be used to help you figure out the meaning of particles? Hint: Take a close look a the sentences that come before the one that contains particles. Write your answer on the lines _______________________________________________ •What clues from the article could be used to help you figure out the meaning of odor? Hint: Take a look at the sentence that comes after the one that contains odorless. Write your answer on the line. _______________________________________________.

  24. Air Pressure and the Weather Air pressure can cause changes in the weather. Cold air weighs more than warm air and so exerts more pressure on the earth. Because it exerts more pressure, cold air causes areas of high pressure to form called highs. On the other hand, warm air creates areas of low pressure called lows. Highs usually bring clear, dry weather. Because they are heavier, highs sink. As the air in a high moves downward, it compresses and heats any clouds that are around so that they evaporate. With lows, the opposite happens. Because it is lighter, warm air rises. As the warm air in lows rises, it is cooled and forms clouds, which may bring rain. Why does cold air create high pressure areas? This is a hard question. Read the explanation in the article again and then write your answer on the lines.

  25. 2. Why do highs usually bring clear, dry weather? Read the explanation in the article again and then fill in the diagram below to show how this happens.

  26. Bell and another inventor created the photophone. The photophone used light instead of electricity to carry sounds. Bell believed that the photophone was his greatest invention. He said it was greater than the telephone. However, the photophone was ahead of its time. Phones that used light to carry sound didn’t come into use until the 1980s. Bell also invented the audiometer, which is used to test people’s hearing. Bell created a device for taking the salt out of seawater and a device for locating icebergs. Bell and his workers also improved the airplane and phonograph records and worked on a boat that has an engine that lifts it out of the water. What makes you think that Bell had a number of different interests? Finish the answer. Hint: In your answer give examples of his different inventions. Bell created many different kinds of inventions. He invented _________ __________________________________________________________ Creating many kinds of inventions shows that Bell had many interests.

  27. Using Organized Graphic Organizers to Organize Information By completing or creating graphic organizers students will be helped to integrate key information in a passage. This would be helpful for understanding complex processes, such as the water cycle. Organizers are related to thinking processes involved and structure of text.

  28. Paraphrasing Students put difficult sentences or passages into their own words in order to foster comprehension. “Paraphrasing text can facilitate reading comprehension by transforming the text into a more familiar construct or by activating relevant prior knowledge” (McNamara, 2004).

  29. Bernoulli’s principle law stating that the pressure of a fluid varies inversely with speed, an increase in speed producing a decrease in pressure and vice versa (such as a drop in hydraulic pressure as the fluid speeds up flowing through a constriction in a pipe) and vice versa. The principle also explains the pressure differences on each surface of an aerofoil, which gives lift to the wing of an aircraft. (Brimblecombe, Gallannaugh, & Thompson, 1998, p. 85) Speed causes the pressure of a fluid to change. Increasing the speed of the flow makes the pressure decrease. Pressure increases when the speed of the flow is decreased. When fluid is pushed through a narrow pipe, the fluid speeds up and the pressure in the pipe drops. This principle explains what keeps planes up. Because air flows more swiftly over the top of a wing than the underside, there is less pressure and the airplane is given lift.

  30. Build Knowledge Not enough to develop thinking and comprehension skills Need to ask: What facts, concepts, information have students learned? How has their knowledge increased? Need to develop topics fully

  31. Doesn’t take any more time Instead of an article on guide horses, have several articles on ways service animals help people A teen who helped others- how even young people can help others A mouse who howls- how and why animals communicate

  32. Sources of High-Quality Informational Text NASA for Educators http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/k-4/index. html#.U073I8epqix Resources are provided for K-4, 5-8, and 9-12. Homework Topics: “What are clouds?” “What is a satellite? ” “What is Jupiter?” K-4 (RL easy 3) 5-8 (RL 4-5) Climate Kids: NASA’s Eyes on the Earth http://climatekids.nasa.gov/ Good use of subheads that pose questions: How do we know Earth is getting warmer? IL 3-8 RL- 4-5

  33. What Are Clouds? A cloud is made of water drops or ice crystals floating in the sky. There are many kinds of clouds. Clouds are an important part of Earth's weather.How Do Clouds Form?The sky can be full of water. But most of the time you can't see the water. The drops of water are too small to see. They have turned into a gas called water vapor. As the water vapor goes higher in the sky, the air gets cooler. The cooler air causes the water droplets to start to stick to things like bits of dust, ice or sea salt. NASA 3.7 (CCSS 2) 570L

  34. What Are Clouds? A cloud is a mass of water drops or ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere. Clouds form when water condenses in the sky. The condensation lets us see the water vapor. There are many different types of clouds. Clouds are an important part of Earth's weather and climate.How Do Clouds Form?Clouds form from water in the sky. The water may evaporate from the ground or move from other areas. Water vapor is always in the sky in some amount but is invisible. Clouds form when an area of air becomes cooler until the water vapor there condenses to liquid form At that point, the air is said to be "saturated" with water vapor. The air where the cloud forms must be cool enough for the water vapor to condense. The water will condense around things like dust, ice or sea salt - all known as condensation nuclei. The temperature, wind and other conditions where a cloud forms determine what type of cloud it will be. 6.3 (5 CCSS) 830L

  35. Library of Congress www.loc.gov America’s Story Meet Amazing Americans Presents brief biographies with illustrations of famous Americans, IL-3-8 RL-4. Jump Back in Time Provides an overview of an era in American history and a number of related articles that portray key figures and events of the era . IL-4-8 RL-5. Explore the States Gives a brief history of each state and brief descriptions of interesting events and customs in the state. IL-4-8 RL-5.

  36. Smithsonian’s History Explorer http://historyexplorer.si.edu/home/ A wide range of topics is explored through primary sources and other resources. http://invention.smithsonian.org/home/ Lemelson Center for the Study of Inventions and Innovation http://invention.smithsonian.org/home/ Invention at Play Tells the stories of a number of inventions, such as robotic ants, Kevlar, Velcro, barbed wire and others. Explores sources of inspiration for inventions. IL 5-8 RL 6

  37. Smithsonian National Zoological Park Meet Our Animals http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Animals/default.cfm Provides descriptions of a variety of animals. Has numerous photos. Also have some film clips and a video cam for the pandas. IL all ages RL varies

  38. Web Weather for Kids http://eo.ucar.edu/webweather/cloud.html Provides information about clouds, storms and the elements of weather. Learning aids include animations and quizzes that appear after each subtopic. IL 3-8 RL 3-4 U. S. Census Bureau State Facts for Kids http://www.census.gov/schools/facts/ Includes basic information about the state along with census information that compares current statistics with prior statistics. Has data for adults and children and a number of key businesses. IL 3-8 RL 3-4

  39. Central Intelligence Agency The World Factbook Contains basic information about every country in the world. Also has maps. IL 6-8 RL 7-8

  40. Read short, worthwhile texts (Coleman & Pimentel, 2012)

  41. Source of High-Quality Informational Text Data Bases- Subscribed to by state, local, or school libraries- EBSCO I-Conn. Org Free for anyone who has a CT library card

  42. IConn

  43. Resources

  44. Kids Search

  45. 603 Articles

  46. Service Animals HTML- usually no illustrations But text-to-speech feature PDF- text & illustrations

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