* Literacy strategies, ideas - for Primary and High-School students * Teacher talk * Book reviews
Sunday, 18 August 2013
Practise blog
One of the books on my top 5 book list is The Road, by Cormac McCarthy.
What book would you recommend to anyone else reading this blog?
Thursday, 15 August 2013
Using Blogs in Education - an overview
Benefits
I believe the key idea behind using blogs in education is that they offer students and teachers an
AUTHENTIC WRITING EXPERIENCE
Last year I attended an ALEA Conference at which the wonderful Mem Fox spoke about how to get students interested in writing; she felt that students need to know that they have a genuine audience for their writing as well as a genuine purpose. Writing a short story or essay for your teacher counts for neither!
Blogging, on the other hand, is one of the amazing new opportunities available to every Tom, Dick and Harry to be published. Clearly that's not always a great thing, but it helps to remember that blogging has the potential to reach out to people who have exactly the same interest in foods beginning with the letter 'C' as you do.... Isn't the idea that we've all got a story in us? We just need an audience to hear us out. And we know for sure that our kids have plenty of opinions to offer!
So that, to my mind, is the most exciting reason to use blogs in the classroom. Here are a few more great reasons:
- They give students the opportunity to communicate and collaborate with people outside their usual sphere (including beyond geographical borders)
- They improve student motivation for writing
- They give students opportunity for feedback outside of the classroom (you know how they don't always listen to what you have to say?)
- They facilitate all of those 21st century skills that we're trying to build: collaboration; media literacy; technology skills; constructive critiquing; digital citizenship;personal reflection.....
How To...
Just sign in to Blogger like I did! I didn't read any instructions; I just keep mucking around with it and see what I can come up with. But for a bit of information:
·
Sunday, 11 August 2013
Helping students make sense of their textbooks: Deconstruction
Purpose: To help students easily locate information
and discern the importance of information.
Useful to help summarise/make notes. It is not an automatic skill to be able to use textbook information effectively. It is our job to teach the skill.
Resources:
·
A photocopy of a double-page spread from your
subject textbook – one per student (make sure the page you use have many layout
elements on them)
·
Each student needs different coloured pencils
x 6 or 7
·
Student worksheet
Process:
Begin at the beginning of the textbook page and work your way
through the layout elements, in order.
Project onto screen. You might
choose to cover IDENTIFY all elements first, then do DESCRIBE features of each
element next, then EXPLAIN the purpose of each element, or do a bit of a mix,
as I’ve done below.
1.
IDENTIFY the layout elements and DESCRIBE
their features:
a)
Note the first layout element on the page
(usually the TOPIC HEADING). Discuss
what features make it different to any of the other headings on the page (eg.
larger font, diff colour, diff style). Have students search the remainder of
the page, and then further into their textbook, to find headings at the similar
heading-hierarchy level. If on the page,
they can colour all appearances of it in eg.BLUE.
b)
Note the next layout element on the page
(often a bolded paragraph – a BLURB or SUMMARY of the topic). Discuss its distinctive features (eg. bold,
larger font, a couple of sentences).
Have students search the remainder of the page, and then further into
their textbook, to find similar blurbs.
If on the page, they can colour all appearances of it in eg. RED.
c)
Note the next layout element on the page
(often a SUB-HEADING). Continue as
above, using different pencil colours to colour different elements.
d)
Continue as above for all layout features of
the page.
Typical features include:
·
Unit Headings
·
Blurbs/context/background paragraph
·
Topic Headings
·
Sub-Headings
·
Paragraphs of text
·
Photographs
·
Diagrams
·
Tables of information
·
Captions
·
Cartoons
·
Callouts (little ‘factoid’ pieces)
·
Keywords
·
Symbols (based on a legend provided at the
beginning of the textbook – eg. in a music textbook a little picture of a
musical note¯with p.54 next to it might mean
there’s an associated musical score to play on p.54)
2.
At this point, you could give students a
little test – eg. give them a different photocopied page, work in groups to complete
a list of instructions in the fastest time, like:
“In blue pencil, colour in all of the sub-headings. In green pencil colour all of the
captions. Draw an arrow pointing to a
key word….”
Students should be able to identify and locate the key elements
that divide up information on a textbook page.
Next, they need to know which type of element will give them which type
of information:
3.
UNDERSTAND and EXPLAIN the purpose of the
different elements on a textbook page.
a)
Go back to the first element (eg.TOPIC
HEADING). Discuss what type of information
it gives you (eg. it tells you what this whole section/chapter will be about).
b)
Do the same for the next element, and so on.
4.
Have students complete notes on everything
they have learned. SEE SAMPLE BELOW:
Layout element
|
Features
|
Example from
page
|
What does it
do? What can I use it for?
|
Main
subject heading
|
Largest
font. Different colour.
|
Plate
Tectonics
|
It
tells me what this section of the textbook is about.
|
Context paragraph
|
Different
font to rest of text. In a box.
|
Paragraph
beginning: “If you look at a map of the world…”
|
It
gives me a brief overview of information relevant to the subject. I could use it to help me focus on what
ideas are most important on the page.
|
Sub-headings
|
Bold
font. Larger font than normal text but smaller than page heading.
|
Continents
that move!
|
Sub-headings
break up the information on the page into smaller topics. They can help me choose which part of the
page I can look on to find specified information. They can also point to the main idea
covered.
|
Paragraphs of text
|
The
majority of the page – in a small font.
A series of paragraphs.
|
Paragraph
beginning: “In 1915 Alfred Wegener proposed…”
|
The
majority of information about the topic will be included in these
paragraphs. Each paragraph should
contain one main idea, and if I want to know what idea is covered, I should
look at the first two sentences.
|
Bolded words
|
Bold
text within the paragraphs.
|
supercontinent
|
These
words are often KEY WORDS – they are important words to know if I want to
understand the topic. I can most
likely look up their meaning in the Glossary.
|
Illustrations
|
Pictures
in text boxes.
|
A
map of the world showing matching mountain ranges.
|
Illustrations
are used to illustrate (give an example) the information that is already
provided in the written text. I
probably won’t get new information here, but it can be useful to look at the
illustrations to give me a better understanding of the information.
|
Callout/ Factoid
|
A
little textbox separate to the main text.
Contains short, sharp detail.
|
Science
Focus
|
This
information is usually only for interest purposes. It probably won’t help me understand the
topic, but it may be interesting.
|
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