literacy conversations

58
LITERACY CONVERSATIONS

Upload: zelia

Post on 22-Feb-2016

24 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Literacy COnversations. POWER OF TEAM. WHY ARE WE HERE?. WHERE ARE YOU AT ?. Take a closer look at running records. What insights do you have into the reader’s strengths and needs? What happens after errors or at difficulty? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Literacy  COnversations

LITERACY

CONVERSATIONS

Page 2: Literacy  COnversations

POWER OF

TEAM

Page 3: Literacy  COnversations

WHY ARE WE

HERE?

Page 4: Literacy  COnversations

WHERE ARE

YOU AT ?

Page 5: Literacy  COnversations

TAKE A CLOSER LOOK AT RUNNING RECORDS• What insights do you have into

the reader’s strengths and needs?

• What happens after errors or at difficulty?

• Look for patterns in the reader’s success or difficultly in noticing and correcting errors and in solving words in flexible ways.

Page 6: Literacy  COnversations

STRATEGIC

ACTIVITY

IN

READING

Page 7: Literacy  COnversations

3 WAVES OF TEACHING EFFORT

First • Classroom InstructionSecon

d• Additional Assistance

Third• Further Assistance / Referral

Page 8: Literacy  COnversations

Transition into RR

Transitioning into having a strong processing system

Transitioning out of Reading Recovery

Transitioning to developing a self-extending system

Page 9: Literacy  COnversations

Independence

Passive to active

Child as a learner

Teacher lifting child to higher levels of processing

Page 10: Literacy  COnversations

Sense /Meaning

Does it make sense?

VisualDoes that look right?

SoundsSay it! What can

you hear?What would you expect to see?

StructureDoes that

sound right?

Page 11: Literacy  COnversations

Behaviour

Strategy Strategic Activity

Page 12: Literacy  COnversations

STRATEGIC ACTIVITY

Fast brainwork that occurs without us consciously having to direct it.

Clay

Page 13: Literacy  COnversations

Different kinds of information in print come together to contribute to a decision.

Early decision making is refined and expanded into more efficient decision making. Compl

exSimple

Page 14: Literacy  COnversations

What on the surface looks like simple word-by-word reading of a short and simple story involves children in linking many things they know from different sources (visual, auditory/phonological, movement, speaking/articulating, and knowledge of the language).

When problem-solving texts children dip into these ‘different ways of knowing something’ and make a series of decisions as they work across texts.

Page 15: Literacy  COnversations

Mobilising several resources needed for a specific task

Integrating different kinds of information

Demonstrating alternative ways of using information

Page 16: Literacy  COnversations

EFFECTIVE SUCCESSFUL PROCESSING• Picking up visual information from the

page• Working on the information• Putting the information from the page

together with other information known: story information, real world information

• Making a decision• Evaluating that decision

Page 17: Literacy  COnversations

BUILDING A PROCESSING SYSTEM• Monitoring with known information

• Searching for a best fit between the known and the unknown information

• Comparing and evaluating choices

• Making a decision

• Self-correcting based on analysis of all this information

Page 18: Literacy  COnversations

GOALS FOR THE CHILD:• To problem-solve by

searching the picture, the language and the story

• To improve processing of information

• To support the continued expansion of the processing system itself, to cope with more features of language.

GOAL FOR THE TEACHER

• To assist the child to construct effective networks in his brain for linking up all the strategic activity that will be needed to work on texts

Page 19: Literacy  COnversations

SEARCHING FOR AND USING INFORMATIONMeaning• Make meaningful attempts at unknown words?• Use the meaning of the story to predict unknown words?• Reread to gather more information to solve the word?• Reread to search for more details – information, characters,

plot?• Use information in the pictures to make a prediction?• Use headings or titles to think about the meaning in a

section of the text?• Use the knowledge of the genre to help in understanding a

text?• Reread to gather information to clarify confustons?

Page 20: Literacy  COnversations

SEARCHING FOR AND USING INFORMATIONStructure• Use knowledge of oral language to solve unknown words?• Reread to see if a word ‘sounds right’ in a sentence?• Reread to correct using language structure?

Page 21: Literacy  COnversations

SEARCH FOR AND USE INFORMATIONVisual Information• Use the visual information to solve words?• Use the sound of the first letter(s) to attempt to solve a

word?• Use some, most, or all of the visual information to solve

words?• Use sound analysis to solve words?• Make attempts that are visually similar?• Use knowledge of a high frequency word to problem solve?• Use analogy to solve unknown words?• Uses syllables to solve words?• Search for more visual information in the word to solve

words?

Page 22: Literacy  COnversations

SOLVING WORDSDoes the reader• Recognise a core of high frequency words quickly?• Use a variety of flexible ways to take words apart?• Use the meaning of the sentence to solve words?• Use the structure of the sentence to solve words?• Use known word parts to solve words?• Work actively to solve words?• Use base words and root words to derive the meanings of

words?• Make attempts that are visually similar?• Use sentence context to derive meanings of words?

Page 23: Literacy  COnversations

SELF-MONITORINGDoes the reader• Hesitate at an unknown word?• Stop at an unknown word?• Stop at an unknown word and appeal for help?• Notice mismatches?• Notice when an attempt does not look right, sound right,

make sense?• Reread to confirm reading?• Use knowledge of some high frequency words to check on

meaning?• Check one source of information with another?• Request help after making several attempts?

Page 24: Literacy  COnversations

SELF-CORRECTINGDoes the reader• Reread and try again until accurate?• Stop after an error and make another attempt?• Stop after an error and make multiple attempts until

accurate?• Reread to self-correct?• Work actively to solve mismatches?• Self- correct errors some of the time?• Self-correct errors most of the time?

Page 25: Literacy  COnversations

MAINTAINING FLUENCYDoes the reader• Read without pointing?• Read word groups (phrases)• Put words together?• Read smoothly?• Read the punctuation?• Make the voice go down at a full stop?• Make the voice go up at a question mark?• Stress the appropriate words to convey accurate meaning?• Read at a good rate: not too fast or not to slow?

Page 26: Literacy  COnversations

CHANGE OVER TIME

Children begin to make better estimates of what a word might be. They are not just guessing. They are computing the likelihood of the features that they recognise belonging to the word they have predicted.

Page 27: Literacy  COnversations

CONSIDERHow does a learner

learn to work on different kinds of information in the text? Separately, at first; and then in some integrated way?

Page 28: Literacy  COnversations

PROMPTI

NG A call for action to do

somethingwithin the

child’scontrol.

Page 29: Literacy  COnversations

Do the prompts activate problem-solving?

Do the prompts promote consolidation and integration?

Are they adjustable according to what the reader needs?

Page 30: Literacy  COnversations

CHANGE OVER TIME

Change over time in using prompts:early - middle - later

Change for each child: moment by moment

Page 31: Literacy  COnversations

To develop an effective processing system from the start

To develop the foundations for neural networks in the brain

To lift the level of processing

Page 32: Literacy  COnversations

FINDING

FIXING

Page 33: Literacy  COnversations

PROMPTING• Not just talk

• Depends on where child is at, at this point in the text

• Teachers need to consider what else needs to be added into the child’s reading processing

• Prompts should send the child in search of a response in his network of responses

Page 34: Literacy  COnversations

TEACHERS MAY PROMPT TO…• Indicate where he should be attending.

• Prompt him to locate something useful.

• Direct his attention to text meaning or to language structure or to letter-sound information.

• Prompt to fine tune the information processing system

• Prompt to interrupt or break into an old habit.

Page 35: Literacy  COnversations

EXPLICIT PROMPTSRead it with your finger.

Do this.

Cover the end of the word.

Use your finger and make it match.

What is the first letter?

Page 36: Literacy  COnversations

PROMPTS WITH AN INFERRED ACTIONDo you know another word that starts like that?

Check it!

You made a mistake on that page. Can you find it?

Was that Ok?

What’s wrong with this?

Try that again.

Page 37: Literacy  COnversations

PROMPTINGP R O M P T I N G F O R I N D E P E N D E N T M O N I T O R I N G

Were you right?

Does that make sense?

Can we say it that way?

P R O M P T I N G F O R I N D E P E N D E N T S E A R C H I N G

What can you try?

Try that again and think what would make sense?

Try that again and think what might sound right?

Page 38: Literacy  COnversations

CONSIDER

How do your prompts help the reader

learn how to search, cross-check, make links,

make decisions and evaluate those decisions

while working across print?

Page 39: Literacy  COnversations

RUNNING

RECORDS

Page 40: Literacy  COnversations

STRATEGIC ACTIVITY

Attending and searching- Looking purposefully for

particular information, known words, familiar text features, patterns of syntax, and information in pictures and diagrams

Page 41: Literacy  COnversations

WHAT LEARNERS DO• Focus attention on particular letters or

letter clusters and draw on what they know about letter-sound relationships

• Identify the words they already known• Look for information in illustrations and

diagrams• Use analogies – that, use their knowledge

of familiar words (can, get) to work out new words (man, ran, pan; let, set, pet)

Attending and searching

Page 42: Literacy  COnversations

HOW TEACHERS PROMPT AND SUPPORT • Tell me the first sound of this

word ?• What letter does this word start

with ?• What do you notice about the end

of the word ? • Can you find a word you know on

this page ?• Who can you see in the picture ?• What do you notice about this

words ?Attending and

searching

Page 43: Literacy  COnversations

STRATEGIC ACTIVITY

Predicting- Forming expectations or anticipating what will come next by drawing on prior knowledge and experience of language;

Page 44: Literacy  COnversations

WHAT LEARNERS DO• Draw on their letter-sound knowledge• Draw on their awareness of the patterns of text• Sound out the word or parts of the word and

use meaning and syntax to narrow the possibilities

• Focus on a detail in an illustration or diagram• Repeat or rerun the preceding text and sound

out the first letter• Use their prior knowledge to predict what a

character might do next or what the next step in an argument might be.

Predicting

Page 45: Literacy  COnversations

HOW TEACHERS PROMPT AND SUPPORT• Read that again. What sound does this word

start with?• What would make sense?• What could you try?• What sound do these letters make?• What’s happening in the picture?• What will the fly do now? Has it noticed the

praying mantis?• That’s right. The fly comes b…..• What do you think will happen next?

Predicting

Page 46: Literacy  COnversations

STRATEGIC ACTIVITY

Cross-checking and confirming- Checking to ensure that the reading makes sense and fits with all the information already processed

Page 47: Literacy  COnversations

STRATEGIC ACTIVITY

Self-Correcting- Detecting or suspecting

that an error has been made and searching for additional information in order to arrive at the right meaning.

Page 48: Literacy  COnversations

WHAT LEARNERS DO• Draw on meaning or pattern of the text

and use illustrations and word knowledge to check and confirm their prediction.

• Reread a word, phrase, or sentence• Use their knowledge of spoken language

or book language to decide whether the piece of text ‘sounds right’.

• Think about the meaning of what they are reading.

Cross-checking, confirming and self-

correcting

Page 49: Literacy  COnversations

HOW TEACHERS PROMPT AND SUPPORT• Does that word look right? If the word

was ‘called’, what would you expect to see at the end/in the middle?

• You said, “There is a hole in my sock.” Check the first word again. Look at the end of the word.

• Something wasn’t quite right. Try that again.

• How did you know what was wrong?

Cross-checking, confirming and self-

correcting

Page 50: Literacy  COnversations

Attending Searching Predicting

Cross-Checking

Confirming Self-Correcting

Page 51: Literacy  COnversations

SEQUENCE OF THINKING BY THE TEACHER

• What will the child need to be able to do to read this text ?

• What acts of processing are observed ?

• How can we prompt for more efficient processing ?

Page 52: Literacy  COnversations

ANALYSIS OF RUNNING RECORDS

Cues used and neglected

How the reading sounds

How has the child monitored?

What is the highest level of processing for this child, on this text?

Page 53: Literacy  COnversations

CONSIDE

R• Different levels of

processing on running records.

• What is the highest level of processing for each child?

Page 54: Literacy  COnversations

Where are you at now ?

Page 55: Literacy  COnversations

GUIDE TO EFFECTIVE TEACHINGHow do I support children’s processing?How do I support phrasing and fluency?What evidence do I see of good problem solving?What problem-solving did the readers initiate?

How did I help children expand language and vocabulary? How did I support effective processing strategies?What changes do I see in the readers’ ability to initiate

problem-solving actions?

Page 56: Literacy  COnversations

A FINAL THOUGHT…Our goal for all readers is independence

in smoothly processing text. When you teach and prompt for effective reading behaviours, your goal is to help the reader learn to do something strategic that she can do whenever she reads.

We want readers to be flexible in the way they engage in problem solving while maintaining a focus on the meaning of the text.

Page 57: Literacy  COnversations

GROW

Page 58: Literacy  COnversations

WHAT DO YOU NEED TO ACHIEVE ? What will be the benefits of achieving this goal?What are the crucial success factors in achieving this goal?

WHAT IS HAPPENING NOW?What do you have in place that will increase the likelihood of achieving this goal?What have you tried so far? What’s working? What’s not working?

WHAT COULD YOU DO?What are the options / possibilities for achieving this goal?

WHAT WILL YOU DO?What will you do, specifically?