READING STRATEGIES 1.Determining Important Ideas 2. Questioning/Wondering 3. Drawing Conclusions 4. Visualizing 5. Synthesizing 6. Connections/Schema 7.

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READING STRATEGIES 1.Determining Important Ideas 2. Questioning/Wondering 3. Drawing Conclusions 4. Visualizing 5. Synthesizing 6. Connections/Schema 7. Summarizing

Example Text Clean hair or clean air? By Glenn Hurowitz While showering a few weeks ago, I realized I had run out of conditioner. So I reached up and grabbed my wife's bottle -- Clairol Herbal Essences Rainforest Flowers, "with essences of nourishing palm." The label caught me slightly by surprise. As an environmental journalist, I've been writing about the ecologically destructive effect of palm oil for some time now. Whether it's used as an additive in soap, cosmetics or food, or processed into a biofuel, palm oil is one of the worst culprits in the climate crisis. Most of it comes from the disappearing, ultra-carbon-rich rain forests of Indonesia and Malaysia, of which a whopping 25,000 square miles have been cleared and burned to make way for palm oil plantations. That burning releases enough carbon dioxide into the air to rank Indonesia as the No. 3 such polluter in the world. It also destroys the last remaining habitat for orangutans, Sumatran rhinos, tigers and other endangered wildlife. So what was this deadly oil doing in our otherwise ecologically friendly apartment? I started to inspect other items on our shelves. Despite our efforts to keep our family green, we'd admitted into our home several products containing palm oil: Burt's Bees soap, chocolate truffles from Trader Joe's, Kashi breakfast bars, Whole Foods water crackers and many others.

Determining Important Ideas Respond to Ideas Strong readers can respond to ideas in the text as they read. By writing thoughtful responses in the margins, students will increase engagement and comprehension of the ideas in the text. Students should write responses to: 1.Interesting ideas; 2.Familiar experiences; 3.Emotional arguments; 4.Provocative statements; 5.Author’s claims; and 6.Facts, data, and other support.

Questions/Wondering Ask Questions Students can learn to question both the ideas in the text and their own understanding of the text. By writing good questions that they have about the text in the margins, students will become more critical readers. Students should ask the following questions while reading: 1.What is the author saying here? 2.What is the author doing? 3.What do I understand so far? 4.What is important about this paragraph/section? 5.What is the purpose of this section? 6.Do I agree/disagree with what the author is saying?

Visualization

Summarization When I summarize I …. *determine who, did what, when and where in fiction. *can identify the most important information in nonfiction. *separate the main idea from the details.