What is Inferential Thinking?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reader’s Workshop Questioning
Advertisements

Making Inferences Created by: Miss White.
Making Inferences.
The Kite Runner Bellringer #1 10/17/13
Annotating Chapter 1—10/13/14  We have discussed the importance of a strong hook in writing. The first chapter of a novel functions as a hook. Read the.
A.K.A….. Drawing Conclusions
Making Inferences Focus Lesson.
Make Connections while they read
Strategies to Achieve Reading Success
Rules Always answer in the form of a question 50 points deducted for wrong answer.
INFERENCES WHAT ARE INFERENCES ?. Inference Background Knowledge (schema) Background Knowledge (schema) Making Connections Making Connections Questioning.
Reading Test Review Review each reading skill and strategy. Click on links to practice each skill and strategy.
Making Inferences. Inference Take what you know and make a guess! Draw personal meaning from text (words) or pictures. You use clues to come to your own.
Learning to Make an Inference Thinking between the lines.
Maniac Magee Literary Elements.
Make Connections! Connect to what you already know -text to self -text to text -text to world Activate your background knowledge.
Question-Answer-Relationship Strategy
Reading Comprehension Skills and Reading Closely.
Prediction and Inference: A Reading Strategy
Making Inferences. “To infer as we read is to go beyond literal interpretation and to open a world of meaning deeply connected to our lives.”“To infer.
HW (see on Skedula) Read chapter 4 of The Kite Runner and develop one high-level question about a SPECIFIC passage in the chapter that helps reveal an.
Question Answer Relationship\. 1.Right There Right there- The answer is right there in the text. Students need to simply recall the information literally.
COMPREHENSION SKILLS. MAIN IDEA The main idea is the most important idea of the passage as a whole. It is what the passage or story is mostly about.
PREDICTIONS AND INFERENCES: A READING STRATEGY.  A prediction is what you think will happen next based upon the text, the author, and background knowledge.
Reading Strategies We Use Every Day. 1. Creating Mental Images Good readers:  Visualize and create pictures in their mind  Organize details in a “mental.
Do you know the difference between the four types of questions?
Finding the Main Idea Try looking in the first sentence or the last sentence of a paragraph. If the main idea is not specifically stated, ask yourself,
Adapted from: D. Kyle Kelso
Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions
Understanding Reading Strategies
Action Research Project:
WRITING A LITERARY ESSAY
Making Inferences Miss White.
Inference.
The Kite Runner Theme.
Reading Comprehension Strategies
Reading Comprehension Strategies
What is included in a story?
WHAT IS READING COMPREHENSION?
Making inferences from text
Making Inferences.
Objectives I will be able to define the word inference.
Making Inferences Miss White.
Know Your Reading Strategies
The Kite Runner: Rahim Khan
Making Inferences Miss White.
20 min. to work on KR chart with your partner
Making Inferences Miss White.
Theme Setting Point of View Inference Draw Conclusions
Making Inferences Miss White.
Knowing the key points and supporting them
Use Background Knowledge
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
Making Inferences - Reading between the lines
Making Inferences.
Reading in the Upper Grades
Making Inferences Miss White.
COPY DOWN YOUR HOMEWORK
Making Inferences Miss White.
The Kite Runner Day 2.
Inferences and Conclusions
Literature: Key Ideas and Details
What is Inference?.
Central Idea V. Theme.
Making Inferences.
Test Genre The MEAP.
Making Inferences Miss White.
Making Inferences Miss White.
Making Inferences.
Making Inferences Miss White.
Presentation transcript:

What is Inferential Thinking? When a reader a reader combines clues from the text with their own background knowledge or from other parts of the text in order to draw conclusions. SOURCE: http://www.dayofreading.org/DOR09HO/Teaching%20the%20Skill%20of%20Inference.pdf

What are examples of inferences? Recognize the antecedents for pronouns Figure out the meaning of unknown words from context clues Figure out the grammatical function of an unknown word Understand intonation of characters’ words Identify characters’ beliefs, personalities, and motivations Understand characters’ relationships to one another Provide details about the setting

More Examples of Inferences Provide explanations for events or ideas that are presented in the text Offer details for events or your own explanations of the events presented in the text Understand the author’s view of the world Recognize the author’s biases Relate what is happening in the text to your own knowledge of the world Offer conclusions from facts presented in the text

What We Need to Know About Inferences We need to find clues to get some answers. We need to add those clues to what we already know or have read. There can be more than one correct answer. We need to be able to support inferences.

Use Inferencing to Understand This Passage from The Kite Runner: “Sometimes, up in those trees, I talked Hassan into firing walnuts with his slingshot at the neighbor’s one-eyed German shepherd. Hassan never wanted to, but if I asked, really asked, he wouldn’t deny me. Hassan never denied me anything. And he was deadly with his slingshot. Hassan’s father, Ali, used to catch us and get mad, or as mad as someone as gentle as Ali could get. He would wag his finger and wave us down from the tree. He would take the mirror and tell us what his mother had told him, that the devil shone mirrors too, shone them to distract Muslims during prayer. “And he laughs while he does it,” he always added, scowling at this son. “Yes, Father,” Hassan would mumble, looking down at his feet. But he never told on me. Never told that the mirror, like shooting walnuts at the neighbor’s dog, was always my idea (3-4). What can we infer about Amir’s relationship with Hassan? What words reveal this?

KIS Strategy Key Words, Infer, Support This mnemonic strategy helps us remember the three steps in making and supporting inferences. Now use this strategy to draw inferences about the relationship between Amir and his father Baba. Read through pages 4-5. What is it readers learn about this father/son relationship?