Bottleneck Junction: Grasping the Etherealness of Analysis

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reading Comprehension. Give a summary of the text after reading. Talk about interesting and new information Derive meaning of new words from context.
Advertisements

CREATING AN ACTIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT Using Inquiry and Primary Sources.
Common Core.  Find your group assignment.  As a group, read over the descriptors for mastery of this standard. (The writing standards apply to more.
“The purpose of a writing course is not to teach information about writing but to help students become better writers.” Cheryl Smith and Angus Dunstan,
P.S.170 Test-Preparation Parent Workshop
Essay Assignment 2 Literary Response Writing Due: Thursday, November 17, 2011 Introduction For this assignment you will respond to specific characteristics.
History Beyond the Book
AVID Ms. Richardson.
Assessment.
Unit Portfolio Presentation Connie Matthews
From Remediation to Meaning
Teaching for Understanding: What Will It Take?
Reading Literature Welcome to this presentation about the top 5 big ideas your child will learn in the first quarter of fifth grade. Top 5 Big Ideas Your.
Assessment.
Reading Comprehension Strategies for ELLs
ACE STRATEGY ACE THOSE ANSWERS!!
How to organize your papers
Thesis-based Writing.
The Learner Centered Classroom
Inference.
The Beginning of Our Journey Through History
Studying a Mentor text to construct literary essays
Socratic Seminar By participating in
Thinking About How You Read READING STRATEGIES
from The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin
Descriptive Organizer/Main Idea
Creating an Active Learning environment
Creating an Active Learning environment
Writing a Personal Narrative
Writing Terms and Literary analysis essay information
Writing a good expository Essay
Writing a Personal Narrative
AP World History Riverside High School Mr. Sakole
Peer Reviews Tips for the author.
Bellwork Assignment Answer the following prompt in one paragraph (5 to 8 sentences). Remember this is MY time, so there is NO TALKING!! What do you know.
Reading Objectives: Close Reading Analyze visuals. RI.4.7
Reflection on Learning
Essay Tips & Expectations
How to read FOR 8th grade AND BEYOND
Writing Fluently Breaking down a topic….
Open Response Writing Workshop for Non-Fiction Readings
Introducing the Ideas One of Six Traits:
Thinking about our Reading
Analyze Student Work Sample 2 Instructional Next Steps
Introductions and Conclusions
Thinking About How You Read READING STRATEGIES
Thinking about our Reading
Responding to Literature
A guide to building higher order thinking
Thinking About How You Read
Journal: Write down as many observations about the photo as you can
Analyzing Student Work Sample 2 Instructional Next Steps
Do Now Directions: Please label the following questions as
World Literature: Short Stories
Cornell Notes.
How to Write a Theme-Based Literary Essay
Timed Write Norming.
Summer Reading Literary Analysis
10th Literature October 31st
Reading in the Upper Grades
What Happens when you Learn?
Reflection on Learning
Personal Responses Year Nine.
(Stay after school if you want to do it here!!)
What you need to know about building a successful and stylish argument
Bell Ringer August 20, 2014 On a clean sheet of paper in the writing section of your binder, write the heading above. Then, take a few minutes to examine.
Test Genre The MEAP.
How to Write a Character Analysis
Analysis Essay Crafting Commentary.
Quantitative Reasoning Portfolio Project
Presentation transcript:

Bottleneck Junction: Grasping the Etherealness of Analysis Heather Lester Nilo Bermeo

Understanding the Bottleneck: The High School and College Students’ Perspectives on Analysis For English Language Learners, reading comprehension alone is daunting. The text is only informative, never transformative. Analysis is the antithesis of clear progression learning (i.e. learning order of operation in math). The text already states its intended meaning. Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

Compiling the Components of Analysis (The Initial Set-up) Summary Analysis Surface Analysis – What is the author trying to do here? What is the main meaning? Mid-level Analysis – What is the best way to use the quote to enhance my own points / meaning? Deep Analysis – Recognizing not only authorial intent, but multiple interpretations. Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

Creating the Rubric (The Competencies) The Observable – Who? What? Where? When? Why? How? Identifying and Using Literary Terms / Jargon. Generating questions that are not the most obvious or simple to solve. Interpreting / Inferring using the three aforementioned components. Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

Dealing With The Competencies in Class (IHS) Competency #1: The Observable – 5Ws COMPREHENSION is a major accomplishment in the ELL classroom Competency #2: Identifying and Using Literary Terms / Jargon NARROWED the focus and still struggled with the mechanics Competency #3: Generating questions that are not the most obvious MOST SUCCESSFUL: Questions were everywhere Competency #4: Interpreting / Inferring using the three components NON-LINEAR WAY Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

Asking and Answering Questions

Modeling and Practice Assignments The Detective Analogy / The Building a House Analogy The Social Media Analogy Connecting text to own personal background Connecting text to a larger context Using multiple jargon to look at the same quote / section differently Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

Detective Analogy: notice, question, connect    

The Social Media Analogy LOL ROFL JK!!! I’m sorry IM SORRY

Agency in Analysis The student must be made to realize that it is alright to connect text to his/her own life experiences. “This poem is boring.” – OK, why is it boring to you? What turned you off from it? “I would never let him do that to me.” – How would you prevent him from doing that? Why could the main character not do that?

Analyzing with Multiple Jargon What does the “S” symbolize to Americans? To the World? To Warner Brothers? Using a Marxist lens, who does Superman represent? Those in power? Those in need?

Dealing With The Competencies in Class (LAGCC) Engagement: The Descriptive and Jargon Approach The Observable – Who? What? Where? When? Why? How? The Questioning Approach – What questions do you want answered? Interpretation – What is the main meaning of this quote / section? Alternative Interpretation(s) – How can others interpret this same quote / section differently? Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

Modeling became daily; full class vs. individual conference Initial Findings and Problems with The Rubric, The Competencies, or Teaching Analysis in General (IHS) The Rubric and the Skills really operates as a spiral because analysis is a kind of spiral Modeling became daily; full class vs. individual conference Power of analogies Practice strategies Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

for developing a thesis Teaching with Analogy Building a House analogy for planning an essay Test Driving a Car analogy for developing a thesis    

Not all quotes are created equal. (The First Step) Initial Findings and Problems with The Rubric, The Competencies, or Teaching Analysis in General (LAGCC) Not all quotes are created equal. (The First Step) The problem with naming The Descriptive and Jargon Approach. (Separating Structure and Jargon) Misfiring on the Observable Approach. (Contextualization in disguise) The solidification of the one interpretation over the possibilities of alternative interpretations. Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

The Wrong Quotes to Use A couple of students quoted the line, “I’ve got to hide, he told himself.” Both students wrote the main character had to hide. Another student in responding to “Now he sat. Now he had a reason for staying here in the underground” wrote the character has his reason to stay hidden.

Using the Observable as Contextualization Only a student may respond to George Zimmerman proclaiming he was in fear for his life by stating, “George Zimmerman is the man who killed Trayvon Martin.” The person here is clearly contextualizing who Zimmerman is and what he did, but there is no further analysis.

Feedback and Motivation It is OK to fail. Transaction and Transformation require connection. Writing is a process. A long process. Number grades over letter grades. Self-identifying which methods of engagement (analysis) is being used the least and the most. Notes to presenter: Description of what you learned in your own words on one side. Include information about the topic Details about the topic will also be helpful here. Tell the story of your learning experience. Just like a story there should always be a beginning, middle and an end. On the other side, you can add a graphic that provides evidence of what you learned. Feel free to use more than one slide to reflect upon your process. It also helps to add some video of your process.

Conclusion (Final Thoughts)