INTRODUCTION TO THE READING / WRITING METACOGNITIVE JOURNAL.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Conducting Research Investigating Your Topic Copyright 2012, Lisa McNeilley.
Advertisements

Identifying Author’s Purpose and Perspective World Lit DD
Author’s purpose LA Analyze the author’s purpose and/or perspective in a variety of texts to understand how they affect meaning.
Sarah Metzler Shaw Heights Middle School 2010 To inform To Explain To Persuade To Entertain S. Metzler –Shaw Heights Middle School, 2010.
Author’s Purpose Standards: ELACC8RI1 (Cite textual evidence) ELACC8RI6 (Determine POV or purpose in text) ELACC8RI7 (Evaluate use of different mediums)
Honors Eng. 9 Unit 3 Lecture Notes
© 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 2: Active Reading and Learning Efficient and Flexible Reading, 8/e Kathleen T.
Types of Essays... and why we write them.. Why do we write essays? Hint: The answer is NOT ‘because sir/miss told me to’
Writing Argumentative Essays (discussing advantages and disadvantages / expressing an opinion) ас. Десислава Зарева.
What makes a good reader? How do you know you are one?
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
ACADEMIC WRITING I May 8 th Today Continue business writing (writing a business letter) Information for Paper 4.
The Magic of Student Empowerment Barbara Stripling Senior Associate Dean and Assistant Professor School of Information Studies Syracuse University.
Five Strategies to Promote SRL
INTRODUCTION TO THE READING / WRITING METACOGNITIVE JOURNAL.
What is Assertiveness? It is the ability to honestly express your opinions, feelings, attitudes, and rights, without undue anxiety, in a way that.
Reading Between the Lives I Reading Between the Lives I The Making Visible Project at Chabot College (18 minutes) As you watch the film, write.
 Date  Greeting  Paragraphs indented  Author & Title of the book  Brief Summary  Response to the Focus Topic  Make a Connection  Ask Questions.
My Personal Reading Procedure. Critical Thinking  What is critical thinking???  Thinking about things beyond what is written there.  Thinking of things.
© 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 2: Active Reading and Learning Efficient and Flexible Reading, 7/e Kathleen T.
Getting Started  Syllabus? Notebook?  Open your English class notebook and divide the pages in half. The front half will used for daily warm-ups and.
ADVICE TO STUDENTS: TEST- TAKING STRATEGIES  Read and pay careful attention to all directions.  Read each passage and accompanying questions.  Read.
Engaging Student Ownership of Achievement Growth in Reading By Jeaninne Sage Wohlman.
Elements of an Effective Formal Summary. “Formal,” in this case, means that the summary is meant to stand alone and that it is longer and more detailed.
Summary-Response Essay Responding to Reading. Reading Critically Not about finding fault with author Rather engaging author in a discussion by asking.
Introduction to Critical Thinking Developing Critical Thinking Skills.
1.define metacognition; 2.describe how it is used by good readers; 3.describe how lack of it creates poor readers; 4.practice “Inquiry”
Annotation: A Writing-to-Learn Strategy. You just don’t know anything unless you can write it. S.I. Hayakawa.
English Composition Jonathan Watts. Welcome back to class! I hope you had a wonderful weekend! Today we will talk about Essay Development –Pg
外语系创新团队活动 —— 课例研究 课堂解决问题:阅读策略培养之区分事实与观点. Reading Strategy Training (1) (45mins) How to improve your reading by distinguishing facts from opinions.
What is Shared Inquiry? Shared Inquiry is a method of learning in which students actively search for answers to questions raised by a text. This search.
Annotating Texts How To Take Notes in Your Book Revised from the adaptation by Sharon Fulmer, Tiffany Holmes, & Laura Hayes The Academy of Irving, Texas,
Second Grade Curriculum Night. Guided Reading  Expectations.
How To Take Notes in Your Book
Strategic Reading Step 2 SCAN. Review from yesterday Preview- practice with Hamlet Oedipal Complex.
Teaching Reading Comprehension
Writing a Critical Review
What good readers do….
The Academic Sustainability Gap
“Think about It…” Answer the following questions HONESTLY… Do you ever read something but not remember what it says? What do you do if you catch yourself.
 Answer six of the following questions about the text you brought to class to challenge your teacher. Why did you choose this particular reading to bring.
DO NOW: 1) Pop Quiz! 2) Take 5 minutes to skim through your last bit of lecture notes. 3) Clear of your desks after 5 minutes.
Welcome Reading II Presentation. What is reading..? 1. Reading is a most complex process requiring very specialized skills on the part of the reader.
“IN THE CASE OF GOOD BOOKS, THE POINT IS NOT HOW MANY OF THEM YOU CAN GET THROUGH, BUT RATHER HOW MANY CAN GET THROUGH TO YOU.” –MORTIMER ADLER Active.
Review Writing Opinión Writing.
The Writing Process. 5 Stages of the Writing Process Prewriting Drafting Revising Editing Publishing.
Drafting Boyd. Online exercise Look the term up on Wikipedia or Google, make note of how it is referenced, etc.), then search for the same term on google.
A Parent’s Guide to the 7 Metacognitive Reading Strategies.
READING COMPREHENSION INSTRUCTION A Project LIFT Training Module 1 CORE - Center at Oregon for Research in Education Module 6 – Part 2.
Unit 1 Notes Part 1. What is theme?  Theme- an insight into human nature that emerges over the course of a work. A theme may be directly stated or implied.
Introduction to Questioning Using Self-Questioning to support Comprehension.
ACT Prep Course English and Reading Skills Mrs. Kinney.
Reading Strategies We Use Every Day. 1. Creating Mental Images Good readers:  Visualize and create pictures in their mind  Organize details in a “mental.
A Change of Heart About Animals
Time to Write.
How To Take Notes in Your Book
The Essay.
How To Take Notes in Your Book
How To Take Notes in Your Book
A Powerful Reading Tool
Exploring the Interactive Read-Aloud
A Guide to Reading Comprehension Strategies
How To Take Notes in Your Book
Academic Reading Strategies for reading in Allied Healthcare.
The best reading/analyzing skill you will ever learn (‘fo realsies!)
And a short comment on note taking
How To Take Notes On A Text
How To Take Notes in Your Book
How To Take Notes in Your Book
Active Reading Series: How to Critically Annotate
Presentation transcript:

INTRODUCTION TO THE READING / WRITING METACOGNITIVE JOURNAL

1.Define metacognition; 2.Describe how it is used by good readers; 3.Describe how lack of it creates poor readers; 4.Practice “Inquiry” in reading; 5. Use the Reading/Writing Metacognitive Journal to make inquiries and improve reading skills; 6. Learn a way to be a strategic, reflective, and self-regulating reader.

Metacognition refers to learners' automatic awareness of their own knowledge and their ability to understand, control, and manipulate their own cognitive (thinking) processes. Metacognitive skills are important not only in school, but throughout life, as they help you:  be a person who has learned to learn;  know the stages in the process of learning and understand your preferred approaches to it;  identify and overcome blocks to learning so you can bring learning from academic to on-the-job/career situations.

 often finish reading a passage without even knowing that they have not understood it;  are unable to process and use what they have read;  are unable to make adjustments in their learning processes and monitor their own learning;  approach reading with a negative attitude;  set themselves up to fail.

COOL: HOW DO I START?

 the act of seeking truth, information, or knowledge  an investigation  The act of inquiring or of seeking information by questioning

 We read different texts in different ways.  Reading is an invisible process.  For effective readers (or when one is reading effectively) this is especially true.  In order to conduct an inquiry into what we do when we read, we need to make this invisible process visible. How do I do that, you ask?

Evidence quotes, phrases, words from the text Interpretation your questions, comments, predictions

Turn to the person next to you and journal this image.

Evidence (objective) 1.It’s a cartoon with a single drawing 2.Parents watching “Reality T.V” 3.Stupid expressions of parents 4.Child reading Harry Potter is imagining what he is reading. 5.Content expression on boy’s face Interpretation (subjective) 1.Single panel cartoons like this usually give the author’s opinion about one topic, so what is the this cartoon trying to tell me? 2.Reality T.V. is boring (plain words). 3.Does reality T.V. make people stupid or do stupid people watch reality T.V.? 4.Reading is good for you. 5.Reading is better than watching reality television.

 Take inventory of background knowledge to make connections;  Make predictions (look at titles);  Take genre into account;  Ask questions;  Analyze (look at parts to understand whole);  Pull evidence from throughout text;  Connect evidence from the text to personal knowledge to interpret;  Confirm inquiry with supported interpretation.

How to Mark a Book by Mortimer J. Adler, Ph.D. 1You know you have to read "between the lines" to get the most out of anything. I want to persuade you to do something equally important in the course of your reading. I want to persuade you to write between the lines. Unless you do, you are not likely to do the most efficient kind of reading. 2I contend, quite bluntly, that marking up a book is not an act of mutilation but of love. You shouldn't mark up a book which isn't yours. 3Librarians (or your friends) who lend you books expect you to keep them clean, and you should. If you decide that I am right about the usefulness of marking books, you will have to buy them. Most of the world's great books are available today, in reprint editions.

4There are two ways in which one can own a book. The first is the property right you establish by paying for it, just as you pay for clothes and furniture. But this act of purchase is only the prelude to possession. Full ownership comes only when you have made it a part of yourself, and the best way to make yourself a part of it is by writing in it. An illustration may make the point clear. You buy a beefsteak and transfer it from the butcher's icebox to your own. But you do not own the beefsteak in the most important sense until you consume it and get it into your bloodstream. I am arguing that books, too, must be absorbed in your blood stream to do you any good.

Complete metacognitive journaling of Mortimer J. Adler’s “How to Mark a Text” ANY QUESTIONS?