Reader Response Theory This is the easiest “lens” in terms of literary analysis and theory. This type of response focuses on the activity of reading a.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Will This Really Help Me Understand Literature On a Deeper Level?
Advertisements

Grade 2 Common Core I Can Statements… 1. Second Grade Common Core… The Next Generation Strand: Reading: Literature RL.2.1 –
Lesson 8 Defining Moments
SYLVIA PLATH. … Sylvia Plath was an American poet, novelist and short story writer who was born on 27 October 1922 in Boston Massachusetts. She studied.
Definition of oxymoron = a combination of contradictory or incongruous words such as ‘soft rock’ or ‘cruel kindness.’
By Angat Vora and Joanna Hebel
Close Reading Instruction
What you are assessed on:
Reading Poetry 3.6(A) 4.4(A) 5.4(A) TEKS TEKS TEKS
Ode. An ode is a serious, and meditative lyric poem that treats a noble or otherwise important subject. It deals with a single theme. An ode is a serious,
How do I distinguish among poetry, prose, and drama?
Comprehension Strategy Routine Cards
Final Assessment Roots and Water. M.L.O To prepare for and plan your essay.
Engaging the Reader: Orienting to the Novel’s Text Structure
THE ESSAY: THE 3 LEVELS OF COMPOSITION. AN OVERVIEW OF THE 3 LEVELS  I. LEVEL ONE = MOST THEORETICAL (INCLUDES YOUR THESIS)  II. LEVEL TWO = DEFINED.
Writing the Literary Analysis
“The Most Dangerous Game” Before, During, and After Reading Skills
Literacy Test Reading Selections
What’s Next? Life After High School
Poetry Analysis Western Literature.
Introduction to Critical Theory
7 th Grade Language Arts MIEL-Con MIEL-Con Breakdown Main idea: The point you want to prove. Introduction of Evidence: At what point in the.
Literary Genres Workshop Objectives: 1.Determine purpose for reading; 2.Analyze characteristics of different genres.
WHAT MAKES A POEM.
Reading Strategies. Learning Target  To identify traits of good readers  To become stronger readers  To use strategies to improve my reading comprehension.
R EVISING FOR TEXTUAL ANALYSIS F OCUS ON THE KEY ASPECTS OF THE POEM THAT YOU WILL BE ASKED TO REFER TO IN YOUR ANSWER IN THE EXAM / NAB: Central concerns.
Introduction to the ERWC (Expository Reading and Writing Course)
LITERATURE Writings in prose or verse; especially : writings having excellence of form or expression and expressing ideas of permanent or universal interest.
Column #1 In the left column, they can write their predictions. Especially when you first use this organizer, have students focus on some of the basic.
Expository Essays Intended to explain, inform, illustrate, or define.
Structure ELA CC5RL5 Explain how a series of chapters, scenes, or stanzas fits together to provide the overall structure of a particular story, drama,
By: Mrs. Abdallah. The way we taught students in the past simply does not prepare them for the higher demands of college and careers today and in the.
How To Analyze a Reading Presented By: Dr. Akassi Content From The Norton’s Field Guide To Writing.
Good Readers How to interact with a text. Good Readers Make connections Good readers relate what they read to their own lives by connecting it to prior.
Lisa Johnson Lincoln County Middle School Language Arts.
PICK UP!! Packet from front table. Thursday October 23 TSW use comprehension skills to analyze how words, images, graphics and sound work together to.
Getting Ready for the OSSLT 2016
Words commonly found in the PARCC Words from Rutgers-PARCC powerpoint Information & Pictures from various websites Sandy Rocco 2015.
Purpose -to analyze skills and knowledge necessary for success in the unit -to build fluency, confidence, and poise when speaking in front of an audience.
“The Most Dangerous Game” By Richard Connell Before, During, and After Reading Skills.
APRIL 29 TH, 2013 English 10. Schedule for Today Silent Reading Warm-Up Book Talks: Period 1 –Maddy / Bethany Period 2 – Devyani / Brady Analyze a Poem.
Parent Academy Grades 2-4 South Plainfield Elementary Schools Mrs. Teresa Luck Literacy Coach Literacy Coach June 4, 2013.
Because I Could Not Stop for Death
Two Versions of One Narrative Page 33
Reading Literature Welcome to this presentation about the top 5 ideas your child will learn during the first quarter of second grade. Top 5 Big Ideas Your.
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.
MUSHROOMS.
ELA 6: Module 2A, Unit 1 lesson 2
Reading Objectives: Close Reading • Explain events from a text.
LAUNCHING THE NOVEL: CHARACTER ANALYSIS OF HA
Reading Focus: Use Details to Understand the Main Idea Close Reading
How do I distinguish among poetry, prose, and drama?
Informational Texts.
Determining Importance in Reading
Poetry Elements 6th grade.
Interpreting Poetry.
Georgia Milestone End-of-Year Assessment
Beyond the Yellow Highlighter
How do I distinguish among poetry, prose, and drama?
Strategies for Taking Standardized Tests
Theme Mr. Rainwater.
Module 1 Unit 1 lesson 3.
How do I distinguish among poetry, prose, and drama?
WRITE BITES Early College Campus.
Strategies for Taking Standardized Tests
Strategies for Taking Standardized Tests
Strategies for Taking Standardized Tests
How to Sound Smart When Talking about Poetry
Strategies for Taking Standardized Tests
Presentation transcript:

Reader Response Theory This is the easiest “lens” in terms of literary analysis and theory. This type of response focuses on the activity of reading a work of literature. Reader response theory states that we each bring our own personal experiences to the reading of literature. Reader response asks the reader to make personal connections to the text by asking and answering questions about the text that are meaningful to us personally. This is the type of writing you have probably been doing all throughout high school.

Reader Response Theory Reader response gives you a voice. As long as you can defend your opinion with textual support (using examples from the text) then it is valid. It isn’t an opportunity or an excuse to go “way out there” and make up crazy things that don’t exist in the text. However – reader responses are usually very different from each other. Because you are all different, your personal responses to literature will be very different!

Examples of reader-response type questions: “What do I personally think that this text means? “Have I ever had an experience like this? What did I learn from it?” “Have I ever felt the way that the characters in this text feel?” “What personal qualities or characteristics do I have that might be relevant to my reading of this text? “Are my morals reflected in this text? How are my morals the different or the same as those highlighted in the text?” “What issues are the most important in the text? Why do I think these issues are the most important?” “What words or phrases are most important to me? Why?”

Overnight, very Whitely, discreetly, Very quietly Our toes, our noses Take hold on the loam, Acquire the air, Nobody sees us, Stops us, betrays us; The small grains make room. Soft fists insist on Heaving the needles The leafy bedding, Even the paving. Our hammers, our rams Earless and eyeless, Perfectly voiceless, Widen the crannies, Shoulder through the holes. We Diet on water, On crumbs of shadow. Bland-mannered, asking Little or nothing. So many of us! So many of us! We are shelves, we are Tables, we are meek, We are edible. Nudgers and shovers In spite of ourselves. Our kind multiplies: We shall by morning Inherit the earth. Our foot's in the door. What is this poem about? Write 2-3 sentences explaining what you think this poem is talking about. Then pick out the stanza (verse of poetry) that is most meaningful to you – you like the sound of it, or it speaks to you – be prepared to discuss what you write!

The preceding poem is called “Mushrooms” and it was written by Sylvia Plath. How did you come to some idea of what this poem meant? Who you are combined with what you are reading causes you to create meaning. Let’s look at a chart that explains this concept

Reader-Response Diagram This diagram graphically illustrates the principles of reader-response theory. Under the “READER” column, consider what personal characteristics, qualities or history might be relevant to your reading of the text. On the right side, under the heading “TEXT” write what textual properties affect your reading (such as use of dialect, narrative structure, punctuation, sentence length.) After completing the right and left side, students then investigate how their personal response and the characteristics of the text create “MEANING” – they write their statements about what the text means to them in the middle of the chart. (Appleman) READERMEANINGTEXT

EXAMPLE Reader-Response Diagram READERMEANINGTEXT Here you write personal characteristics that relate to the text you are analyzing. Here you write characteristics of the text you are reading such as vocabulary, sentence length, type of literary work, punctuation Together these make up the way a reader gets individual meaning. Who you are and what you are reading results in meaning.