Engraining the Art of Analysis: Teaching Students to Dig a Little Deeper Joey Littrell Southwestern Pulaski County High School English Department EKUWP.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Know role of and characteristics of effective feedback
Advertisements

“Quick-Fix” Workshop Communication Centre
GCSE Crossover Coursework Pre1914 texts: Shakespeare and the Prose Study.
Everything you need to know in order to set up your Reader’s Notebook
Lesson Design Teaching for Mastery.
Close Reading Lesson Today’s Agenda:
Lesson Plan Design By: Andrea Perez EDU 3460.
Writing a literary analysis essay English II Honors.
Close Reading. What is close reading? Also known as “analytic reading” Reading to uncover layers of meaning that lead to deep comprehension An instructional.
Developing Strategic Readers Developing Strategic Readers Dr. Connie Cain FLaRE Coordinator Just Read, Florida!
Strategy Toolbox By: Danelle Keninger.
Visualization By: Kierstin, Brittany, Wendy, and Stephennie.
Research Writing Using Common Core Writing Lessons and Mini-Lessons.
A Framework for Inquiry-Based Instruction through
Making Group Work Productive PowerPoints available at Click on “Resources”
Exploring a topic in depth... From Reading to Writing The Odyssey often raises questions in readers’ minds: Was Odysseus a real person? Were the places.
Written Conversation An Effective Strategy for Thinking and Writing.
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 13, 2013 CO: SWD analyzing the figurative language in a text by determining the meaning. LO: SW read and explain key ideas in drama.
Objectives apply the root to a new application Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis Use writing process to create analysis essay.
Module 5.1 Unit 1: Building Background Knowledge on Human Rights
My Personal Reading Procedure. Critical Thinking  What is critical thinking???  Thinking about things beyond what is written there.  Thinking of things.
Summarization Skills and the use of the Effective Quote in Student Writing Chippewa River Writing Project Summer Institute 2015.
UNDERSTANDING THE READING / ELA VOLUNTARY STATE CURRICULUM Kathy Volk
Tuesday, 8 September 2015 BRING YOUR AR BOOK!!!!!!!! Bell Ringer: Fill in your Reading Log with today’s date and your starting page. Then, start reading.
Thew Thursday Wrap up Crucible discussion How to take an essay test  A Guide to Writing the Timed Essay  Academic Vocabulary/Ways to Respond to a Quotation.
RPDP Secondary Literacy     Southern Nevada Regional Professional Development Program RPDP.net.
Differentiated Instruction: Literature Circles
 Sign In and find your assigned table  Enjoy breakfast items  You will NOT need a computer until much later  Be ready to share at 9 a.m. a check for.
Quarterly Review/ Reading for Endurance October 29.
Hook, Housekeeping & Homework Monday Have out your novel (fictional text) to read Quietly read for approx. 10 minutes Remember… no electronics out/on.
Socratic Seminar. What is a Socratic Seminar? In a Socratic Seminar participants seek deeper understanding of complex ideas through thoughtful dialogue.
TCH 264: Museum Literacies April 21, Today’s Class Share Writing Crawl Pieces Examine Museum Literacies Describe classroom applications Writer’s.
Bellwork Dec. 7, 2015 Copy and answer. Standard/I can Standards: ELAGSE7W7: Conduct short research projects to answer a question, drawing on several sources.
Reading Log #1 - Predictions
 Florida Standards Assessment: Q & A with the State Literacy Department January Zone Meeting.
The Body of a Research Report 8 TH GRADE LA RESEARCH REPORT.
Reading Strategies We Use Every Day. 1. Creating Mental Images Good readers:  Visualize and create pictures in their mind  Organize details in a “mental.
Information Literacy.  Information Literacy means essentially the ability to locate, evaluate, select, use, and share information effectively.  THIS.
Writing a literary analysis essay English 11/12. Begin with the basics Read the book or books assigned Read the book or books assigned Ask relevant questions.
Literature Circles Overview Practicing the Roles
Assessment and UBD Wednesday, August 7, 2013 SSDSRV – Summer Institute.
UNIT 6: LITERARY ANALYSIS (POETRY) English 10 Standard 10.4k English 10 Standard 10.4k: Students will compare and contrast how rhyme, rhythm, sound imagery,
Research Methods and the Researched Argument Essay.
Intro. To Socratic Seminar
Learning around the World Unit 1
Reaching Out, Pushing Away
3RD 9 weeks  2017.
workbook NOVEL ANALYSIS
Writing – Plagiarism What is academic dishonesty?
AP English Language and Composition
Utilizing Modeling Instruction & Standards Based Grading
Beyond the Yellow Highlighter
Title of notes: Text Annotation page 7 right side (RS)
Joey Littrell Southwestern Pulaski County High School
How to Write a research paper
Bell Work: You must have either your composition book or a folder with 5-10 sheets of paper in it for the writing you will be doing this week. The writing.
Welcome! January 8th, 2018 Monday
Socratic Seminars.
Summer Reading Ms. Baumeister.
Writing a literary analysis essay
Journal: Write down as many observations about the photo as you can
Agenda: 1. Newsela Article 2. Gatsby Social Media Assignment
Cornell Notes.
Literary Analysis.
Unit 2: Research Lesson 04 and 05
Journal: Think about the emotions being portrayed in and about the story behind the photograph above. What details do you notice that help you develop.
Final Exam Elements Multiple Choice Questions
Welcome to Ms. Sonn’s 4B Sophomore English Class! 5/4/2012
Final week before parcc!
Presentation transcript:

Engraining the Art of Analysis: Teaching Students to Dig a Little Deeper Joey Littrell Southwestern Pulaski County High School English Department EKUWP 2012 Summer Institute June 24, 2014

Think-Write-Share (≈3 min.) Why is it important for students to learn how to analyze? What does analysis look like in your classroom?

Essential Questions for the next ≈67 minutes… How do we go about teaching students to analyze effectively? How can we scaffold lessons to push students toward a higher level of analysis?

Why analyze? To know why you believe what you believe To learn critical thinking skills essential for participating freely in a democracy – We want our students to be leaders, not followers (or at least to be well-informed followers). To determine the importance and relevance of information To determine purpose, reflect upon message, and apply to our own experiences

“The student of literature who hides in the crowd or parrots the thinking of classmates, who learns only to paraphrase the critical judgments of scholars or to memorize peripheral information about the authors’ lives and historical periods, has not begun to learn the literature. Those parroted observations and memorized judgments reflect not less learning, but no learning whatsoever.” ~Probst, Robert E. Response and Analysis: Teaching Literature in Secondary School. “The Reader and other Readers.” 2 nd ed. Portsmouth: Heinemann,

Evidence Analysis (≈10 min.) Each group has received a different article or passage to read. 1.Read the article or passage, either individually or as a group. 2.Find two direct quotes from the article or passage which tell us something (directly or indirectly) about the person you read about. Write each quote (with citation) on one side of an index card (you will have two cards, one for each quote). 3.On the back of the card, explain the quotation— basically, “What do you think this quote tells us about the person? Why is it important?” 4.See the back of the assignment sheet for an example.

Evidence Analysis On-going activity as we read (great for formative assessment) Exit-slip Quick group activity Discussion Can be used with short excerpts or longer passages

So, since we’re scaffolding analysis… Think of the person you read about in the previous activity. Now, imagine performing an autopsy on that person’s character. What does that person deem important? What motivates that person? How would you portray this to someone else?

Post-Mortem of a Protagonist (or Body Biography) Researched and promoted by Laying the Foundation Forces students to think outside the proverbial box Allows students to create information based upon textual evidence and to present this information to their peers and other school personnel Cognitive and Social Best Practice: students work together to create their own information and communicate through writing, speaking, drawing, and visual arts.

Best Practice Cognitive: Students create their own information and communicate through writing, speaking, drawing, and visual arts. They make choices about the content of their final product, are interactive with the text they are analyzing, and present their findings to others. Social: Students work in groups to discuss the text and its nuances, to make decisions about representing the text, and to present their information to peers.

Post-Mortem Analysis of ________. (≈30 minutes) Each group will need: – An assignment sheet – One sheet of poster paper – Crayons and/or markers – The article/passage you read about your character – The index cards you used for the Evidence Collection activity

You are going to create a symbolic representation of the person you read about based on what you have read. Example: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 Choose five of the body parts on the assignment sheet to represent the person you read about. On your poster paper, draw a body outline, then begin using colors and drawing symbols to represent each of the body parts you chose. Remember to justify your decisions. In your group, create the “Found Poem” using the article or passage you read. Be ready to share your poem and artwork with the rest of us!

Take the information you gathered from completing the “Evidence Collection” and “Post- Mortem” activities and write a well-developed paragraph analyzing the person you read about. Don’t forget to support your answer. Once you have finished, share with the person next to you. (≈5 min.)

“Instruction in literature should enable readers to find the connections between their experience and the literary work. If it does so, it may enable them to use the literature, to employ it in making sense of their lives.” ~Probst, Robert E. “Dialogue with a Text.” The English Journal (Jan. 1988): JSTOR. Web. 14 June 2012.

“My mind rebels at stagnation. Give me problems, give me work, give me the most abstruse cryptogram, or the most intricate analysis, and I am in my own proper atmosphere. But I abhor the dull routine of existence. I crave for mental exaltation.” ~Sir Arthur Conan Doyle What implications does this quotation have for our teaching?

Works Cited Probst, Robert E. “Dialogue with a Text.” The English Journal (Jan. 1988): JSTOR. Web. 14 June Response and Analysis: Teaching Literature in Secondary School. “The Reader and other Readers.” 2 nd ed. Portsmouth: Heinemann,

Resource Excellent source for critical reading strategies nalyzing.htm nalyzing.htm