Using Reading Strategies Houghton-Mifflin Reading Back to School Grade 3.

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Presentation transcript:

Using Reading Strategies Houghton-Mifflin Reading Back to School Grade 3

Using Reading Strategies Good readers use strategies when they read. Different strategies are used before, during, and after reading. As readers learn to use strategies, they must think about how each strategy will help them.

“The Rule” by Ann Cameron

Predict/Infer Use this strategy before and during reading to help make predictions about what happens next or what you’re going to learn. 1.Think about the title, the illustrations, and what you have read so far. 2.Tell what you think what will happen next -- or what you will learn. Thinking about what you already know about the subject may help. 3.Try to figure out things the author does not say directly.

Phonics/Decoding Use this strategy during reading when you come across a word you don’t know. 1.Look carefully at the word. 2.Look for the word parts that you know and think about the sounds for the letters. 3.Blend the sounds to read the word. 4.Ask yourself if this is a word you know and whether the word makes sense in the sentence. 5.If not, ask yourself if there is anything else you could try, -- should you look in the dictionary?

Monitor/Clarify Use this strategy during reading whenever you’re confused about what you are reading. 1.Ask yourself if what you’re reading makes sense - or if you are learning what you need to learn. 2.If you don’t understand something, reread, look at the illustrations, or read ahead to see if that helps.

Question Use this strategy during and after reading to ask questions about important ideas in the story. 1.Ask yourself questions about important ideas in the story. 2.Ask yourself if you can answer these questions. 3.If you can’t answer the questions, reread and look for answers in the text. Thinking about what you already know and what you’ve read in the story may help you.

Evaluate Use this strategy during and after reading to help you form an opinion about what you read. 1.Think about how the author makes the story come alive and makes you want to read it. 2.Think about what was entertaining, informative, or useful about the selection. 3.Think about how you reacted to the story - how well you understood the selection and whether you enjoyed reading it.

Summarize Use this strategy after reading to summarize what you read. 1.Think about the characters. 2.Think about where the story takes place. 3.Think about the problem in the story and how the characters solve it. 4.Think about what happens in the beginning, middle, and end of the story.

Reading Strategies What strategies were the most helpful to you in understanding the story? What strategies do you use when you are reading? Why do you find them helpful?

Comprehension Check 1.What is the rule Huey’s parents have about eating? 2.Why doesn’t Huey want to eat his food? 3.How does Huey solve his problem? 4.Why do you think Huey’s parents don’t make him eat all of the trout? 5.Do you think rules should sometimes be changed?