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Published byMaria Newton Modified over 9 years ago
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Retelling What it is as instruction as assessment
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Retelling is an oral (or written) account of a text in the child’s own words. a way to reveal a particular element that confuses or interferes with a child’s comprehension. enhances both comprehension and oral reading proficiency.
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Through retelling, students learn to: identify, clarify and organize thinking identify important events/concepts make decisions about organizing info build a base of literal and implied meaning
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Through retelling, students learn to identify literary elements and genres evaluate use of language and interpret meaning. talk about language and interpret meaning increase self-confidence with the acts of reading, writing, listening and speaking.
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Different Forms of Retelling Oral to Oral Teacher reads aloud/ Students retell orally. Perfect for: Non-reader or non-writer Insight into: Listening and oral language skills
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Oral to Written Teacher reads or tells text aloud/Students retell in writing. Perfect for: Immature and mature readers/writers. Insight into: Listening skills, plus control over written language.
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Oral to Drawing Teacher reads or tells text aloud/Students retell in drawings Perfect for: Non-readers/non-writers Insight into: Listening skills and control over oral language skills
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Written to Oral Students read text and retell orally Perfect for: ESL or immature learner Insight into: Reading comprehension and control over oral language
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Written to written Students read text and retell in writing. Perfect for: Students who have some control over reading and writing Insight into: Reading comprehension and control over written language.
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Written to drawing Students read the text and retell it by drawing. Perfect for: Students who read but have difficulty with writing. Insight into: Reading comprehension and control of oral language.
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Retelling and Critical Thinking skills Process thinking is enhanced since retelling requires knowing all the the story parts and putting them within the whole context. Problem solving/Analytical thinking is involved since retelling requires analyzing the story to determine what is important and then organizing it for presenting the retelling.
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Language/communication skills requires the reteller to control the language in order to retell the story. It also requires decontextualized language. Independent Learning skills are enhanced when the reteller must define the boundaries and self initiate the retelling.
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Retelling is on a developmental continuum PRETELLING requires the child to think sequentially. Child must think backward to retell a story and then forward to put the events in order. The teacher should hear words like: FIRST, NEXT, THEN, LAST
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GUIDED RETELLING is where the child is retelling in a supported or guided manner, using schema and topic knowledge combined with illustrations or story props to organize and remember the retelling. Teacher is a guide or coach introducing strategies for organizing and scaffolding the story.
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STORY MAP RETELLING introduces writing AS the child reads. The child organizes the information from beginning to middle to end. The goal is to increase the complexity of the retelling.
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WRITTEN RETELLINGS Now the child expected to interpret the story from the WHOLE to PART to WHOLE. Then the parts needed to retell are reconstructed in writing.
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WRITTEN RETELLINGS cont. The child interprets story from WHOLE to PART to WHOLE and reconstructed in a piece of writing.
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