I thought that this article from Marshall’s Memo
included great question prompts to use with Cloze Reading. Let me know if you
do too!
In this Educational Leadership article, Nancy
Boyles (Southern Connecticut University) suggests ways to bring “close reading”
– a major theme in the Common Core State Standards – to the elementary grades.
“Essentially, close reading means reading to uncover layers of meaning that
lead to deep comprehension,” she says. Boyles is critical of the “ho-hum”
text-dependent questions suggested by David Coleman and his colleagues in their
Student Achievement Partners handbook. All of the questions have a right answer
and none of them will generate real discussion, she says.
Boyles urges
teachers to take students beyond the text and ask deeper questions that they
can apply to other texts on their own:
-
What is
the author telling me here?
-
Are
there any hard or important words?
-
What
does the author want me to understand?
-
How does
the author play with language to add
to the meaning?
“If students take time
to ask themselves these questions while reading and become skillful at
answering them, there’ll be less need for the teacher to do all the asking,”
she says. “For this to happen, we must develop students’ capacity to observe
and analyze.” Delving deeper, she suggests getting students to ask themselves
questions like these:
-
Who is
speaking in the passage?
-
Who
seems to be the main audience for this text?
-
What is
the first thing that jumps out at me as I read? Why?
-
What’s
the next thing I notice? Are these two things connected? How?
-
What
seems important here? Why?
-
What
does the author mean by _______? What exact words lead me to this meaning?
-
Is the
author trying to convince me of something? How do I know?
-
Is there
something missing from this passage that I expected to find? Why did the author
leave it out?
-
Is there
anything that could have been explained more thoroughly for greater clarity?
-
Is there
a message or main idea?
-
How does
this sentence or passage fit into the text as a whole?
“Students who learn to
ask themselves such questions are reading with the discerning eye of a careful
reader,” says Boyles. The next step is to look at passages with the eye of a writer,
analyzing:
-
Imagery,
including similes, metaphors, personification, figurative language, and
symbols;
-
Word
choice;
-
Tone and
voice;
-
Sentence
structure: short sentences, long sentences, sentence fragments, word order
within sentences, and questions.
“Closing in on Close
Reading” by Nancy Boyles in Educational
Leadership, December 2012/January 2013 (Vol. 70, #4, p. 36-41), www.ascd.org; Boyles can be reached at nancyboyles@comcast.net.
No comments:
Post a Comment