Fun With Reading!

Reading to Learn
Rationale:
After children are able to read with fluency and speed, they must begin
to move on to the next step in reading. This is the reading to learn
step. Children must be able to read and summarize all kinds of reading
materials so that they are able to learn. This lesson will begin to
teach students how to find the important information in a passage. They
will read a passage and then discuss as a class what the important
information is. They will highlight this material and then write a
summarization from the information that they have highlighted.
Materials:
- A copy of All About Frogs by Jim Arnosky (Scholastic Inc., New York :
2001) for every student
- A copy of One Tiny Turtle by Nicola Davies (Scholastic Inc., New
York: 2001) for every student
- A copy of the article Baby Hippo Orphan Finds a Friend by Catherine
Clarke in March of 2004 from National Geographic Kids found at http://news.nationalgeographic.com/kids/2005/03/owen.html
- handout copy of the graphic organizers "An Important Point" from the
First Graphic Organizers: Reading by Rhonda Graff Silver (Scholastic,
Inc., 2003) for all students and a blown up copy of the graphic
organizer laminated to write on in front of the class
- Copy of summary checklist for each student that says:
1. Is unimportant or repeated information left out of your
summary? Yes or no
2. Are important events and ideas stated? Yes or
no
3. Do you have a topic sentence that states the author's main
idea? Yes or no
- notebook paper and pencils for each student
- easel or board to display blown up copies of graphic organizers
- dry erase board and markers
- a yellow and blue highlighter for each student
- column handout (3 three columns: unimportant/repeated info, important
ideas/events, author's main idea)
Procedures:
1. "When we read, the most important thing we do is to
comprehend, or understand, what we are reading. Comprehending helps us
to understand what is happening in a story, or to learn important
information from text. We are going to practice summarizing today.
Summarizing is a strategy you can use on your own to help you
comprehend or understand the text you are reading. We will practice
finding the main idea and details as we read about several different
animals"
2. "The way we are going to read today is silently.
Does anyone remember what silent reading is? Silent reading is
when we read text to ourselves instead of out loud so we do not disturb
others around us. Let me show you just as a reminder. I am
going to read the sentences I have written on the board out loud and
then I am going to read silently. I want you to pay close
attention to the differences. (I will read the sentences "Pizza
is my favorite food. I could eat it everyday." aloud then
silently to model by paraphrasing to show I understood what I
read). Now I want you to try. I am going to write a new
sentence on the board. (write "Put your left hand on your right
shoulder." on the board). Now everyone read the sentence on the
board silently and demonstrate what you read. (everyone will read it
silently, then show they understood by following the directions)
Good!"
3. "When we summarize the text we are reading there are three
things that are important to keep in mind that will be helpful.
First, we should leave out unimportant and repeated information.
Second, we should always state the important events and ideas.
The third thing to remember is that we should write a topic sentence
that states the author's main idea. The three things will help
you to write a summary. So now I want everyone to get out your
article called Baby Hippo Orphan Finds a Friend and your blue and
yellow highlighter. This article tells the story of a baby hippo who
was left behind after flood waters in the East African country of Kenya
swept him and his herd down the Sabaki River and into the Indian
Ocean. Most of the hippos returned inland, however, this baby
hippo did not. Lucky for him, rescuers found him and took him to
the shelter and named him Owen. While in the shelter he met an
unlikely friend that took everyone by surprise. To find out about
Owen's new friend you will have to read the article Baby Hippo Orphan
Finds a Friend. I want everyone to read this silently then we are
going to complete this graphic organizer together and write a class
summary. As you read to yourself, think about
what information is unimportant and repeated, what are important events
and ideas and what is the main idea that we can make a topic sentence
out of. You have two highlighters. If you come across any
unimportant or repeated information I want you to highlight in blue so
that we leave it out of our summary. With your yellow highlighter
highlight what you think are the important events, ideas, and the
author's main idea. We will help each after we read by going over
what we should have highlighted so everyone can know what information
to look for. Now everyone read silently paying close attention to the
article then we will go over it together." (give silent reading time,
then time for the class as a whole to create graphic organizer then use
that tool to write a class summary of the article).
4. "Now we are going to read a book. Everyone please get
out All About Frogs. Frogs are fun pets. It is interesting
to watch them grow from tadpoles to adult frogs! However it is
important to know how to take care of your pet frog. In the book
All About Frogs you can learn everything you need to know. Now I
want everyone to read the book silently to yourself. I want you
to use the handout I gave you with three columns that will help
classify the three reminders about summarizing. As you read I
want you to put repeated and unimportant information in column 1,
important events and ideas in column 2, and when you finish try to come
up with the author's main idea and write it in column three. I
want you to work with your partner next to you to do this. When
you finish, come up to the front of the room and pick up a copy of the
graphic organizer we used together and work with your partner to
complete to write a topic sentence that states the author's main idea
in the book on the top line. Then I want you to fill in the lines
on the fingers with important events or ideas. You may have found
one or you may have found more. Fill in what you have."
(give about 10 minutes, then go over answers with whole class)
6. "Now everyone get out a piece of notebook paper. On your
own, I want you to write a paragraph that summarizes the book All About
Frogs that you read silently using your two handouts you and your
partner completed to guide your summary. Also use the summary
checklist that I handed out with the three reminders on it. Start
with a topic sentence that states the author's main idea. When
both you and your partner are donw writing your summaries swap
paragraphs and read each other's summary and then fill out a checklist
on your partner. Circle yes or no beside each of the three
reminders to let your partner know if they did it or not."
7. "Tonight I want everyone to read the book One Tiny Turtle at
home silently. In One Tiny Turtle you will learn about the
Loggerhead turtle while reading a story about its life.
Loggerheads swim alone in the vastness of the water, munches on crabs,
floats over coral reefs and crawls with slow, heavy steps across the
beach to lay her eggs. To learn more about Loggerheads you will
have to read the book One Tiny Turtle. Then I want you to write a
paragraph summarizing the book in your reading journal just as we have
done in class today. You can use the graphic organizer and chart
to help as well as your summary checklist. Tomorrow I will read
your summary and fill out a summary checklist on your paragraph to see
how you did."
Assessment:
To assess the children I will read their summaries that they wrote on
chapter 2 and fill out a summary checklist for them and discuss with
them the summaries they wrote. This way I will know how well they
mastered the skills required to write a summary.
References:
Arnosky, Jim. All About Frogs. Scholastic Inc., New York:
2001.
Clarke, Catherine. Baby Hippo Orphan Finds a Friend. March
2004. National Geographic Kids. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/kids/2005/03/owen.html.
Davies, Nicola. One Tiny Turtle. Scholastic, Inc., New
York: 2001.
Fleming, Nell. 1,2,3 A Summary. http://www.auburn.edu/academic/education/reading_genie/connect/flemingrl.html
Silver, Rhonda Graff. First Graphic Oraganizers" Reading.
Scholastic, Inc. New York: 2003.
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