EvidentlyReading Profile picture
Mar 19, 2024 9 tweets 3 min read Read on X
@ksirach asked this question today so I thought I'd elaborate on how I've scaffolded this strategy for my striving readers, supporting them to identify that most elusive of creatures ... the main idea. (1/9)

@SoRclassroom @goyenfoundation
I have had so many teachers tell me kids struggle with "main idea." This strategy provides scaffolds so kids can be successful. Below, I lay out how I use gradual release to teach this strategy. (2/x)
(It's called "paragraph shrinking" in peer-assisted learning strategies - PALS; "get the gist" in collaborative strategic reading - CSR. They are very similar. I usually call it "get the gist." ) (3/x) Image
The first part of the strategy is to identify "the most important who or what" in a paragraph or section of text. I usually begin this orally, modeling with think-alouds and giving feedback as kids try it. (4/x)
Paragraph shrinking is often done orally, but I have students write it out, as a simple way to take notes across a knowledge-building unit or longer text.

The second aspect of the strategy is to identify "what's most important about the who or what?"). (5x)
I begin by providing a 3-column table - sometimes with the "who or what" provided, so students can focus on what's important about it. At this phase, students often riff on info from other parts of the text. Feedback and modeling can help them focus, (6/x) Image
I then have students independently identify the "important who or what" and "what's most important about it" in the 3-column table. (7/x) Image
At this point, I find that students often spontaneously begin writing main idea sentences in the third column of the table. But if they do not, I add an intermediate scaffold to transfer their work in the table to a sentence. (8/x) Image
The final step? Students write a main idea sentence without the scaffold of the 3-column table.

If you want to know more about this strategy, check out this link:


(/fin) readingrockets.org/classroom/clas…
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More from @EvidentlyR

Apr 14, 2024
There's been lots of talk about implicit/statistical learning after this week's episode of "Sold a Story" from @apmreports, @ehanford, and @CLPeak (and team).

Here's how I think about the role of statistical learning in my intervention context🧵

@SoRclassroom @goyenfoundation
Some responses to the pod seem to be suggesting that Mark Seidenberg's comments in the ep mean that we return to balanced literacy (BL) but with more phonics in the beginning. But structured literacy (SL) is different from BL in many respects. A couple of years ago... (2/12)
... I put together this graphic (with help and input from some of you!) that outlines different approaches to reading instruction that go beyond foundational skills teaching. (And yes, of course there are blurred lines between these approaches... (3/12) Image
Read 12 tweets
Apr 9, 2024
Student-generated questions are my absolute favorite! Here I'm talking through a couple of questions my students asked to get meta about how we answer them. (1/9) @goyenfoundation @SoRclassroom
Part 2. (/9)
Generating questions was highlighted all the way back in the NRP, but the era of standards-based accountability has led to a lot of focus on students' answering questions posed by the teacher. (TDQs, anyone?) (3/9)
Read 9 tweets
Apr 1, 2024
After each unit (or phase of a unit) in my intervention groups, I like to have some kind of culminating experience to build on what we've learned. Here's our hallway display for conference week from our "Build-a-Bird" activity. @goyenfoundation @SoRclassroom #KnowledgeMatters Image
At the end of our bird unit's first phase, our culminating activity was a readers' theater (like @ClassroomD4 I often use ChatGPT to create content-related readers' theater scripts.) We practiced reading with fluency, using vocab and concepts we'd learned about.
Read 9 tweets
Mar 23, 2024
Modeling writing sentences with appositives!

My students have just finished a study of bird adaptations, and they have each created an imaginary bird adapted to a specific habitat, synthesizing their understanding of adaptations. (1/5) @SoRclassroom #KnowledgeMatters
Here are a few of their opening sentences using appositive phrases. (We drafted on white boards and I gave feedback, then students transferred to a final copy, a very quick writing process in the limited time of an intervention block.) (2/5)

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Do students need to know the word "appositive"? This episode of Literacy Talks explored what teachers need to know vs. students. My position is similar to what @LindsayKemeny
discusses on the ep: I use the terminology, but the goal is for ... (3/5)
literacytalks.buzzsprout.com/1903769/147148…
Read 5 tweets
Mar 1, 2024
I spend most of my lesson- planning time reading.

(This post is a sequel to this one, about how I choose and sequence texts for knowledge building in intervention.)

@SoRclassroom #KnowledgeMatters

My planning has changed a lot over the years, and much of the change is due to the writings of @ReadingShanahan, who has written that reading comp is "the ability to negotiate the linguistic and conceptual barriers or affordances of a text." (2019)

shanahanonliteracy.com/blog/why-not-t…
Definition of affordance: "According to Gibson, an affordance is a resource or support that the environment offers an animal; the animal in turn must possess the capabilities to perceive it and use it." (Shanahan, 2019)
I spend my planning time reading my instructional texts because I am analyzing for those barriers and affordances.

Here, some examples of my planning with the text "Spit Nests, Puke Power, and Other Brilliant Bird Adaptations," (Laura Perdew, 2020). The cover of "Spit Nests, Puke Power, and Other Brilliant Bird Adaptations," by Laura Perdew.
Read 8 tweets
Feb 21, 2024
Knowledge building and challenging text in intervention, Part 1: Text Choice

When I started as an interventionist, I wanted to bring more knowledge/vocab building to my students who no longer need an intensive focus on foundational skills. @SoRclassroom #KnowledgeMatters (1/6) Image
I began to develop units - similar to those in the gen ed classroom. This is our unit on birds.

I begin with simple texts to build general knowledge of the topic. Our first guiding question: What do all birds have in common? (2/6) A photo of a Readworks text about birds.
For this phase of the unit, we read three texts from Readworks and Newsela, starting with the simplest text at the lower end of the grade 2-3 CCSS Lexile band, and moving to more complex texts. (3/6)
Read 7 tweets

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