way beyond dick and jane day 2

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Phase 1 Exposure - Book Hooks: High interest read alouds and higher order questions Phase 1 - Exposure High-interest book hooks for read aloud Higher-order thinking probing questions Bookmarks for teachers with questions focusing on advanced thinking skills and reading skill instruction that is relevant to a broad range of literature

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2nd Day Presentation in Challenging Elementary Talented Readers at Hormel Conference

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Page 1: Way Beyond Dick and Jane Day 2

Phase 1Exposure - Book Hooks:High interest read alouds and higher order questions

Phase 1 - Exposure

• High-interest book hooks for read aloud

• Higher-order thinking probing questions

• Bookmarks for teachers with questions focusing on advanced thinking skills and reading skill instruction that is relevant to a broad range of literature

Type I Activities

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The students have broadened their reading choices due to the fact that they have been introduced to all the genres, and many nonfiction and fiction books, that they may have never picked up.

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A Primary Focus

Before you read aloud -- Take Three!

1. Exposure: Share why or how you chose the book.

2. Critical Thinking: Choose a question, theme, or strategy to guide your discussion about the literature.

3. Connections: Consider links to other books, websites, art, experiences, activities, or projects.

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Teacher Read AloudGuidelines in Phase One

• Use a book you enjoy. • Match the book to your audience. • Illustrate reading strategies• Change intonation, speed, and

volume.• Leave them wanting to hear

more. • Scaffold higher level thinking

skills. • Choose multiple books by the

same author. • Change genres and styles often. • Utilize great books on tape.• Invite special guest readers.

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Developing a Question

• Help your students see themselves as investigators collecting evidence:–Ask open-ended questions.–Tie answers back to the text.–Modeling is a Must!–Consider creative, offbeat

ideas a bonus.

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‘The student, said the teacher, is crazy.

The student said the teacher is crazy.’

Complexity of Ideas and Content

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‘“Of course he’s miserable, moaned Wesley’s mother. “He sticks out.”

“Like a nose,” snapped his father.’

Complexity of Ideas and Content

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‘Before fun was invented, people joined bell-ringing clubs.

As a member at Boston’s Old North Church, Paul spent hours practicing in the belfry tower.’

Complexity of Ideas and Content

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‘Men and boys blocked the sidewalks, trying to glimpse the “Bewitching Brokers,” unable to believe that ladies could deal with money without constant headaches.’

Complexity of Ideas and Content

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‘Right away I saw a cloud that would make a wonderful tattoo; it looked exactly like a dog, if dogs had only two legs – on the top, not the bottom. I am not allowed to have tattoos yet …’

Text Level

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‘All the kids in the room made sounds as if they thought a talent show was exciting news. Except me, because it was N-O-T, not.

But okay, fine, it wasn’t boring, either.’

Text Level

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‘But though he’s helped me make sense of what’s happened, and has earned my loyalty, the entire business is so extraordinarily secretive and complicated that I’ve long been convinced I will never learn anything about my past.’

Text Level

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‘The first place that I can well remember was a large, pleasant meadow. Over the hedge on one side we looked into a plowed field, and on the other, the gate to our mater’s house.’

Text Level

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‘After sitting atop a virtual bomb and traveling nearly half a million miles; after battling 1202 alarms, low fuel, and frozen fuel slugs; after walking on an airless rock; . . .’

Text Level

Given to the most distinguished children’s informational book published in the preceding year.

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In the beginning, I did not realize how much middle of the road reading

instruction I did and how few of my kids I really challenged.

~ Treatment Teacher

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‘That year at Perkins had also given Helen a glimpse of her own future. She had learned about another deaf-blind boy named Tommy Stringer. Five-year-old Tommy had lived in a poor house and …’

Text Level

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Resources for Finding Books

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Your Turn

1. Briefly examine a book on your table and look for a passage you might read aloud.

2. Decide which bookmark question and/or reading strategy you might use to guide a book hook from this book.

3. What other resources might you connect to this text?

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Weekly Book Hook Theme Ideas

• Author • Historical Event (WW2, Hiroshima, Gold

Rush, Pioneering, Colonialism)• Struggle• Race • Gender Issues• Big Questions (Why hate? Why love?)

www.CarolHurst.com/subjects/subjects.html

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Weekly Theme: Dealing with Change in Life

The Dust Bowl Out of the Dust

A Year Down Yonder

Bud Not Buddy

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Weekly Theme: Freedom and the Loss of Freedom

Jip: His Story To Be a Slave

Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt

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Weekly Theme: Prejudice

Day 1

Dr. King uses some very interesting wording in his speeches. [Give one example] How would you have said the same thing?

For what purposes should someone use these books? (MC text to self)

(MC text to text)

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Day 2

Why do you think that Dr. King’s sister would decide to write a book about her brother?

How does Ms. Anderson’s personality contribute to her success or failure?

How do these two books add to the information that we discussed yesterday?

(Making Inferences)

(Making Inferences)

(MC text to text)

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Day 3

How do the events in the passages from these two books relate to what was going on in the world during the stories’ time periods?

What questions do you have about the time period in which these books took place?

What kind of text could you use to find answers to your questions?

(MC text to world)

(Questioning)

(MC text to text)

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Day 4

As I read from this book, I want you to make a picture in your head of the characters and the setting. Be ready to tell me what you see. (Visualization)

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DAY 5

Today’s books are different from the books we’ve book talked the other days this week, but they have a similar theme. How are they different?

What seems to be the theme for this week’s books?

(MC text to text)

(Synthesis)

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http://www.bookhive.org/

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http://nancykeane.com/rl/

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