Visual Reading Strategies For Ell Students
Visual Reading Strategies For Ell Students
Visual Reading Strategies For Ell Students
Graphic Organizers
That Build Comprehension During
Independent Reading
by Anina Robb
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Contents
...............................................................5
Introduction
The Benefits of Independent Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Making Independent Reading Work in Your Classroom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Getting Students Ready to Read . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
How to Use This Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
. . .Record-Keeping
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Forms
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Part 1:
My Reading Agreement: A Contract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
My Reading Log: A Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Word Wallets: Building Vocabulary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
. . .Getting
. . . . . . .Ready
. . . . . to
. . Read
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Part 2:
Get a Sneak Peek: Previewing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Preview and Predict Balloons: Making Predictions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Hooked to the Book: Making Connections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
. . .Becoming
. . . . . . . . a. .Strategic
. . . . . . . . Reader
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Part 3:
Strategies for Reading Fiction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Read the Future: Predict/Support/Adjust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Picture This!: Visualizing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Follow the Guide: Retelling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Pop the Question!: Questioning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Sum It Up With Storyboards: Summarizing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Strategies for Reading Nonfiction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
My Personal Thinking and Learning Record: Activating Prior Knowledge . . . 31
Get Behind the Scenes: Finding Key Information5 Ws and H . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Identifying Fact and Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Venn Diagram: Compare and Contrast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Build With Details: Main Idea and Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Strategies for Reading Poetry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Say It Your Way: Paraphrasing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Hop on the Sensory Express: Noticing Sensory Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
. . .Helping
. . . . . . .Students
. . . . . . . .Understand
. . . . . . . . . .Literary
. . . . . . .Genres
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Part 4:
Fiction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Paint a Portrait: Character Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
What a Character!: Character Traits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Whats the Problem: Problem/Actions/Outcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Follow the Footsteps: Sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Map It Out: Story Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Narrative Fan: Summarize . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Beginning to End: Character Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Folk and Fairy Tales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Are You Up to the Test?: Identifying Tasks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Magic Powers: Elements of Folk and Fairy Tales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Heros and Heroines With Heart: Inferring Character Traits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Poetry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
What Is It Like?: Simile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Show Off the Shape: Concrete Poetry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Trip Over Your Tongue: Alliteration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Meaningful Sounds: Onomatopoeia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Nonfiction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
The Road to Success: Biography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Fact-O-Gram: Informational Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
I Wonder: Questioning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Keep-in-Time Sequence String: Chronological Order . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Once I . . . : Making Connections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Treasure Hunt: Elements of Newspapers and Magazines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Read All About It!: The 5 Ws and the News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
. . .Reading
. . . . . . . and
. . . .Word
. . . . .Study
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Part. 5:
What I Know About Words: Using Prior Knowledge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Web a Word: Word Questioning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Word Links: Making Connections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Words in the World: Sensory Language Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Professional Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Introduction
his book is not for me. Tanisha pranced up beside me, waving her
new copy of Stone Fox in front of her face.
Why not? I asked.
This book is for boys. Anyway, it never snows like this [she pointed to the
book cover] in the Bronx. Tanisha had a point, I thought to myself. How could
I entice her to dig into this great story? Tanisha was from Puerto Rico and was
currently living in a shelter with her mother and brother. Her father died in a
work-related accident last summer, and Tanisha was still mourning this loss. A
book about a dogsled race had nothing to do with her life. But I had suggested
the story because I thought Tanisha could connect to its theme of overcoming
obstacles as well as the feeling of hope in Willies story. I knew that Tanisha had
suffered like Willie. But I also knew she has a lively spirit that would not be
kept down.
Try it Tanisha, I nudged. Its about this boy whose grandfather is
very ill.
She interrupted, My father died last summer. Tanisha looked at the
book again.
Why cant it be about a girl? she asked. But not waiting for my answer,
she walked back to her desk, reading the back cover again.
Tanisha was reluctant to read Stone Fox because she didnt think shed be able
to relate to the story: This book is for boys. But since I knew Tanisha and her
history, I suspected that she would be able to connect to the main character, to
his strength and grief. And she did. Tanisha read and reread Stone Fox many times
that year, each time finding something new that deepened her understanding of
the book.
Teachers, educators, and parents continually ask students to read all sorts of
materials: instructions, novels, newspapers, tests, web sites, poems, reference
books, and a multitude of other genres. Hooking students like Tanisha to books
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
during independent reading helps them build their skills so they can approach
other reading tasks with confidence. The recipe for success is simple: The more
students read, the more fluent readers they become. Regular reading builds
vocabulary as students meet words in different contexts. Equally important,
regular reading builds students background knowledge, including their knowledge
of people, places, nature, and how things work. The graphic organizers in this
book will help you and your students get the most out of independent reading
time, making it invaluable time for everyone.
The Benefits of
Independent Reading
stablishing an independent reading program has helped both my students
and me. Independent reading allows me to teach a heterogeneous class of
students reading at many different levels. While students are eagerly engaged in
readingpracticing their skills, applying strategies, building background knowledgeI am free to meet and conference with individual students. Children who
wrote I hate reading on their reading surveys now protest when the lights flash
signaling the end of independent reading. In an independent reading program,
each studentfrom below-grade-level readers to proficient oneshas a chance to
succeed, monitor his or her improvement, and challenge himself or herself.
chunks of time to read during the school day, they make more progress by
reading fine literature than from completing skills worksheets day after day.
{ The best way to improve reading is to read, read, read!
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
{ Offer students choices in the books they read. Let them select from several
year, students complete Reading Interest surveys so I can get to know them
better as individual readers.
{ Present short but lively book talks and invite other teachers in to introduce
new books to the students. These talks whet students appetites for new
books.
{ Read Aloud several times a day. This shows your students how important
reading is to you. Read Aloud will quickly become a treasured time in your
class that neither you nor your students will want to skip.
{ Share some personal stories about your reading life with the students. Tell
them about a great book or a magazine or newspaper article that youve read.
{ Reserve class time, 2030 minutes a day, for independent reading.
{ Encourage students to find a comfortable space when they read. Under a
desk, on a pillow, and sitting against a wall are some favorite reading places
in my classroom.
{ Set aside time for students to talk about a favorite book with classmates.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Idea Box
Why Do You Read?
To build students motivation to read, invite them to explore
their purposes for reading. Help them understand the many
reasons for reading by asking them, Why do you read? and
How does it make you feel? Follow up by sharing some of
your reasons for reading, which may include the following:
FUNReading is a great way to entertain yourself.
EASEReading happens automatically every day. You read signs,
headlines, and food labels.
MEANINGReading teaches you new facts and helps you
discover new ideas.
INFORMATIONReading helps you understand the world around
you. You can learn about current events and computers. You can
learn how to play the piano or make a cake.
APPRECIATIONReading a well-crafted poem, story, novel, letter,
or article can develop an appreciation of the writers craft and
teach you to read like a writer.
Refer to this discussion often and encourage students to
consider their own purposes for reading specific pieces.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Think Aloud
Finding the Right Book
Yesterday I was in the library looking for a book to give me some more information on taking care of my new kitten. I found a section of books meant just
for veterinarians. I opened to the first page, but there were so many medical
words and terms that I couldnt understand it at all. I became aggravated.
Then I realized that the book was too difficult for me to be helpful. So, I put
that book back on the shelf and chose another one that was for new cat
owners. Everything in that book was clearly explained. Plus, there were great
pictures that illustrated the directions. I knew that this was the book for me.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Model It
Moving Beyond the First Response
If students use evidence only from their own experiences in discussions of
texts, prompt them to give detailed, specific examples from the story. Help
them do this with these steps.
1. Ensure students can recall the plot. They should be able to retell the main
events and identify key details. You can model retelling after Read Alouds,
and encourage students to practice this skill during their independent reading.
2. Think aloud about how you find details in text to support a point you want
to make. For example: Cinderellas stepsisters are cruel. Here on page 4
one of them throws ashes onto the floor Cinderella has spent all morning
scrubbing, and on page 6 they brag about being able to go to the ball
and tease her about not having anything but rags to wear. Because of
their actions and what they say, I believe the stepsisters are cruel.
3. Model the difference between a general statement and a specific one
from the text. A general statement tells; it lacks details. A specific statement shows exact details.
Example:
General: The room is messy.
Specific: On the rooms floor were chocolate cookie crumbs,
dirty gym socks, last nights homework papers, and ants.
4. Encourage students to make specific statements in support of their ideas.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
P A R T
RecordKeeping Forms
he three forms on pages 1316 help build students motivation for reading
and provide you with easy-to-use management tools that track student
progress and interests. Students learn to pace themselves and take responsibility for their own learning, setting their own course for their independent
reading life.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Name:
Date:
My Reading Agreement:
A Contract
DIRECTIONS: How many books do you want to
read this month? Fill in and sign the contract.
My goal is to read
Students name
Teachers name
Top Teacher Picks: Two titles you might enjoy (recommended, not required).
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Name:
Date:
Title:
Author:
Date finished:
Question #:
My response:
Title:
Author:
Date finished:
Question #:
My response:
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Title:
Author:
Date finished:
Question #:
My response:
Title:
Author:
Date finished:
Question #:
My response:
Title:
Author:
Date finished:
Question #:
My response:
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
B u i ld i n g Vo c a b u l a ry
Name:
Date:
Word Wallets
DIRECTIONS: While you read your book, collect new
or interesting words. Write the words in the wallets.
me wonder!
e
k
a
m
t
a
h
t
Words
Words that e
xcite my ears
and eyes!
rds I know!
o
w
r
e
h
t
o
e
k
ok li
Words that lo
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
P A R T
17
P rev i ew i n g
Name:
Date:
Idea Box
A genre is a type of writing.
Some genres are
nonfiction: textbooks,
magazine and newspaper
articles, biographies,
autobiographies
fiction: plays, novels,
short stories, picture books
fantasy: fairy tales, tall tales
poetry
TITLE:
AUTHOR:
My Preview Checklist
My book has these features:
18
headline or title
table of contents
chapter titles
illustrations
bold headings
dialogue
repeated words
boxed items
shape of a poem
bold words
rhymes
Genre:
40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
M a k i n g P re d i c t i o n s
Name:
Date:
TITLE:
pa
Clues from th
ep
i ct
Cl ues
es
ur
fro
m
ge
M y P re d i c t i o n
I think this book will be about
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Making Connections
Name:
Date:
The book r
eminds me
of
ink of
h
t
e
m
s
e
k
a
The cover m
I have a co
nnection
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
P A R T
Becoming a Strategic
Reader
Strategies for Reading Fiction
ood readers use strategies to construct meaning and monitor what they
understand and what confuses them. The five strategies in this section
will help you teach your students to engage fully with the text while
they read by predicting, retelling, questioning, visualizing, and using a
storyboard. As active readers, students are better able to identify when they are
having trouble and are aware of the parts of the text they need to revisit.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
P re d i c t / S u p p o r t / Adj u st
Name:
Date:
MY PREDICTION
Draw what you think might happen.
M y P re d i c t i o n
I think this story will be about
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Visualizing
Name:
Date:
Picture
This!
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the story or book.
2. Close your eyes. Picture
in your mind two settings
in the book.
3. Name the settings and
draw them in the
photographs.
4. On another sheet of
paper, write about what
you drew and why it was
an important setting.
A trip to:
A trip to:
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Re te l l i n g
Name:
Date:
Who?
Where?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Re te l l i n g , c o n t i n u e d
Draw the problem in the box. Write about it in the space below the box.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Q u e st i o n i n g
Name:
Date:
After Reading
What questions do I still have?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Summarizing
Name:
Date:
1. Note:
2. Note:
3. Note:
4. Note:
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Strategies for
Reading Nonfiction
y the time students reach the second grade, they have a strong sense of the
structure of stories. This is a good time to emphasize reading nonfiction.
Reading nonfiction expands students background knowledge. It also deepens
their understanding of the physical and natural environment and prepares them
for reading the content area textbooks theyll encounter in the upper grades. In
addition, more and more standardized tests focus on nonfiction selections. The
graphic organizers in the following section will help you guide students to understand how nonfiction texts work and how to approach them in order to construct
new understandings.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Ac t i va t i n g P r i o r K n ow le dg e
Name:
Date:
My Personal Thinking
and Learning Record
DIRECTIONS:
1. Before you read, write down everything you already know
about the topic in the What I Know box.
2. Then write questions you have about the topic in the
What I Want to Know box.
3. After you read, write important information and answers
to your questions in the What I Learned box.
Topic:
What I Know
What I Learned
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
F i n d i n g Ke y I n fo r m a t i o n 5 W s a n d H
Name:
Date:
Ta k e O n e
Subject:
Where?
Who?
When?
?
How did it end
d? Why?
What happene
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
I de n t i f y i n g Fa c t a n d O p i n i o n
Name:
Date:
Fact or Opinion?
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the book or article all the way through. Highlight at least two interesting
statements.
2. Choose two interesting statements and draw them in the boxes below.
3. Write a caption for each picture. Then decide if the statement is a
fact or an opinion. Label each picture as fact or opinion.
1. Caption:
2. Caption:
Label:
Label:
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
C o m p a re a n d C o n t ra st
Name:
Date:
Venn Diagram
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the book or article all the way through.
2. Write the two people, places, or things to compare in the circles.
3. Draw or write shared traits in the center where the circles overlap.
4. Draw or write unique traits in each circle.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
M a i n I de a a n d D e ta i l s
Name:
Date:
Title
ail
ail
3
Det
Det
Detail 2
Main Idea
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
R
Idea Box
Rereading
eading poetry is different from reading fiction and nonfiction. Poetry challenges readers to look at words closely, visualize, and listen to the sounds of
words. Poetry is often a good place to start looking for
meaning in writing. Because of the condensed form of
the poem, many students will not feel afraid of jumping right in. The two organizers in this section will
invite your students to be active readers as they
respond to poetry.
Idea Box
Paraphrasing
Students can paraphrase
in a number of different
situations. Encourage
students to paraphrase
during.
{ class discussion.
{
conversations with a
reading partner.
{ journal entries.
{ summaries.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Pa ra p h ra s i n g
Name:
Date:
Talking abo
ut your
ideas with
others can
help you u
nderstand
a
difficult ph
rase or line
.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Date:
Poet:
Poem:
Sight Words
5. Sketch the images that pop into your head when you read those words.
2. As you read, look out for words that appeal to your sight, hearing, smell, touch, and taste.
Note: Every sense might not be in each poem.
DI RECTIONS:
1. Read the poem out loud and to yourself several times.
Name:
N o t i c i n g S e n s o ry D e ta i l s
Sound Words
Touch Words
Smell Words
Taste Words
B
B
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
P A R T
Helping Students
Understand
Literary Genres
here are two main reasons for developing your students grasp of different literary genres. First, understanding genre helps students know what to expect
from a new texthow it is organized, what its purpose iswhich boosts
their comprehension. Second, understanding genre facilitates a reading and writing
connection. When students know how a genre works, they can begin to write in that
genre, incorporating its structure and elements. Help students see that a genre is a
category or a kind of literature. Give them examples of different genres like fantasy,
fairy tales, biography, and so on. The graphic organizers in this section deepen students understanding of fiction, folk and fairy tales, nonfiction, and poetry.
Fiction
he graphic organizers grouped under fiction can be used interchangeably
with realistic fiction, historical fiction, and fantasy.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Idea Box
This is a great tool to use to
ensure that students make connections and monitor themselves
as they read. You can also use the
Narrative Fan to get students
ready to write summaries.
Beginning to End:
Character Development
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
C h a ra c te r M a p
Name:
Date:
Paint a Portrait
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the story or book.
2. As you read, pay special attention to the main character.
3. After you read, draw and write about the character in the
spaces below.
Draw a friend or
foe of the character
Characters
Name
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
C h a ra c te r Tra i t s
Name:
Date:
What a Character!
Idea Box
DIRECTIONS:
1. As you read, think about the main characters
personality. Choose one trait to describe him or her.
(See the idea box for suggestions.)
2. After reading, draw the character in the box below
using details from the story to help you.
Clever, generous,
dishonest, friendly,
selfish, loyal,
outgoing, mean,
brave
Visualize It
Wr i te A b o u t I t
is a
person. I think this because in
the story he/she
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
P rob le m / Ac t i o n s / O u tc o m e
Name:
Date:
P rob le m
O u tc o m e
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Sequence
Name:
Date:
Title
Author
Chapter title or number
Idea Box
Here are some key words
that can signal time-order:
First, It started when,
Second, Next, Then, Later,
Now, As, After, Finally,
Last, At the end
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
S to ry S t r u c tu re
Name:
Date:
Map It Out
DIRECTIONS:
1. As you read, keep track of the important details you learn by placing sticky notes next
to clues about the setting, main character, an important problem, and the outcome.
2. After you read, draw the setting, main character, problem, and outcome below. Then
write about each one.
Title
Author
Setting
P rob le m
M a i n C h a ra c te r
O u tc o m e
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Summarize
Name:
Date:
Narrative Fan
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the story or book with a partner.
2. After you read, discuss the main events in the story with your partner.
3. Work together and record your ideas in the Narrative Fan.
e
s nam
r
e
t
c
chara
wo
rds
de
scr
ibi
ng
the
im
po
rta
nt
wor
ds d
pro
escr
ble
ibin
m
g an
othe
r im
port
ant
even
t
words des
cribing th
e outcom
e
ter
c
ra
ha
c
e
th
e
rib
c
s
e
od
t
rds
o
w
wo
rd
ss
ta
tin
g
an
im
po
rta
nt
ev
en
t
s to
d
r
wo
g
ttin
e
s
the
e
b
i
cr
des
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
C h a ra c te r D eve lop m e n t
Name:
Date:
Beginning to End
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the story or book.
2. Think about what the character was like at the beginning and end. Think about
what made him or her grow or change.
3. After you read, draw and write about the character.
4. Then, explain what made the character grow or change.
Beginning
End
How did the character change? Why do you think he or she changed?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Think Aloud
Helping Students
Understand Genre
Rumpelstiltskin
by Jonathan Langley, HarperCollins 1991
Magic is an important part of this story. It is magical when the little man,
Rumpelstiltskin, appears in the locked castle room from out of nowhere and
can change straw into gold. His disappearance is magical, too. When the
princess finds out his name and tells the little man it is Rumpelstiltskin, he
gets angry and disappears. Even though Rumpelstiltskin helped the princess
at first by changing the straw to gold, he ended up being an evil force
because he wanted to take her baby away.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
I de n t i f y i n g Ta s k s
Name:
Date:
Title
Name of Hero(ine)
Ta s k 1
Ta s k 2
What task did the hero or heroine
have to do?
Le s s o n
What did the hero or heroine learn?
Le s s o n
What did the hero or heroine learn?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
E le m e n t s o f Fo l k a n d Fa i ry Ta le s
Name:
Date:
Magic Powers
DIRECTIONS:
1. Review the definition forces of evil.
2. As you read your story or book, look for the forces of good or evil.
3. Fill in the web below.
Definition
Forces of Evil: In many folk and fairy tales an evil force works against the
hero or heroine to try to stop them from being happy. Example: the wicked
queen in Snow White.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
I n fe r r i n g C h a ra c te r Tra i t s
Name:
Date:
Title
Author
because
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Poetry
eading, enjoying, and understanding poetry is a delicious experience. Poets
love words, and poems read aloud often light up childrens faces. In my
experience, avid as well as reluctant readers dive into poems eagerly. They love
poetrys music, rhythm, images, and rhyme. Reading poems is an excellent way
to motivate readers. Poems are usually shorter than prose and do not threaten
students. They appeal to the senses and draw the reader into the poets world
immediately. In addition, poems are rhythmical and rock readers into an enjoyable place.
In school, students are often asked to decide what a poem means. Encourage
your students to focus first on the images or pictures that come into their mind
after reading. Introduce them to the tools a poet uses to create those pictures.
After students fall in love with the words, you can begin talking about meaning.
The graphic organizers in this section encourage students to reread, listen to
sounds, and picture the images the poems paint. Each organizer focuses on an
element of the craft of poetry.
Think Aloud
the fast wind, for instance a jet airplane, time when Im opening birthday
presents, an eye blinking. After I come up with some things I can compare the
fastness of the wind to, I can rewrite my sentence using a simile: The wind, like
a jet airplane, blew past me. How does this simile improve the image of the
wind? Can you think of other similes that might work?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Idea Box
Onomatopoeia
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
S i m i le
Name:
Date:
What Is It Like?
Definition
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the poem out loud and to yourself several
times.
2. As you read, look for similes; write one below.
Answer the questions about your simile.
3. Explain the similes in the chart below.
4. After, reread the poem again and think about how
the similes add to pictures you get in your mind;
draw what you see in your imagination on the back
of this page.
Title:
Author:
1.
2.
3.
Simile: A simile is a
comparison between
two unlike things
using the words like or
as. Think about this
line: sand sifting
through my fingers
like light snow. How
is sand like snow?
They are both fine
and pale. You can pile
both of them up.
They both tickle your
nose.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
C o n c re te Po e t ry
Name:
Date:
Definition
A concrete poem is a special form of poetry. Concrete poems are shape
poems. They have the shape of the object the poem is abouta poem about
football would be in the shape of a football; a poem about a sailboat might
be in the shape of a sail.
I feel like
I could almost
Hiking
1.
2.
How does the shape help you understand or enjoy the poem?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
C o n c re te Po e t ry
Name:
Date:
Topics
S ke tc h
B ra i n sto r m
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
A l l i te ra t i o n
Name:
Date:
Model Poem
Making Cookies
Nothing is sweeter than a Saturday
Covered in sugar and semi-sweet chocolate chips
And the chance that soon
Ill get to lick the sweet, sweet spoon.
Title
Definition
Alliteration:
is the repetition
of the same
consonant sound
at the beginning
of two or more
words in a line
of poetry. In the
poem Making
Cookies the
S sound is
repeated in the
last line, making
a hissing sound
like slurping
gooey batter
from a spoon.
Author
1.
2.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
O n o m a top o e i a
Name:
Date:
Meaningful Sounds
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the Model Poem and review the
definition of onomatopoeia.
2. Then read your poem out loud and to
yourself several times.
3. As you read, listen for any onomatopoeia
sounds.
4. Complete the second page of this sheet.
Model Poem
Swinging
Tick-tock,
Im a grandfather clock
counting the seconds
swinging.
Definition
Onomatopoeia: Onomatopoeia is the
use of words that sound like the noises
they describe. In the poem Swinging
each stanza begins with onomatopoeia.
Tick-tock sounds like a clock; the word
swish sounds like a vine swinging; the
word whisk sounds like the noise a
trapeze flying through the air might
make; the word whee is the sound a
child might make when the swing goes
high.
Swish, swish,
Im a brave explorer
floating on vines
through the forest.
Whisk, whisk
Im a trapeze artist
soaring above crowds
of squirrels.
Whee, whee
Im a little girl
gliding over gardens
to the sky.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
O n o m a top o e i a
Meaningful Sounds
Title
Poet
1.
2.
3.
Idea Box
Try I t O u t !
Write your own onomatopoetic lines.
1. Choose a topic from the box or use your own.
2. Brainstorm a list of words that describe the sound.
breaking glass,
chewing ice, wet socks,
sneezing, wind blowing,
belly flopping in a pool,
airplane taking off,
traffic jam
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Nonfiction
egin your study of nonfiction by guiding your class through a KWL.
This activity will help you assess what they already know and plan what
nonfiction genres to work with. Make sure students know that nonfiction as a
category or genre of literature encompasses biography, memoir, articles in
newspapers and magazines, science books, informational picture and
chapter books, and so on. Curiosity
and the desire to learn about the world
around them attract students to nonfiction. Use the graphic organizers in
this section to focus them on the
Taking Notes
important elements of this genre.
Students will encounter nonfiction
Explain to students how to take notes on sticky notes.
reading material in all subjects and on
Model for them as you read aloud how you would take
standardized tests. When students
notes. I often say something like:
understand the structure of expository
Sometimes I like to place sticky notes on a page in a
texts, they can more readily navigate
book where I learned new information or discovered a
through them and recall facts from
new word. Marking the story with sticky notes makes it
magazines, newspapers, and informaeasier for me to go back and review the new informational picture and chapter books.
tion I learned. I use sticky notes in my journal someReview how to preview a book
times, too. I take notes and write the page number of
(see page 18). Invite students to read
the book on my sticky notes so I can easily find and
and think about the title, pictures,
reread the passage.
captions, headings, maps, and graphs.
Then, ask students to predict what
they will learn.
Model It
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
I Wonder . . .: Questioning
Students who are active readers remain engaged in the text by constantly asking
questions about what they are understanding and not understanding. This organizer
will help students keep new ideas in their heads and sort out challenging information. Questioning is a great strategy to use before, during, and after reading. It helps
students pinpoint what they understand and parts that confuse them.You can have
students tape the two sheets together to create the sequence string.
64
Use this graphic organizer to help students identify the main points of a newspaper article. Model for students how you would preview an article before reading
with the sample on page 72. Point out the headline, author, photos, repeated
words, and graphs and charts. Tell students that a quick preview of an article can
often help them learn a lot of important information. Keep reading articles about
many different subjects until students can find the facts with ease. Then, make the
reading and writing connection by using this organizer as a plan for students to
write their own newspaper articles.
40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
B i o g ra p h y
Name:
Date:
Persons Name
Draw one important
accomplishment
in this persons life.
Explain your drawing.
Ke e p Th i n k i n g
Do you admire this person? Why? Why not? Write about it on the back.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
I n fo r m a t i o n a l B o o k s
Name:
Date:
Fact-O-Gram
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the book or article
2. As you read, keep track of new facts you learn by putting sticky notes beside them.
3. After you read, think about how you would explain these facts to someone. Record
one of your ideas in the telegraph below.
HOWDY
In a book called
Ke e p Th i n k i n g
What else would you like to learn about this subject?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Q u e st i o n i n g
Name:
Date:
I Wonder . . .
DIRECTIONS:
1. Before you read, answer the first question below. Then read the book or article.
2. As you read, think about the questions that pop into your head.
3. After, record your questions and thoughts below.
How
What
Are there
Why
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Date:
Chronological
order is the
arrangement
of details in
time order or
the order in
which they
really happen.
Definition
Event 1
3. Write and draw about four important events in order on the sequence
string below.
DI RECTIONS:
1. Read the chapter or article.
Event 2
Name:
C h ro n o lo g i c a l O rde r
Event 3
Event 4
Ke e p
Th i n k i n g
40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Making Connections
Name:
Date:
Once I . . .
DIRECTIONS:
1. Read the text.
2. As you read, use sticky notes to mark information that you connect to.
3. Record your connections in the chart below.
Kind of
Information
Draw It
Connections
I Made
The photo or
illustration I connected
to was of
The map/chart/graph
that I connected to
was of
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
E le m e n t s o f N ews p a p e r s a n d M a g a z i n e s
Name:
Date:
Treasure Hunt
Idea Box
DIRECTIONS:
1. Skim through a newspaper or a magazine.
2. As you skim, look for the different kinds of
information you can find.
3. Then fill the treasure chest with all the things
you can learn from the newspaper or
magazine.
Ke e p Th i n k i n g
What did you find that surprised you?
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Th e 5 Ws a n d Th e N ews
Name:
Date:
Preview Tip
by-line
Grand Opening
of Pizza, Pizza!
headline
by Mallery Blake
Music. Balloons. Games. Rides. And
who
Idea Box
A newspaper article usually
has a LEAD. A lead grabs
your attention. It also usually
answers the most important
questions about the article.
They are the 5 Ws: WHO?
WHAT? WHERE? WHEN?
WHY?
what
when
Shopping Plaza.
where
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Who
Article:
What
Where
When
Why
Th e 5 W s a n d t h e N ews
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
P A R T
Reading and
Word Study
Have students write two to three new words that they found
tough on a sticky note.
Invite students to help you use context clues. Once students get it, have
them work in pairs to figure out their words meanings.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Think Aloud
Word Questioning: glistening
Rumpelstiltskin
by Jonathan Langley, HarperCollins 1991
In the story I read, all the straw was gone and in its place was a heap of glistening gold. Glistening isnt a word that I have heard before. I wonder what it
means. If I look at the picture, I see the big pile of gold and there are gold,
sunny rays coming off of it just like it was a sun. Gold is like the sun because
they are both yellow and they both shine. Maybe glistening means something
like shining or sparkling.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
U s i n g P r i o r K n ow le dg e
Name:
Date:
Word 1
Word 2
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Wo rd Q u e st i o n i n g
Name:
Date:
Web a Word
DIRECTIONS:
1. When you come to a word that you dont know, write it in the chart.
2. Answer the questions in the web to help you think about the word.
3. Keep reading to find clues about the meaning; add new information to the web.
4. Write what you think the word means.
What do I see in
my imagination when
I read this word?
Do I recognize
any part of this word?
Ke e p Th i n k i n g
I think this word means
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Making Connections
Name:
Date:
Word Links
DIRECTIONS:
1. Write the new word below.
2. Complete the sheet to help you make connections to the new word.
Word
Sentence the word is used in:
What it means:
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
S e n s o ry L a n g u a g e C h a r t
Name:
Date:
Title:
Sense Words
Author:
What I Imagine
Sight
Sound
Smell
Taste
Touch
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources
Professional Resources
Fielding and Pearson: Education Leadership, 51 (5), 1994.
Richard Allington: The Elementary School Journal, Vol. 83, 1983.
Nagy, William E., 1988. Teaching Vocabulary to Improve Reading Comprehension,
NCTE & IRA.
Vacca, R.T. & J.L. Vacca, 1999. Content Area Reading: Literacy and Learning
Across the Curriculum, 16th Ed. NY: Longman.
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40 Graphic Organizers That Build Comprehension During Independent Reading Anina Robb, Scholastic Teaching Resources