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Wendy Windust

Making Connections While Reading: Text to Text, Text to Self and Text to World Connections - 0 views

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    "Making Connections While Reading Text to Text, Text to Self and Text to World Connections "
Wendy Windust

Making Connections - ReadWriteThink - 1 views

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    "In this strategy guide, you'll learn how to model how students can make three different kinds of connections (text-to-text, text-to-self, text-to-world). Students then use this knowledge to find their own personal connections to a text."
Wendy Windust

Every Child a Reader and Writer - 0 views

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    This clip shows the first two steps of a mini-lesson: "Connect" and "Teach." I connect today's lesson with previous lessons, reminding everyone that today's work is part of our ongoing personal narrative unit. Next, I introduce what I want the students to try in today's lesson, which is to use a mentor text.
Wendy Windust

Guided Comprehension: Making Connections Using a Double-Entry Journal - ReadWriteThink - 1 views

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    "Guided Comprehension: Making Connections Using a Double-Entry Journal"
Wendy Windust

Teaching Text to Self Connections - 1 views

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    Comprehension Strategy: making connections "Teaching Text to Self"
Wendy Windust

Stenhouse Publishers - Nonfiction Reading Power: Teaching Students How to Think While T... - 0 views

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    How can you help students find meaning in informational texts and become independent strategic readers and thinkers? Nonfiction Reading Power gives teachers a wealth of effective strategies for helping students think while they read material in all subject areas. Using the best children's books to motivate students, Adrienne Gear shows teachers how help students zoom-in, question and infer; find the main idea, make connections, and transform what's on the printed page. Key introductory concept lessons for each of the five reading powers provide valuable insight into the purpose of each strategy. The book also explores the particular features of nonfiction and offers lists of key books organized around strategies and subject areas.
Wendy Windust

Into the Book: Teaching Reading Comprehension Strategies - 3 views

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    "Into the Book is a reading comprehension resource for K-4 students and teachers. We focus on eight research-based strategies: Using Prior Knowledge, Making Connections, Questioning, Visualizing, Inferring, Summarizing, Evaluating and Synthesizing. Try the online interactive activities, or click below to find out how to get our engaging 15-minute video programs."
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    This would be great for grades 6 and 7
Wendy Windust

Crafting A Memoir - 0 views

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    A unique aspect of children's memoir writing is that their collection of memories, wisdom and value is limited. That is not to say these memories do not exist. Children should be given the opportunity to develop an understanding of who they are and where they come from, and how this is connected to the past & future, the near & far away. A memoir study focusing on location as a theme can provide this opportunity.
Wendy Windust

Teachers: Content Literacy - 1 views

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    "Using Graphic Organizers Graphic organizers are excellent tools for helping students connect ideas and see relationships between different pieces of information. The goal is for students to expand their knowledge by understanding the material in their own way. Graphic organizers can be used for a variety of purposes, such as eliciting prior knowledge, demonstrating a sequence of events, and comparing and contrasting. "
Wendy Windust

AdLit.org: Adolescent Literacy - Classroom Strategies - 2 views

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    Classroom Strategies Explicit strategy instruction is at the core of good comprehension instruction. "Before" strategies activate students' prior knowledge and set a purpose for reading. "During" strategies help students make connections, monitor their understanding, generate questions, and stay focused. "After" strategies provide students an opportunity to summarize, question, reflect, discuss, and respond to text. Teachers should help students to understand why a strategy is useful, how it is used, and when it is appropriate. Teacher demonstration and modeling are critical factors for success, and student discussion following strategy instruction is also helpful. The most frequently researched strategies can be applied across content areas; other content-area specific strategies are emerging, and we will include them here in the future.
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