
My Year 6 Team Leader and my BT mentor recently went on PD course on PACT reading. This year will be the first year at Lynmore that we will be using PACT for reading. Below our her notes from the seminar which gives clarity on reading and PACT.
Reading to learn - PACT Otonga
Presenter- Melanie Winthrop
Was does reading to learn look like?
How does this relate to the children we have in front of us everyday.
Reading to learn:
Making links to the reading processes and strategies years 3-6
Revisiting the literacy learning progressions - expectations for year 3-6
Reading to learn - with the curriculum learning areas
Exploring and making sense of the pact reading framework.
Students need to do more than just read (or write). They need to use their reading (and writing) to meet the demands of the curriculum. These demands are integral to many of the teaching and learning activities that support students in developing the key competencies as well as knowledge and ind skills in the essential learning areas.
Partner task- With a partner, discuss your responses to the follow questions.
Think of your class and all the reading they do in school day, including out of school.
At the end of year 6, what sort of readers do your students need to be in order for them to succeed at intermediate, high school and beyond.
How are you setting them up to succeed.
The discussion around the text is so important.
What do we know about readers entering year 4.
By now most students:
Have constrained skills pretty much under control
Can monitor their reading
Use some basic comprehension strategies’Have some knowledge of how basic text work
have built up sight vocabulary
Can evaluate straight forward information
Can identify the authors purpose
Are fluent readers
Literacy Acquisition:
Diagram in literacy progression.
Engagement in literacy activities.
Learning the code - decode, understand punctuation...
Making meaning - awareness of what you are doing
Thinking critically - evaluating, purpose, my response, what do I think?
These all work together at the same time - fluent readers do automatically.
Integrating sources of information -
Diagram in literacy progression.
What children bring to the text is so important
Knowledge and experiences
Meaning
Language structure
Shapes and sounds
Partner task
Group 1- The literacy framework.
Group 2: Integrating sources of information
Group 1 task:
Learning the code is…
basic level- read and write.
More advance- build on basic skills, increase on vocal, more complex text structures, visual features/ diagrams.
Making meaning:
involves understanding the text are written for a range of purpose for audience
Thinking critically:
considers different perspectives and the different intentions of the text.
Reflecting on them, finding rewards in being a reader… and writer.
What does all this mean when teaching reading?
Using a range of codes, understand who the writing if for, reading a range of more complex text to apply their skills.
Think and talk about the learning and how to apply the learning of new concepts.
Advance readers will automatically do all three together - make connections reading and writing. Deliberate acts- control of their knowledge.
Prior knowledge, pull the text apart with discuss, word knowledge.
The literacy Context:
Effective literacy
The New Zealand Curriculum - is central.
Reading and writing standards
Learning through talk
By the end of year 4:
locate, evaluate information and ideas (navigate, have read it and understood, vocabulary…)
Within text
By the end of year 5 and 6:
Locate evaluate, and integrate information and ideas
within and across a small range of text (pulling information from a range of texts and link it together across a small range of texts)
By the end of year 7 and 8:
Locate, evaluate, and synthesis information and ideas- (synthesis- a new idea is developed)
Within and across a range of text
Reading to learn for a curriculum purpose -
Reading to learn strategies- tools to achieve a purpose (many strategies working together).
Reading and writing as interactive tools:
This means that students read and write texts in ways that help them:
Organise their thinking
construct and create meaning
communicate information and ideas in print and electronic text, an
reveal their developing knowledge of content across the curriculum
Introduce the purpose for reading-
Why are we reading this…. introduce the text. Reading has a purpose … find out information or pleasure.
Need to tell the students about the purpose - why are they reading it and why its important… before the W.A.L.T.
Introduction important to the text.
Need to keep showing students how to keep using taught strategies.
By the end of year 6- they need to have a combination of strategies use them independently.
A note on …. comprehension strategies
Students need to be able to use some key comprehension strategies by the end of year 4, with some support, and be able to select from a repertoire of comprehension strategies by the end of year 6, mostly by themselves.
Specific strategies instruction needed
Teaching of strategies sports a wider reading/learning purpose.
By the end of year 6, student need to understand how strategies work in combination to meet reading purposes.
Very important to show and model your enjoyment around reading. Also model the purpose for reading.
High 5 strategies: Enhancing comprehension
Sue Dimick
Activating prior knowledge
Questioning
Analyzing text structure
Creating mental images
Summarising (quite highly skilled task)
Kids need to be ask question - not the teacher asking question.
Activating prior knowledge: High 5! #1
Make connections between what they know, what they have experienced…with what they are reading
Differentiate between back ground knowledge that is useful for their reading purpose, and background knowledge that isn’t useful?
Articulate how back ground knowledge helps them to enhance their understanding of what they are reading.
Need to be thinking in relation to the text.
High 5!#2: Questioning
When reading, can your students:
Ask ‘wondering’ questions?
ask question to clarify confusions?
Search for specific information that answers their question, think and search question, beyond the text questions.
Language of the learning areas:
Each learning area has its own language or languages. As students discover how to use them, they find they are able to think in different ways, access new areas of knowledge and see their world from new perspectives.
Using the proper language.
For each area , students need specific help from their teachers as they learn:
Specific language to that area.
Partner task- essence statements
Health and PE
recipe reading
personal goal setting -fitness goals
understand specific exercise by understanding the exercise
Puberty-
healthy community and environment - reading, talking about finding out about their own and others wellbeing. More opinion based - facts/opinions.
How they contribute to healthy communities - promoting supportive physical and emotional environments - role playing...
achievement awards - community task
Need to make connection more with what we are currently doing.
High 5!#3 Analysing text structure
Recognise common text purposes ( to narrate, to describe, to recount, to explain..etc..)
Recognise common text structures for fiction and non fiction text (sequential descriptive, persuasive, problem - solution, cause and effect. compare and contrast?0
Negotiate continuous and non-contiguous text.
Recognise different text types within a text?
Recognise and use specific language and visual features of the text?
Look for the text structure by noting key words, subheadings, etc. that reveal the text structure
Recognise and use signal or cue words
Follow and keep track of pronoun references
Build ideas within and across increasingly complex sentences
Articulate how using knowledge of text structure helps them to read and understand the text.
Purpose - what has the author done to achieve their purpose?
High 5! #4 Creating mental images
Its probably not what you think…
Visualise how the text is structures as they read.
Can they read like architects?
Can they see the ribs and bones of the text.
My reflection-
Find out more about passive and active voice.
How to ensure during my guided reading I promote student to ask questions - not just me as the teacher.
Not to rush through texts….. spend more time on them.
Sometimes start teaching/train students by using a lower level text - one they can easily read.
Afternoon session:
A closer look at the PaCt reading framework.
Measuring how students are using reading across the curriculum.
What it looks like when students are using their reading across the curriculum.
The following aspect comprise the reading framework
What are the knowledge and skills a reader needs?
Reading for literacy experience
Acquiring and using ideas & information in informational texts
Reading to organise ideas and information for reading
Making sense if get: reading critically
Making sense of text: vocabular
Making sense of text: text structure
Making sense of text: processing system
The components of an illustration
Annotation - The interpretation of the response and why it fits
Text and task
Student response- What the student does or says
Looked at Tevins response to the task.
Pre-reading task……. read to find out….
What is the place for fiction in reading to learn?
Empathy cultural values
High 5!#5
Summarising
Can you students:
Delete irrelevant details?
Combine similar ideas?
Condense the main ideas?
Connect major themes into concise statements (that capture the purpose.
Connected-
Fact or fiction?
Purpose for writing
text structures generally mirror how scientist communicate ideas and information
includes content relating to NOS
each year a different
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