Reading Strategies

Scaffolding Students' Interactions

with Texts

 

Click on any of the reading strategies below to access ideas and resources for using this strategy in your classroom.

 

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Annolighting
A Text

This active reading strategy links concept of highlighting key words and phrases in a text and annotating those highlights with marginal notes.  

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Annotating
A Text

Annotating a text is an effective strategy to promote active and critical reading skills; this strategy provides a number useful acronyms that students can use to remember different elements of writer's craft when reading and annotating a text.

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Anticipation
Guide

Anticipation guides are typically used as a pre-reading strategy and help to engage students in thought and discussion about ideas and concepts that they will encounter in the text.

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Checking out the Framework

This strategy provides students with suggestions for previewing texts of different genre in order to read strategically based on their purposes for reading the text.

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Collaborative Annotation

This strategy engages students in a process of co-constructing their interpretations of a text through a collaborative annotation activity.

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Conversations
Across Time

This reading strategy helps students to develop deeper insights by making connections between and across texts from different time periods in response to a common topic, theme, or essential question.

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Dense Questioning

The dense questioning strategy can be used to help students pose increasingly dense questions as they make text-to-text, text-to-self, text-to-world connections.

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Frame of Reference

The frame of reference strategy teaches students how to create a mental context for reading a passage; this is accomplished by helping students to consider what they know about a topic and how they know what they know.

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Inferential
Reading

The inferential reading strategy provides a list of the various types of inferences that readers make while reading even seemingly straightforward text; recognizing that there are different types of inferences helps students to analyze text more consciously and strategically.

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Interactive
Notebook

This highly adaptable strategy encourages students to use a two-column note-taking strategy.  In the right column, they take notes to synthesize essential ideas and information from a text, presentation, film etc.; in the left-hand column, they interact with the content in any way they choose (personal connections, illustrations, etc.).

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Key Concept Synthesis

The key concept synthesis strategy helps students to identify the most important ideas in a text, put those ideas into their own words, and then make connections between among these important ideas

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Listening to Voice

This strategy helps students to analyze and interpret writer's voice through the annotation of a passage, with particular emphasis on dictions, tone, syntax, unity, coherence, and audience.

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Metaphor Analysis

This adaptable strategy teaches students how to analyze a complex metaphor and substantiate interpretive claims using textual evidence.

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Parallel
Note-taking

The parallel note-taking strategy teaches students to recognize different organizational patterns for informational texts and then develop a note-taking strategy that parallels the organization of the text.

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QAR:
Question-Answer Relationships

The QAR strategy helps students to identify the four Question-Answer Relationships that they are likely to encounter as they read texts and attempt to answer questions about what they have read.  These include "right there" questions, "think and search" questions, "author and you" questions, and "on my own" questions. 

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Questions Only

The questions only strategy teaches students how to pose questions about the texts they are reading and encourages them to read actively as they work to answer the questions they have posed. 

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RAFT

This is a flexible post-reading strategy that helps students to analyze and reflect upon their reading through persona writing.  Based on suggestions provided by the teacher or generated by the class, students choose a Role, an Audience, a Format, and a Topic on which to write in response to their reading.

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Reciprocal
Teaching

The reciprocal teaching strategy enables students to activate four different comprehension strategies - predicting, questioning, clarifying, summarizing - which they apply collaboratively to help each other understand a text they are reading.

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Sociograms

A sociogram is a visual representation of the relationships among characters in a literary text.  Students can make use of pictures, symbols, shapes, colors, and line styles to illustrate these relationships, to understand the traits of each character, and to analyze the emerging primary and secondary conflicts.

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Think Aloud

Skillful readers unconsciously use a range of strategies to make meaning from text.  The think aloud strategy involves modeling these strategies by "thinking aloud" while reading and responding to a text.  By making explicit for students what is implicit for more expert readers, it becomes possible for students develop and apply these strategies themselves.

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Transactional Reading Journal

The name of this reading strategy is inspired by the work of Louise Rosenblatt (1978), who explained reading as a transactional process that occurs between the text and the reader.  The Transactional Reading Journal builds on this concept (via Jude Ellis) and provides a flexible framework for engaging students in a process of active and personally meaningful interaction with a text.

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Writer's Craft Seminar

This reading strategy teaches students how to analyze text through close reading in order to formulate a interpretive thesis that is supported through assertions and textual evidence.  Students present their interpretations to the class through a seminar format.


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