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Classroom Connections: Introduce Annotation

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  • čas přidán 16. 01. 2019
  • "Class, when reading, be sure to take notes, too. Use your highlighter and sticky notes. Mark up the text while you read."
    This is a familiar command in many classrooms. Often teachers require students to annotate the text--and they comply. But for some students, annotation is just a task; it's just something the teacher makes them do. Too many students don't know what they should be marking and/or why they should be noticing it. The secret to building this essential reader habit is to provide explicit instruction connecting annotation to the Thinking Voice.
    Once students are aware of and listening to their Thinking Voices, they are ready to jot down the various thoughts they are having. Students are to note what their Thinking Voices are whispering. That's what annotation is--the documentation of the Thinking Voice.
    --If the Thinking Voice makes a connection, the reader should mark the words in the text and note the connection in the margin.
    --If the Thinking Voice creates a visualization, the reader should mark the words in the text and create a quick sketch in the margin.
    --If the Thinking Voice questions or predicts, the reader should mark the words in the text that caused the wondering, and then note the question/prediction in the margin.
    --If the Thinking Voice retells a paragraph, summarizes a chunk, identifies the main idea of a section, or generates a new understanding/synthesis, the reader should mark/bracket that portion of the text and label it in a 2-3-word phrase within the margin.
    When introducing the process of annotation, emphasize that in addition to marking (e.g., underlining, circling, highlighting, etc.) the words in the text, students MUST note their thinking. That's imperative! Readers don't just have thoughts; they have thoughts about the text. Certain words/phrases/sentences read by the Reading Voice caused the Thinking Voice to whisper. It's just as important to know what the Thinking Voice said as it is to know what words prompted the thought. This ensures that the reader is focused on the text/the author's ideas.
    The teacher should plan to model this process. Project a short passage and read it aloud. Periodically pause the Reading Voice to share a thought. While the Thinking Voice whispers the thought, underline the relevant words and note the gist of the thought in the margin. Continue this process while reading a short passage.
    The explanation above addresses WHAT annotation is. But for students to buy into this reader habit, they also need to know WHY it's important. Consequently, reveal a photograph of footprints in the snow or wet footprints on a pool deck. Reminisce about times students have "made tracks" and then looked back to see their path.
    Annotation Tracks in the Snow Annotation Tracks by the pool
    Compare this experience to annotation. Connect the white margin space on the page to the white snow (or the dry pool deck). Every time they note a reader thought in the margin, students are placing another footprint in the snow/on the deck. When they are done reading, they can look back at the journey of their thinking. This not only helps them stay engaged during reading, but also helps them recall information after reading.
    For additional lessons, resources, and graphic organizers to support this essential reader habit, check out other articles within the Annotating & Note-Taking category of the Idea Library.
    View a reading mini-lesson that introduces annotation to fifth graders. NOTE: These students had already been exposed to the Reading Voice and Thinking Voice.
    Visit the article for these downloadable resources:
    Smart Board document used in lesson
    PDF version of resources used in lesson
    www.smekensedu...

Komentáře • 18

  • @ZoeyCLR78
    @ZoeyCLR78 Před 4 lety +6

    I'm 41 years old and have struggled with reading comprehension and remembering what I've read all my life. This is by far the best explanation on how to annotate a text I've seen. Thank you so much for sharing this video it has helped me more than I can say. 😄👍🏼

    • @SmekensEducation
      @SmekensEducation  Před 4 lety

      Zoe--Thank you for taking the time to make such a kind comment. We hope that our videos will continue to encourage you. And we applaud you for being a lifetime learner!

  • @mohamednooribrahim8810
    @mohamednooribrahim8810 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Best teacher on earth🤩

  • @carolinek8311
    @carolinek8311 Před 2 lety +1

    This teacher was terrific. She was very animated and fun to watch.

  • @tracygillis6992
    @tracygillis6992 Před 4 lety +2

    Fantastic explanations that will enable me to explain annotation to my grade 7's during guided reading, thank you.

    • @SmekensEducation
      @SmekensEducation  Před 4 lety +2

      Thank you for your kind comment! If you're interested in learning more about annotation, consider visiting our website. Here are some article links that offer additional instruction as well as resources:
      www.smekenseducation.com/Annotate-Based-on-the-Reading-Purpose.html
      www.smekenseducation.com/Marks-Codes-AbbreviationsAnnota.html
      www.smekenseducation.com/Go-Beyond-Highlighting-Expect-Why-Lighting.html

  • @evamorgan3942
    @evamorgan3942 Před 4 lety +1

    I do love the modeling of the meta cognition strategies and annotating. The video picked up a bit on collaboration at about the 11 minute.

  • @maymay222ify
    @maymay222ify Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent! I am going to use this to teach my High School remediation class! Thank you!

    • @SmekensEducation
      @SmekensEducation  Před 2 lety +1

      So glad this will help you with your high school class! Check out our website for more support with annotating for struggling students: www.smekenseducation.com/what-annotation-expectations-should-i-have-for-struggling-readers/

  • @teresitaromero4325
    @teresitaromero4325 Před 4 lety +3

    You read you think and then you ink. Great

    • @SmekensEducation
      @SmekensEducation  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks, Teresita! You're right--it's that simple. We hope it will help your students!

    • @heatherhelmer5700
      @heatherhelmer5700 Před 3 lety

      I like this mnemonic device to help my students break down the text: “read about it, think about it, ink it.” Speak, visualize/imagine, write/do. :-)

  • @Jutho529
    @Jutho529 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much, as a parent it helped me so much.

  • @sabrinad.8086
    @sabrinad.8086 Před 4 lety +2

    This is SO good!!!!

  • @HeatherBrannon-g6z
    @HeatherBrannon-g6z Před 13 dny

    Gatorade and YOYO story. Anyone have the pdf