Monday, February 17, 2014

Comprehension Strategies: Schema Part 3 - Making Connections

Students learned that readers comprehend better when they actively think about and apply their knowledge of a book's topic as we tapped into our schema to read nonfiction. Now, I begin to teach students how they can use their schema to make connections to fiction stories. Stephanie Harvey and Anne Goudvis state, "When children understand how to connect the text they read to their lives, they begin to make connections between what they read and the larger world. This nudges them into thinking about bigger, more expansive issues beyond their universe of home, school, and neighborhood." (Strategies that Work, 2000)

So I start again by using a launching activity from Comprehension Connections (McGregor, 2007). Around the room I hang up four picture by Norman Rockwell - High Dive, Day in the Life of a Boy, Day in the Life of Girl, and Surprise. I have students browse the pictures with a partner. I encourage students to discuss what the pictures remind them of and leave behind a sticky with their thoughts.

They learn the first thinking/talking stems for making connections:
  • This reminds me of . . . 
  • I'm remembering . . . 
I explain that readers use their schema when reading fiction in lots of way, but for this first day I only show them one way, making text to self connections. I use a visual of paper clips joining a book and a die cut of a person. I tell them "Connections are like chains or bridges, they connect our schema with what we are reading. We hear our inner voice saying, 'this reminds me of . . '

The First Connection Lesson

My first read aloud lesson on making connections comes from Stephanie Harvey's Primary Comprehension Toolkit. As I read aloud Patches Lost and Found By: Steven Kroll, I model making a text to self  and text to text connections, explaining how it is helping me understand what I'm reading. I then guide student into jotting down and drawing their connections as I continue reading. After reading the book, I transfer my connection to a two column think sheet. One side states "My Connection" then other "How it helps me".  I explain how I was able to understand the character's emotions because I experienced something similar. Students try the same as I float and confer. We then share our think sheets.
terrible quality . . . but you get the idea
We focus on Text to Self connections for a couple days. Each day we read a book, record our connections and discuss how it's impacting our understanding.

Snippets 

The snippet lesson comes from Strategies That Work.  To avoid long drawn out stories, it uses the book Snippets By: Charlotte Zolotow to illustrate how we can write about tiny pieces of our lives. I model choose a snippet from the text and connect it to my life, another text, or big idea. I then respond, by writing a snippet of my own. Students then choose a snippet and try to respond to it in their literacy notebooks.



Rating Our Connections Lesson

 One of the earliest reads I use is, Ira Sleeps Over by: Bernard Waber. As we read I give students opportunites to turn and talk about their connections. Since this is one of the first books, I offer some scaffolding by giving the students starting points. For example, "turn and talk about what you like to do a sleepover" or "talk about a time when you were excited for a play date like Ira is." After reading I have the students record one of their connections to a post-it and collect them for the following day.


The next day we discuss the difference between a deep connection and flat connection. I introduce the students to our Meaty Connection Picture Rubric. We discuss what makes a connection a deep connection and then rate the previous days connections on the rubric. We come to the conclusion that the best connections include details and feelings.



Some books that I use for Text to Self Connections: 
  • Lily's Purple Plastic Purse By: Kevin Henkes
  • Owen By: Kevin Henkes
  • Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day By: Judith Viorst
  • Earrings By:  Judith Viorst 
  • Knuffle Bunny By: Mo Willems
  • The Relatives Came By: Cynthia Rylant
  • The Snowy Day By: Ezra Jack Keats
  • The Two of Them By: Alikia
  • Andrew’s Loose Tooth By: Robert Munsch
  • Sick Day By: Patricia MacLachlan
  • My Rotten Red-Headed Older Brother  By: Patricia Polacco
Once students have a good understanding of text to self connections, we begin learning about the other types of connections. 

Three Types of Connections Lesson:

I begin by introducing an anchor chart and the three types of connection. I show the chain visual that they saw earlier for text to self, but this time add in the ones for text to text and text to self.



Then I begin reading Knuffle Bunny Too By: Mo Willems. Stopping and modeling my thinking.

Stop and Talk:
  1. When Trixis is excited to take her Knuffle bunny to school -  “ This reminds me of my first day of 7th grade, I was so excited to show all my friends my new outfit. It was the first time I didn’t have to wear a uniform, I was as excited as Trixie”   Explain that this a text to self connection, the TEXT is reminding you have something that has happened to mySELF (T2S).  I invite students to assemble their own text to self puppet.
  2. When Trixie has the bunny taken away - “This reminds me of Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse. The teacher took Lily’s purse away. I remember that Lilly got it back at the end of the day, I bet the teacher will give Trixie her bunny back at the end of the day” Explain that is a text to text connection, one TEXT (Knuffle Bunny Too) is reminding me of another TEXT (Lily’s purple plastic purse)  (T2T).  Invite students assemble their own text to text puppet.
  3. When Trixie makes her first friend in Sonja - “This reminds me of how kids often make their first friend, it usually happens by accident because they have something in common.” Explain this is Text to World connection, because the TEXT is reminding of a big idea, friendship, that happens across the WORLD (T2W). Invite  students assemble their own text to world puppet.
Now that I have modeled for the students, I relinquish some of the responsibly and guide them through determining the different types of connections. We visit blue ribbon readers website. As students watch and listen to the children on the screen make connections, they hold up their puppets to indicate which type of connection it is. 


Finally, students practice this identification of different types of connections independently by listening to a song and writing their connection on post-it notes. They then stick their post-its on our chart by based on whether they made a T2S, T2T, or T2W connection.  Some song suggestions: Rachel Delevoryas By: Randy Stonehill, We’re going to be friends By: White Stripes, Popular By: Kristin Chenoweth, Old Blue By: Byrds, You’ve got a friend in me By: Randy Newman

 Text to Text Connections

 The next step is taking students through story comparisons. I span each set of books over 2 to 3 days. One day we read aloud and make text to self connections, then by day 3 we are comparing the two stories making text to text connections. 

Here are some book combinations:

Sometimes I'm Bombaloo and When Sophie Gets Really Really Angry
       

Dooby Dooby Moo and Punk Farm
   

Good Boy Fergus     and    No David
          


 Ira Sleeps Over   and   Weekend at Wendell's
  


Bootsie Barker Bites   and  Mean Jean the Recess Queen
        


At the end of the unit, we discuss all we've learned about connections and why we should record them and try to connect every time we read. Here is our final anchor chart.


I also end up with a lot of work samples from my kiddos to show their understanding of making connections.  Here are a look at some. 
Again I use a lot of the graphic organizers from Hello Literacy 

By the time we have finished this unit, students have made connections to so many characters, places, and themes. They have learned that through making connections, one can vicariously live through the pages.

"All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you: the good and the bad, the ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was."  –Ernest Hemingway

Comprehension Strategies: Schema Part 2 - Tapping Into Our Schema When Reading Non-Fiction

"Our responsibility is to help build students' background knowledge so that they can read independently to gain new information." - Strategies That Work


After helping students to understand this huge concept of schema*, we begin seeing how it influences our understanding of Non-fiction texts.


I teach student's to "tap into their schema" before they read a new nonfiction book. I explain that we have "mental files" that holds our schema for certain topics.  I create a reusable anchor chart that when closed looks like a file folder but when opened has a place for us to place our schema, new learning, and any misconceptions. I don't have a picture of my anchor chart available, but here is a "recreation".
As always I start by modeling, having the book up when I am reading and down when I am thinking. I let the students hear when I have an ah-ha moment, when I learn something new, and when I get a confused my new information, bridging it back to my prior knowledge. We move into shared studies of different informational texts, each time charting our thinking.

Here are some anchor chart examples of how you might chart your student's learning. I've posted the teacher's blog that they came from below for ideas on how they used them in class.
http://mscrowleysclass.blogspot.com/2012/01/penguins.html
http://thegoodlife-lindsay.blogspot.com/2011/10/creepy-crawly-spiders.html
http://mrswilliamsonskinders.blogspot.com/
Of course, I also expect students to record their own thinking and to practice this strategy independently.I use these graphic organizers from Hello Literacy. Her Common Core bundles are full of wonderful graphic organizers and ideas.


 Eventually, the students' reading binders become full of little mental files on different topics they read throughout the year.




*I've divided this topic into three posts: Part 1 - Introduction, Part 2 - Prior Knowledge and New Learning, and Part 3 - Making Connections.
*

Comprehension Strategies: Schema Part 1: Introduction

Now that students realize that reading is thinking and that good readers pay attention to their "inner voice", I can start to explain/name the strategies that their "inner voice" is taking them through. 

I start with explaining what schema is  using a strategy from Tanny McGregor's Comprehension Connections:
I name the word and explain it is all the things that they have in their head - like the people we know. I tell the students some small stories from my life, for example, how I love playing with my best friend, Jenna.  As I talk about some of our favorite games I write her name on small piece of paper.  I say "it's also the places we've been." I write down a vacation spot that my students have heard me talk and write about before. "It's also the things you know", writing down cooking on another strip of paper. I conclude giving examples of books I've read, experiences I've had, and information I've seen on T.V - each time writing the topic/person/place on small piece of paper. I can see their curiosity building - they want to hear more about my life and wonder why I am writing all this information down. Then I explain, as we go through life our brain remembers all this stuff. It's like a lint roller. Pulling out the largest roller I can find and rolling it over my strips of paper, I show students how all those little papers stick to roller just like the actual people and experiences are stuck in my head. This concrete visualization spurs students to start sharing their experiences and knowledge with one in another. They hurry to piles of paper strips on their desk and begin writing  . . . strip after strip. Comparing their knowledge to each other - already beginning the strategy of making connections.  "I've been to Disney too!" Then each student rolls up their schema and we display it as a reminder of how much we already know!
For homework, I ask students to complete The Many Pieces of My Graphic Organizer created by Linda Teese.
I also love this little creativity from  Amy at Milk and Cookies.


 The next day we begin learning how that schema, sometimes referred to as prior knowledge helps us understand our reading. We begin the lesson by doing the One Minute Determiner activity also found in Comprehension Connections. I split the paper into a t-chart. I write a familiar topic on one side. I give the students 1 minute to share their schema, writing it down as they shout it out. I repeat the activity on the other side with a topic I know they don't have schema for. Afterwards, I have students turn and talk about why there is such a different in the two topics. We sum up by writing SCHEMA down the right side. "Schema makes the difference!" I tell children I can tell they have a lot of schema for Cedar Point, but none for the Adirondacks. I explain that I have been to the Adirondacks so I have schema for it, sharing bits of my experience.

From here we beginning diving into Non-Fiction and use our schema to help us prepare to read and understand different non-fiction texts. Read about it in the post titled Comprehension Strategies: Schema Part 2 - Tapping into our Schema to Understand Non-Fiction.
*Once I finish writing up the entire Schema Unit, I will post my resources on my TPT store.