remember the importance of and rationale for "tracks of our thinking"   I ran 
into this issue with primary teachers at my old school.  Kids were having 
strong discussions but I knew they were going to need to write on the state 
test (it was actually a good performance test int hose days).  But it's more 
than test prep.  There is so much value in rereading one's reponses and going 
deeper and so on...


From: "Jones, Rex" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 2007/01/17 Wed PM 05:40:17 CST
To: 
        "Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Listserv" 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Mosaic Digest, Vol 5, Issue 15

I agree with you, Joy.  Interestingly enough, our students didn't do too well 
this year on the Connecticut Mastery Test in the area of making connections.  
The funny part of that is that we teach our students explicitly how to make 
connections verbally.  I've done demonstrations lessons in our classrooms, and 
our teachers teach our students religiously how to make connections.  Our 
students can even tell us the various kinds of connections readers make to the 
texts they read.  The key on our state test, though, is that our students need 
to WRITE about the connections they make, and we seem to assume that if our 
kids can talk about their connections, they can write about them as well--go 
back into the text to validate their answers to questions.  And I don't think 
they're doing that.  Our kids figure if they answer the question correctly, 
they've done what they need to do.  State tests, however, require some kind of 
validation.  How do we address this?

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Joy
Sent: Wed 1/17/2007 5:12 PM
To: Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Listserv
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Mosaic Digest, Vol 5, Issue 15



Funny, my students who have been diagnosed with learning differences do fine 
with inferring, it's finding facts and details within the text that they 
struggle with. I think all the years of not "getting" it have made them very 
good at taking sketchy information and stitching it together to make sense. 
This is just my unsceintific observation. I noticed this in second grade, as 
well.



                Joy/NC/4
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  How children learn is as important as what they learn: process and content go 
hand in hand. http://www.responsiveclassroom.org
  










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