Hi everyone,
I have been developing some ideas for teaching non-fiction text structures  
that have really been helping my second graders internalize this abstract  
concept. 
 
Two of these I have mentioned before:
On the To Understand list, Peter posted a lesson on using a dresser analogy  
to teach nonfiction. If you look on the To Understand archives on the  
readinglady.com home page under a Wow Moment...you'll find it. The idea  behind 
the 
dresser is that just like you have a sock drawer and a sweatshirt  drawer in 
your dresser...where you can open that drawer you will be easily able  to find 
what you need. Non fiction books have drawers too... the subtitles help  the 
reader know what he or she will find in that section.  I used Peter's  idea 
with 
great success. It is a great lesson.
 
My colleague and I then branched out and used a staircase to teach the  
chronological/sequential text structures of biographies. As they read a simple  
biography of Dr. Seuss, the kids identified what the author wanted them to 
learn  
in each section...then we laid those ideas out on sentence strips on a stair  
case. Kids quickly realized that unlike books organized like a dresser, you  
can't just hop to any part of the book as easily and have it make  sense...you 
need to know what comes before and after. 
 
After teaching those two...we gave kids a choice and they had to figure out  
if the books they chose to read were like a dresser or like a staircase...and  
they totally got it! These are kids that are all below level but are  
internalizing these abstract concepts. I think they are getting it because we  
are 
taking our time and teaching for depth... The concrete models help but I  think 
 
the way we have asked the kids to discover for themselves how a book  is like 
a dresser or staircase has helped too. Constructed knowledge is powerful  
knowledge.
 
This week, we have started discussing descriptive text structures. I  brought 
to school a floor length mirror and laid it on its side in the  middle of the 
classroom rug. I asked the kids to think about how a book  could be like a 
mirror. I divided the class in half...one on the side of  the mirror, the other 
seeing only the back of the mirror. We began the lesson by  putting objects in 
front of the mirror and  the kids on the mirror side had  to start describing 
the object to the kids who couldn't see the object on the  other side. The 
key here was they had to describe what they saw in the  mirror...they couldn't 
just start telling all they knew about it. The idea  behind the mirror was to 
first help kids know what describing really was  and THEN move it to an 
abstract level. They told what they saw in  the mirror...and the nonfiction 
book was 
really the mirror and you as the  reader can see what aspects of the object 
the author wants you to see! Does that  make sense? Then we used Tomie 
DePaalo's 
Quicksand book to identify  portions of it that were like a mirror...the 
parts telling you all about the  features of quicksand. 
 
I wasn't sure if this mirror thing would work but I have to tell you it  
really did help second graders get the idea that some books use words  to show 
you 
what something is like...you can get a picture of it...just  like a 
reflection in the mirror. Tomorrow we will make our own list of what  
descriptive text 
structures are like.
 
Later this week, we are going to do cause and effect structures.... We are  
thinking of using a light bulb with a pull string for an analogy for this  
one...but I am open to ideas! 
 
This is the first time I have really spent this much time on text  structures 
with little people but it is paying dividends in comprehension. It  seems to 
be helping them determine importance. 
I would love to explore that idea with the rest of you...
Have any of you taught determining importance with text structures? How has  
it worked for you?
Jennifer
 
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