1. The document describes a lesson plan where teachers introduce students to the QAR (Question Answer Relationship) strategy to help improve reading comprehension. Students are asked to reflect on how QAR helped their learning.
2. The next steps suggested include having students apply QAR to additional readings by generating their own questions about the text and categorizing them. Teachers should assess student understanding of QAR and the story.
3. More modeling and guided practice is recommended to help students independently compose QAR questions and apply the strategy to both literary and informational texts.
1. The document describes a lesson plan where teachers introduce students to the QAR (Question Answer Relationship) strategy to help improve reading comprehension. Students are asked to reflect on how QAR helped their learning.
2. The next steps suggested include having students apply QAR to additional readings by generating their own questions about the text and categorizing them. Teachers should assess student understanding of QAR and the story.
3. More modeling and guided practice is recommended to help students independently compose QAR questions and apply the strategy to both literary and informational texts.
1. The document describes a lesson plan where teachers introduce students to the QAR (Question Answer Relationship) strategy to help improve reading comprehension. Students are asked to reflect on how QAR helped their learning.
2. The next steps suggested include having students apply QAR to additional readings by generating their own questions about the text and categorizing them. Teachers should assess student understanding of QAR and the story.
3. More modeling and guided practice is recommended to help students independently compose QAR questions and apply the strategy to both literary and informational texts.
1. The document describes a lesson plan where teachers introduce students to the QAR (Question Answer Relationship) strategy to help improve reading comprehension. Students are asked to reflect on how QAR helped their learning.
2. The next steps suggested include having students apply QAR to additional readings by generating their own questions about the text and categorizing them. Teachers should assess student understanding of QAR and the story.
3. More modeling and guided practice is recommended to help students independently compose QAR questions and apply the strategy to both literary and informational texts.
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After Reading/Learning (10 minutes)
Literacy outcome: Students will identify how the QAR strategy helped them to be metacognitive.
Teacher facilitation: When there are about 10 minutes remaining in the class period, tell students they will be doing a Quick Write. 1) Ask them to describe metacognitively (thinking about their thinking), in one to two thoughtful paragraphs, how using QAR helped their learning today and what questions, if any, remain about QAR. 2) Collect the students lists of questions and the Quick Writes as students leave.
Like all student-completed literacy strategy templates, these student-generated questions and Quick Writes provide valuable data for teacher reflection. These should not be graded. The student responses should be used to assess student learning and make decisions about next steps in teaching. Suggested Subsequent Lessons
Teachers should review the Quick Writes and student-generated questions to assess student learning of the strategy and their understanding of the story. In the next class, pass the question sheets back to the students. Students should complete the reading of the story using the Paired Reading strategy, if this did not happen in the first lesson, and generate a minimum of six good questions. Then students should work together to formulate an answer and based on the thinking required to respond to the question, label each of their questions according to QAR type. Then each pair should decide which are their two best or most interesting questions. When everyone has completed the story and their list of questions, ask students to take turns sharing the questions with the whole class, engaging students in a discussion of these questions. A pair should share the question and before anyone answer the question, the other students should be asked to identify to which QAR category the question belongs. When all pairs have shared one of the questions they thought was a good question, the teacher could engage students in a discussion about critical reading and the types of questions and thinking that generate critical reading using the Think and Search, Author and Me, and On My Own questions. After additional modeling and guided practice, students may eventually compose QAR questions independently with literary text and/or with informational text. As students become more comfortable using QAR, it might also be paired with Reciprocal Teaching. 2 High School English Lesson Narrative: Short Stories
Teachers: As you read the lesson narrative, think about the following questions. You may want to discuss them with fellow English teachers. What does the teacher do to support students literacy development and content learning before, during, and after reading/learning? What challenges do you anticipate if you were to implement this lesson in your own classroom? How would you prepare to meet these challenges? How would you make improvements to this lesson?
Mrs. Plaziak was excited to begin the unit on short stories with her ninth grade class after finishing up the first unit of the year on poetry. The students made connections between popular music lyrics and poetry and enjoyed writing and performing original raps for their peers. But she knew her students were having a difficult time getting beyond literal understanding of the reading they had been doing. They would need explicit instruction on how to read and respond more thoughtfully to text and improve their reading comprehension, as well as help to build stamina for reading these longer texts written at grade level, which for many would be above their ability level. She chose to focus on a high leverage questioning strategy (originally developed by Taffy Raphael, 1982, 1986) called QAR to help students develop some strategies to engage actively with the text in the first short story.
Before Reading/Learning Mrs. Plaziak explained she would be introducing a new strategy for this lesson. She projected an image of The Scream for the whole class to see. Mrs. Plaziak asked, How many people are in this image? Charlisse raised her hand. There are three men. Mrs. Plaziak asked what Charlisse had to do in order to answer that question. Charlisse answered, I looked at the image. Its right there. Mrs. Plaziak asked if she had to search to find the answer and Charlisse said, No. Mrs. Plaziak wrote the question on the chart paper and labeled itRight There. Mrs. Plaziak said, Its a Right There question, because you only had to look in one place in the image.
Mrs. Plaziak asked a second question. What is the setting in this image? Among several waving hands, she called on a quiet student named Sam. Sam said, Its during the day, on a bridge, near the ocean or a river. Sam, what did you have to do to answer that question? Sam said that he looked around the image to see the swirling water, the handrail, and the boardwalk. Mrs. Plaziak probed, Sam did you have to look in more than one spot to answer the question? Sam nodded. Thanks, Sam. This type of question is called a Think and Search, because you had to look in more than one place to answer the question. She added the question and label to the chart paper for all the class to see.
For the third question, Mrs. Plaziak asked, Do you think the man in the foreground is the protagonist or hero, or is he the antagonist or villain? Mrs. Plaziak wrote the question on the chart paper to reinforce the terms protagonist/antagonist for students. Jasmine said, I think hes a villain. His eyes look scary to me. And very intense. Ron objected, Hes not scary looking, he looks like hes panicked. Or trying to get away from something maybe. After a few minutes students weighed in on the question without a clear consensus and becoming increasingly confused. Mrs. Plaziak asked what kind of thinking students had to do to answer the question. Ron hesitated, but offered, We looked at the mans face in the image and tried to read the emotion on his facesome of us thought he looked mean and others thought he looked worried. Whats the right answer? Mrs. Plaziak said, So Ron, I think Im hearing you say you 3 looked at the image and you thought about what the man was feeling. Ron agreed that was what hed done. Mrs. Plaziak labeled the questionAuthor and Me, while explaining you couldnt answer the question only by looking at the image, but you had to use the knowledge in your head as well. Jasmine said, So Im still confused. What is the right answer? Is the man a protagonist or an antagonist? Mrs. Plaziak emphasized that getting the right answer is not as important at this point as analyzing the thinking needed to answer the question. Jasmine, lets take another look at the question. Can you definitively say whether the man is a protagonist or antagonist? Jasmine thought, No, its asking you to make a prediction or like give your opinion. Mrs. Plaziak inquired, In that case, could your answer and Rons both be correct at this point? Jasmine said, Yes, were both entitled to our opinions and we gave evidence to support our opinions. Other students nodded.
For the last question, Mrs. Plaziak asked, What kinds of things make a person scream? Al, a tall, burly student raised his hand and said; Nothing makes me scream. But my sister screams when were watching scary movies. Yes, fear can make you scream. Al, what kind of thinking did you use to answer this question? Did you look at the image? Al said his sister puts her hands on her face and screams when shes scared and it reminded him of the face in the picture. So you just used the knowledge in your headnot the imageto answer the question, Al? As Al nodded affirmatively, Mrs. Plaziak wrote the question and labelOn My Own.
Good work, class! We worked hard just now to put thinking at the heart of answering questions about an image or visual text. Next, well be ratcheting up our thinking to answering questions about text that will be a little more challenging than the image. If no one has any further questions, lets dig into the text. She asked students to open the book to The Most Dangerous Game.
Mrs. Plaziak projected a short section of The Most Dangerous Game on the overhead and asked students to follow along with her in their own texts as she read aloud several chunks of text without stopping. Then she stopped and told her students Im going to begin with a Right There question: How many days will it take until the men reach Rio? Well, she said, pointing to the lines in the text where she found the answer, Whitney said We should make it in a few days so I think theyll be on this boat for a couple of days. Then she told them she would come up with a Think and Search question. What are the men going to Rio to do? I know they are talking about hunting. And Whitney said he hoped the jaguar guns would be in at Purdys, which I guess must be a store, and he thought theyd have good hunting up the Amazon. And Rainsford told Whitney Youre a big game hunter, not a philosopher, and they were talking about whether a jaguar feels fear. So I think they were going to go to the Amazon to hunt jaguar. Do you see how I had to look in a few places to search through this section of text for evidence, and then I pieced the evidence together to determine what it is Rainsford and Whitney were planning to do in Rio? Some of the students nodded. She decided they needed to try some of this with a partner as she continued on. Now, Ill ask the question, and you turn to a partner and talk about how to find the answer. Heres the first one: What social class do Rainsford and Whitney belong to? Someone said, Huh? But Mrs. Plaziak continued. What kind of people do you think they are? Everyday working people, poor people, privileged people? Talk to each other and use the lines we just read. She gave them a minute and listened to the kind of thinking students were doing in their pairs. I heard some of you saying they were on a yacht, and your own knowledge about yachts and who usually has yachts helped you to determine the fact that Rainsford and Whitney might be upper-class or wealthy people. Great! One more: When have you felt most afraid and what were you afraid of? Turn and talk with your partner about your greatest fear, and then decide what kind of question that is.
4 Mrs. Plaziak circulated for just a minute or two, smiling as students became a bit animated in their discussions about personal fears and events. Then she explained to them that, although Whitney discusses fear with Rainsford, there is nothing in the text that can help them answer this question. They were On Their Own to come up with a response. However, by thinking about fear in this way, it may help them to understand the story.
During Reading/Learning Mrs. Plaziak asked the class to choose a partner for Paired Reading. She gave them a few minutes to move around and get settled in pairs, and then she gave directions. Read to the part in the story where Rainsford falls off the boat and hears the sound of an animal in terror. You can read the story on your own or you can use the Paired Reading strategy. When you have both read to the stopping point, work together to answer the four questions I have put up on the blackboard. Then discuss and decide based on the thinking you needed to do to answer each question, which category of QAR each question is. Why are the sailors jittery when they pass the island? How does the author create a sense of foreboding? What is the relationship between Whitney and Rainsford? What will happen to Rainsford after he falls off the yacht?
You will have 15 minutes to read, answer, and label the questions together and you may continue reading the story after you finish with your questions. Mrs. Plaziak continued to circulate. She stopped to listen to certain students as they read aloud in their pairs. She listened to them read, noting which students were reading fluently and which students were working harder to read the text. She realized she might have to assign pairs in the future to make sure some of her students werent struggling too much during the reading.
The room got louder as the pairs began to discuss the questions on the board, their answers, and the types of questions. When all students had finished the assignment, Mrs. Plaziak asked them to report out as a whole class. What kind of thinking was needed to answer the first question? Students were slow to respond, but she waited a few minutes. Someone finally called out, Think and Search. Mrs. Plaziak asked, And the rest of you, do you agree? A few others nodded tentatively, so she emphasized the importance of taking this analytical stance with questioning the text. You want to be thinking about how you develop understanding when you read a story. This QAR strategy will help you. Lets keep at it. When all questions had been answered, and the class discussed what kind of thinking was necessary to get those answers, Mrs. Plaziak told her students they would continue to read the story and formulate their own questions with their partners. When they finished reading, they would work with their partners to formulate answers to their questions, using the text evidence as much as possible. Tomorrow each pair would discuss and agree on the type of QAR category each question belonged to. Dont worry about types of questions up front. Just come u
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