Newspaper As Informational Texts
Newspaper As Informational Texts
Newspaper As Informational Texts
Teacher’s Guide
NIE Week 2006
Dr. Sherrye Dee Garrett
Use The News Foundation
Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi
Keep It Real
Table of Contents
3 NIE Week 2006 Sponsors
5 Newspapers as Informational Text
6 Informational Text and the Newspaper
8 Fiction and Informational Text: Reader Expectations
9 National Standards and Informational Text
11 Lesson Plans and Activity Pages
12 How It Works: The Organization of the Newspaper
14 Finding Your Way: Navigational Aids in the Newspaper
16 Newspaper Connections
18 The ‘Why’ of News Stories
20 Our Right to Know
22 The Marketplace of Ideas: Editorials and Commentary in the Newspaper
24 Personal Progress
26 Look and Learn: Visual Elements in the Newspaper
28 Goods and Services: Advertising in the Newspaper
30 Gathering Data: Using the Newspaper for Research
33 Elementary Activity Sheets
44 Instructional Aids
Introduction
N I E We ek 2 0 0 6 S p o n s o r s
Newspaper In Education Week is a joint program of the Newspaper Association of America
Foundation, the International Reading Association and the National Council for the Social
Studies. It is observed the first full week of March; in 2006, NIE Week takes place March 6
through 10. The goal of the program is to reinforce a positive lifetime reading habit in students by
engaging them with an authentic text — the newspaper.
A b o u t t h e O r ga n i z at i o n s
Newspapers as
Informational Text
W h y T e ac h I n fo r m at i o na l Text?
Informational text and nonfiction are enjoying renewed interest and attention from
the world of education. National and state standards place a high priority on students being
able to read, write and think about informational materials. Many state assessments include
high percentages of informational text. Standards require students to ask questions, locate
information to find answers and evaluate sources of information. Educational publishers have
recognized the demand and are providing many new materials for schools and teachers.
Until recently, much classroom reading instruction has focused on fiction and narrative
texts. Many educators have believed that students prefer fiction and stories; many classroom
libraries contain four to five times as many fiction books as nonfiction books. Current research
disrupts those beliefs. Studies show that even primary students like nonfiction topics and texts.
They like learning about the real world, and real-world reading requires the ability to read and
understand informational text. What students need is instruction in how to read the expository
text structures found in nonfiction and informational text.
The newspaper is the ultimate informational text. This teacher’s guide provides educators
with specific activities to help students develop and extend their ability to comprehend
informational text structures and organization.
I n fo r m at i o na l T e x t a n d N o nfiction
The terms informational text and nonfiction can sometimes be confusing because they are
often used interchangeably. One way to structure their relationship is to think of a first division
between fiction, the narrative and not-true text of literature; and nonfiction, the literature of the
true, or of fact. Nonfiction is seen as the product of an author’s inquiry, research and writing. Its
purpose is to provide information, explain, argue and/or demonstrate. Certainly, the newspaper
meets all of those characteristics.
Informational text can be seen as a type of nonfiction. The characteristics of informational
text are that it:
Conveys information about the natural or social world;
Is written from someone who knows information to someone who doesn’t;
Has specialized features such as headings and technical vocabulary.
The newspaper also meets these specific characteristics. It is a logical resource for information
about the natural, social and political world. A chart illustrating how the newspaper matches specific
characteristics of informational text is included in this teacher’s guide (see pages 6-7).
Teacher’s Guide 5
Keep It Real
1. Conveys information Newspaper content provides information about the real world of
about the natural or the reader.
social world. International, national, state and local people and events are
the subjects of news and feature stories every day.
Anything that touches the lives of readers can be found in
the newspaper, from weather reports, to stock prices, to
community problems and solutions, to national decisions
that affect the country and the world.
2. Is written from someone Newspapers see themselves as primary resources for many
who knows the different kinds of information.
information to someone News is gathered and written by professional journalists who
who doesn’t know the operate under clear codes of ethics.
information. Photographs and art elements are developed by professional
photographers and artists.
Advertising is created by professionals with degrees and
backgrounds in business and marketing.
Newspapers hold all of their employees to high standards of
performance.
3. Uses navigational aids The newspaper contains a variety of navigational aids to help
such as indexes, page readers quickly find information they are seeking.
numbers and headings. Newspapers are usually divided into specific sections – such
as news, business, lifestyle and sports.
Many times, the section has its own “front page.”
Newspapers identify each page with a folio line which gives
the name of the newspaper, the date, the section and the
page number.
Newspapers may include newspaper or section content
previews with front page elements, such as “in this section”
boxes which provide information about stories inside the
section.
The classified advertising section of the newspaper has its
own index to help readers locate information quickly.
4. Uses graphic devices The newspaper uses graphic devices wherever an editor thinks
such as diagrams, that information can best be provided in a visual format.
tables, charts and maps. News stories are often accompanied by locator maps, data
charts and tables.
Feature stories and how-to columns use diagrams and
tables.
Sports stories are accompanied by box scores in tables and
data charts providing information about an individual or
team performance.
The weather page is usually dominated by national and/or
regional maps with icons indicating specific weather
predictions.
7. May have classificatory The newspaper categorizes its content in ways to make
structures. information easily accessible to readers.
The newspaper categorizes news and features by topics.
The newspaper has an index on page one which directs
readers to appropriate information.
The classified ad section categorizes ads by function.
Within each ad category, information is usually arranged
in a particular order. For example, autos might be listed by
brand name and year.
Teacher’s Guide 7
Keep It Real
The work is untrue; it may be fantasy, The work is true and accurate; that truth is
historical fiction, contemporary realistic provided by the author.
fiction, science fiction or any other genre,
You can choose to read only a part of the text.
but it is not true.
You have the option of starting at the front,
The work contains specific elements: plot,
back or middle of the text.
characters, setting, conflict, resolution and
theme. Visual elements are present to help you
access information. They can be read
The first line is the “gateway” to the text.
for meaning whether or not they are
You start reading at the beginning of the accompanied by words (photographs,
work and continue straight through until illustrations, diagrams, maps, graphs,
the end. timelines).
You begin reading at the top of each page Running text may be interrupted by visual
and travel to the bottom. elements, so you don’t always start at the top
and go to the bottom; you don’t always read
Your eyes move left-to-right.
left-to-right.
You can put the work down and pick it up
Visual elements may be read bottom-to-
later at the same point.
top, right-to-left, in a circular fashion, etc.,
You judge the quality of the work on the depending on the design of the publication.
development of the plot, theme and
Captions under visual elements may repeat
characters and the extent to which it
information from the text, contain new
entertains or engages you.
information, or describe how you should
process the visual.
S ta n da r d s fo r t h e E n g l i s h Language Arts
(Sponsored by the National Council of Teachers of English and the International Reading Association)
Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of
texts, of themselves and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire
new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the work place;
and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and
contemporary works.
Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative and critical members of a
variety of literacy communities.
M e di a L i t e r ac y S ta n da r d s
McREL (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning)
The student:
Knows characteristics of a wide range of media (e.g., television news favors messages
that are immediate and visual; news photographs favor messages with an emotional
component).
Understands the different purposes of various media (e.g., to provide entertainment or
information, to persuade, to transmit culture, to focus attention on an issue).
Understands how the type of media affects coverage of events or issues (e.g., how the
same event is covered by the radio, television and newspapers; how each medium shapes
facts into a particular point of view; how limitations and advantages of various media
affect coverage of events).
Understands various elements that recur across media (e.g., common features found
in print and broadcast advertising; the layout of magazines and newspapers, including
headlines, photographs, regular columns, feature articles and editorials).
Understands aspects of media production and distribution (e.g., different steps and
choices involved in planning and producing various media; various professionals who
Teacher’s Guide 9
Keep It Real
produce media, such as news writers, photographers, camera operators, film directors,
graphic artists, political cartoonists).
Understands the ways in which imagemakers carefully construct meaning (e.g., idea and
word choice by authors; images created by photographers; television programs created
by groups of people; photos or cutlines chosen in newspapers).
Understands influences on the construction of media messages and images (e.g., the
historical period or place in which they were made; laws that govern mass media, such
as truth in advertising; the socio-cultural background of the target audience; financial
factors such as sponsorship; cause-and-effect relationships between mass media
coverage and public opinion trends).
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to look through the
newspaper.
2. Show students copies of several days’ worth of newspapers: e.g., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, etc. Explain to students
that there are many different kinds of information in each copy of the newspaper.
3. Explain that the newspaper is carefully organized so that readers can find the information they want. One way newspapers
organize information is to put news about the same topic together. Show students the front section of the newspaper.
Explain that here they will find the most important news of the day – whether it is local, national or international news.
Point out examples of major stories.
4. In most newspapers, national and international news is in the front section of the newspaper. Show those pages to
students. Then show them where other categories of news are located in their newspaper.
Guided practice
1. Have students work in small groups to complete the activity sheet The Newspaper Works for You.
2. Have students share their responses with the class.
Assessment questions
Identify three things you noticed about the way the newspaper is organized.
Discuss a part of the newspaper that reminded you of your own life.
Discuss one type of useful information you found in the newspaper.
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
PURPOSE/ Why would it appeal Why would it appeal Why would it appeal
HEADLINE to you? to a family member? to a friend?
Inform
Entertain
Persuade
Teacher’s Guide 13
LESSON 2: Finding Your Way -
Navigational Aids in the Newspaper
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to look through the
newspaper. Encourage students to notice elements that help them identify where they are in the newspaper.
2. Use a classroom textbook or nonfiction book to model navigational aids in nonfiction. Demonstrate to students the
location and use of a table of contents, chapter titles, headings and subheadings in the text.
3. Ask students to name other parts of the book that will provide specific information, such as a glossary and an index.
4. Explain to students that newspapers are also informational text and the newspaper has its own specific aids to help
readers locate information.
5. Point to the index on page one of the newspaper. Ask students to name the textbook element that is like the index. Point out
section fronts and heads in the newspaper. Ask students to name the comparable component in a textbook (chapter headings).
6. Explain to students that some newspaper features are “anchored” – they are always found in the same spot in any copy
of the newspaper. Ask students if they know to look for a specific feature based on its location. Point out some anchored
features in your newspaper. Explain that the anchoring of features helps readers locate those features easily.
7. Now have students identify other navigational aids they can find in the newspaper.
Guided practice
1. Have students work in pairs to complete the activity sheet Find It Fast.
2. Have student pairs share their findings with the class.
Assessment questions
Describe three different types of navigational aids you found in the newspaper.
Discuss the efficiency of the navigational aids the newspaper uses.
What navigational aid did you use most frequently? Why did you use that aid?
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
4. Page head
5. Section front
7. Anchored features
How are newspaper navigational aids similar to navigational aids in your textbooks?
Teacher’s Guide 15
LESSON 3: Newspaper Connections
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage them to look for something that relates to their lives in school or at home.
2. Review with students that the newspaper provides information on a wide range of topics to meet the needs of many
different readers. Explain how newspaper content can inform, explain, argue or demonstrate.
3. Review the three different “text” connections students might find in the newspaper: text-to-text, text-to-world and
text-to-self.
4. Model for students your “text” connections. Share the stories, features or ads that you could use to make connections.
5. Ask students to identify the story or feature that caught their attention in today’s newspaper. Ask why they reacted to
that item and have them identify the kind of connection they made. Allow several students the opportunity to share their
ideas.
Guided practice
1. Have students work individually to complete the activity sheet My Connections.
2. Have students compare their responses in small groups.
Assessment questions
What relationship did you see between newspaper content and your school coursework?
How can reading the newspaper help you with your school classes?
What new understanding do you have about your community or country as a result of reading the newspaper?
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Text-to-text
Text-to-world
Text-to-self
Teacher’s Guide 17
LESSON 4: The ‘Why’ of News Stories
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage them to look for a story that may affect them or their families in some way.
2. Show students the front page of your newspaper. Explain that the editors put what they think are the most important
stories on page one.
3. Select one story. Model for students why you think it is an important story. Explain why the story is important to you as a
citizen or for you personally.
4. Ask students to identify another story on page one. Have them explain why they think the editors placed the story there
and how the story could impact them or someone they know.
5. Explain to students that the primary purpose of the newspaper is to provide news about events happening in the
community and the world.
6. Explain that the newspaper editors have to decide every day which stories to put in the newspaper and where to place
them. Are they important enough for page one? Should they go in a special section, such as community news or sports?
Guided practice
1. Have students work in small groups to complete the activity sheet Why This Story.
2. Have students share their responses with the whole class.
Assessment questions
Make a statement about the range of topics covered in one issue of the newspaper.
Explain why you think that range is important.
Discuss something that surprised you about the content of the newspaper.
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Teacher’s Guide 19
LESSON 5: Our Right to Know
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage them to pay attention to stories about government bodies.
2. Write the following quote on the board: “… [W]ere it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without
newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should mean
that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them.” – Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), author of the
Declaration of Independence, third U.S. President (1801-09)
3. Ask students to discuss Jefferson’s quote. Why do they think he considered newspapers so important? Allow students to
discuss their ideas.
4. Show students a news story about a government decision or action. Ask them who might want citizens to get that
information. Ask them to suggest who might prefer that people not learn about it.
5. Explain to students that people in power (those who hold office) don’t usually want to hear any criticism about their
decisions. On the other hand, those people who are out of power (political opponents) want to hear only criticism about
elected officials. Discuss how it is the newspaper’s responsibility to report what happens objectively so citizens can make
up their own minds.
Guided practice
1. Have students work in small groups to complete the activity sheet We Need to Know.
2. Have students share their responses with the whole class.
Assessment questions
Revisit Jefferson’s quote as it relates to a specific story in the newspaper today.
Discuss the importance of having different sides of an issue represented in the newspaper.
Discuss how and why our free press is different from the press in countries under authoritarian regimes.
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Which story do you think government officials are not happy to have in the newspaper? Why?
Teacher’s Guide 21
LESSON 6: The Marketplace of Ideas -
Editorials and Commentary in the
Newspaper
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage students to look at the commentary pages of the newspaper.
2. Review the topic of the public’s right to know with students. Remind them of the founding fathers’ purpose for protecting
the press from government interference.
3. Explain that another reason the founders wanted to protect speech was to encourage open and free discussion of topics
that affect the country and its citizens. Explain the expression “marketplace of ideas.”
4. Have students discuss how they think a marketplace of ideas would work. Allow several minutes for discussion.
5. Show students the editorial/commentary pages of the newspaper. Have them read just the headlines of editorials and
opinion columns, and try to predict the writer’s point of view about each topic.
6. Share the editorial, opinion column and letter to the editor you’ve selected with the class. Point out differences in the
opinions of the writers. Explain how citizens can use the information from news stories and the opinions from editorial/
commentary pages to make up their own minds about important issues facing their community or country.
Guided practice
1. Have students work in pairs to complete the activity sheet Marketplace of Ideas.
2. Have students discuss their responses with the whole class.
Assessment questions
Discuss why the newspaper puts opinions in a designated section of the newspaper.
Discuss the differences between professional opinion columnists and the writers of letters to the editor.
Discuss the role of the “marketplace of ideas” in a democracy.
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Editorial headline:
How have any of the other opinion pieces influenced your thinking?
Teacher’s Guide 23
LESSON 7: Personal Progress
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage them to look at entertainment and lifestyle sections.
2. Tell students that today you’ll be looking at newspapers from a personal and practical point of view. They’ve spent time
looking at news and opinions that have consequences for the country, but now you want them to focus on themselves.
3. Explain that they might not be aware of the different kinds of feature stories and columns in the newspaper that are not
directly related to late-breaking news. Explain that newspapers also have a purpose to educate and entertain.
4. Share with students the items you have selected from the newspaper. Read aloud parts of each item and explain how you
would use the information.
5. Share with students one or more recommendations of stories or columns you thought might be of interest to them.
Guided practice
1. Have students work individually to complete the activity sheet It’s All About Me.
2. Have students share their responses with the whole class.
Assessment questions
Discuss the variety of non-hard news sections in your newspaper.
Discuss why you think the editors include this kind of information.
Discuss one thing in the newspaper that had personal meaning or use for you.
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Teacher’s Guide 25
LESSON 8: Look and Learn -
Visual Elements in the Newspaper
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage them to look for information that is presented in a format other than text in paragraphs.
2. Ask students to identify any information they found that was not represented by text in paragraphs. Discuss their
examples.
3. Show students the examples you have selected from the newspaper. Point out any titles or captions (cutlines) that help
readers identify the information. On a graph, show students the labels for the two axes. Demonstrate how to read the data
on the graph – a line that represents change over time, or bars or columns that show comparative information. On a table,
show students the vertical and horizontal categories. Demonstrate how to read the data inside the table. On a diagram,
show students how to read the labels and any directional arrows.
4. Discuss with students why some of this information is easier to understand using graphics instead of or in addition to
words.
Guided practice
1. Have students work in small groups to complete the activity sheet Look and Learn.
2. Have students share their responses with the whole class.
Assessment questions
Identify the different types of visual or graphic informational elements you found in the newspaper.
What criteria do you think editors use in determining whether or not to print visual informational elements?
Discuss the part you think technology plays in the creation of visual information elements.
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Write three questions about the data or information provided. Have a friend answer your questions.
Teacher’s Guide 27
LESSON 9: Goods and Services -
Advertising in the Newspaper
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage students to look at the ads as they read through the newspaper.
2. Explain to students that newspapers divide information into two types: editorial and advertising. Editorial refers to all
of the news and feature stories, columns and photos related to current events. Advertising refers to the business ads
throughout the newspaper and the classified ads in the classified section of the newspaper.
3. Tell students that up until this point, they have been looking at editorial information in the newspaper. Today you are
going to look at advertising. Point out the two different kinds of ads. Show examples of display ads and then show the
classified section of the newspaper.
4. Ask students to suggest reasons for including ads in the newspaper. The two major reasons are that businesses pay to put
advertising in the newspaper and that money subsidizes the cost of the newspaper. You may want to use the television
commercial as an analogy. Another reason is that advertising provides information about the goods and services that are
available to readers and where readers can find them.
5. Show students the ads you have selected. Explain how you can use the information in the ad.
Guided practice
1. Have students work in pairs to complete the activity sheet Get the Goods.
2. Have students share their responses with the whole class.
Assessment questions
Discuss the role of ads in the newspaper and commercials on television.
What do you see as the differences between the kind of information found in newspaper ads and television commercials?
Discuss the efficiency of the indexing system used in the classified section of your newspaper.
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
What is one thing you would change about the classified ad section of the newspaper?
Teacher’s Guide 29
LESSON 10: Gathering Data -
Using the Newspaper for Research
Direct instruction
1. Pass out individual copies of the newspaper to students. Allow several minutes for students to read the newspaper.
Encourage them to look for stories about a topic that many people in the community care about.
2. Show students a section of a classroom social studies textbook, preferably on a topic you are studying now in your class.
Read aloud part of the section that provides factual information about an event or situation.
3. Explain to students that long before this information was put into a textbook, it was probably reported in a local
newspaper. Discuss how newspapers are a “first draft of history” and how historians go back and read original newspaper
accounts to learn what really happened. Historians read newspapers to see how situations developed.
4. Tell students that they are going to be modern historians. They are going to select a topic and use the newspaper as a
primary source for their research.
5. Show students the various newspaper items you have selected. Briefly describe the issue you are researching and explain
how each of the items (stories, columns, visual elements) provides information about that issue.
6. Project the Data Chart on a board. Write the questions you have for your issue in the columns across the top of the chart.
See the example below:
Topic: Should the school put wireless Internet capabilities in the building?
Newspaper source Arguments for Arguments against Names and Statistics provided
positions of people
making statements
7. Write the headline for one of your items in the first row. Read your story or column aloud and have students suggest notes
to put in each column.
8. Explain to students that they can use the data collected to write a research paper. The information in each column can be
used to write a paragraph. More advanced students will be able to use data across the columns to write a paper.
Guided practice
1. Have students work in small groups to identify a topic to research.
2. Have students collect newspaper stories, columns, editorial cartoons and letters to the editor over several weeks.
3. Have students work in their groups to complete the activity sheet Research and Report.
4. Have students discuss their charts with the rest of the class.
5. Have students use their charts to write individual reports on their topics.
Assessment questions
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of using primary source materials like the newspaper for research.
Discuss the decision-making skills you use when you evaluate a news story or column for research information.
Discuss the value of reading opinion columns as well as news stories to get information about a topic.
Teacher’s Guide 31
Activity Page for Lesson 10:
Research and Report!
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
3. Count the number of stories on your newspaper pages. Write the number here:
________________
4. How many stories do you think are in the newspaper today? Write the number here:
________________
Find It Fast!
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________
The newspaper has different ways to help you f ind information. Work with a team to f ind
each of the newspaper items below. Paste each item in the correct box.
The name of the newspaper. The box on the front page that tells you
where to find things in the newspaper.
Teacher’s Guide 35
Elementary Activity For Lesson 3
My Connections!
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________
Find these things in the newspaper. Write your answers on this paper.
1. Find a headline that is about something you are studying in school. Write the headline here:
____________________________________________________________________________________________
2. Find a story that tells something about your city. Write the headline here:
____________________________________________________________________________________________
3. Find a story about something you like. Write the headline here:
____________________________________________________________________________________________
Important Stories!
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________
1. Find a news story or photo about these topics. Cut out your stories or photos, and
put them on a piece of poster paper or on a class bulletin board.
• Someone who lives in your community
• A special event
• A student
• An animal
2. Now write a sentence telling about each item. Paste your sentence under the story or
photo.
Teacher’s Guide 37
Elementary Activity For Lesson 5
Important People!
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________
Newspapers tell us about people who make decisions. Find stories about these people in
the newspaper:
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
4. Write three sentences telling why it is a good idea for us to know who important people
are. Write your sentences on the back of this paper.
My Opinion!
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________
The newspaper prints letters from people who have ideas about their community. What
would you like to say about your community? Use the sentence starters here to write a
letter telling what you think.
Dear Editor,
________________________________________________________________________________________________.
I think ________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________.
Yours truly,
_________________________________________
Teacher’s Guide 39
Elementary Activity For Lesson 7
2. Now look through the newspaper and put a sticky note on each of these things:
• A comic strip you like
• A movie you would like to see
• A place to go for fun
• A place to eat
• A sport you like
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Teacher’s Guide 41
Elementary Activity For Lesson 9
1. Find an ad for something you would like to have. Paste it on a piece of paper.
Do Research!
Name _________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Teacher’s Guide 43
Instructional
Aids
Instructional Aids
G u i di n g R e a di n g
Help students learn to make predictions and verify their thinking as they move through a
news story by using a modified Directed Reading and Thinking Activity (DRTA). Select a news
story that is appropriate for the grade level and interests of your students. Have students read
just the headline of a news story. Entertain predictions about what students think the story will
be about. Then have students read just the first sentence of the story. Discuss their previous
predictions. Have them predict what will happen next. Have them read the next paragraph. Stop
and discuss predictions. Continue through the news story. After students are familiar with this
process, you can have them read more than one paragraph at a time. Be sure to have them verify
their predictions. You can have students go back and read the part of the story that supports their
predictions. Teacher’s Guide 45
Instructional Aids
D i s c ov e ry C i r c l es
Discovery Circles are informal discussion groups where students read about a common
topic and then get together to share their reading and look for common themes. With very young
children, you can have each child in a group of four to six students read a different comic strip. Be
sure to select comic strips with some elements in common, such as family life, school or animals.
Each child reads his or her comic strip and talks about it with the group. With older students, give
students different sports stories. Have each child read his or her story and then come to the group
to discuss. With middle school or secondary students, you can have students read news stories or
different opinion columns on the same subject.
The key elements of the discovery circle are:
Students read independently.
students share their reading with others.
and students look for commonality in their reading.
S h a r e d R e a di n g
One version of shared reading is to have students work in pairs to read and discuss the
same story. Assign appropriate stories to students. Then have the students take turns reading one
paragraph at a time out loud. After each paragraph is read, both students discuss what they know
about the story so far. After students are familiar with the process, you can have them alternate
reading aloud and asking questions of each other.
Tell me about your newspaper story (or Whom do you think would also like to
column or graphic). What did you learn read this story? Why would that person
from your reading? be interested?
Why do you think the editor put this Tell me how this story made you think
story in the newspaper? about your own life.
What questions do you have now about Tell me the who, what, when and where
the topic of this story? of this story.
Teacher’s Guide 47
Instructional Aids