NAPLAN 2011 Teaching Strategies
Transcription
NAPLAN 2011 Teaching Strategies
NAPLAN 2011 TEACHING STRATEGIES » Literacy » Reading » Interpretive Comprehension (Poetry) » » Overview teaching strategies Stages 2-4 3-4 overview 4-5 Interpretive Comprehension Poetry Overview Interpretive meaning is often hidden throughout the text and requires the use of inference and understanding the relationship between events and characters or causes and consequences. Readers need to link like information to fully understand the text. Sometimes these relationships can be stated and are often found near causal words such as because, so and therefore. Information may need to be linked from sentence to sentence, across paragraphs or chapters, and is often referred to as information that is given 'between the lines'. Connecting Literal Information To answer more complex questions, students may need to connect literal ideas in sentences by searching for information in text, illustrations or graphs. If no interpretation is required to locate the information, students are employing literal comprehension skills. Where students need to connect information that is directly stated in the text and there needs to be an understanding that particular information belongs together, this is classed as an interpretive question. Identifying key words, skim reading and scanning will help students to locate and connect information efficiently. Key words Key words are the content words that carry the most meaning in a text. Students can underline or highlight the key words. Skimming Skimming is reading quickly through a text to get the gist or main idea. Students can skim read by looking at headings and sub-headings, pictures, diagrams, captions, any italicised or bold words, and the first and last paragraphs of the text. Scanning Scanning is reading to locate particular elements or specific details in a text, such as key concepts, names, dates or certain information in answer to a question. Students can scan by looking through the text to locate key words to find the specific information quickly. Poetry Interpretive Understanding and interpreting poetry requires readers to connect and interpret ideas and meaning from both the structure and the linguistic styles and devices used. Information may need to be linked from sentence to sentence or across stanzas. back to top sitemap sitemap NAPLAN 2011 TEACHING STRATEGIES » Literacy » Reading » Interpretive Comprehension (Poetry) »Exploring a poem » 2-4 teaching strategies Stages 2-4 3-4 overview Item & Stimulus 4-5 Reading Year 5 Q: 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 Year 7 Q: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 Skill Focus: Exploring a poem STAGE 2-4 Item Descriptor Exploring ideas in a poem Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar. Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822), English poet. A Defence of Poetry (written 1821; published 1840) Statements of Learning for English p. 14 Activities to support the strategy Four Blocks Guided Reading Lesson Using Poetry Links Poetry Zone Poetry Foundation Quality Teaching Framework Intellecutal quality: metalanguage/ higher order thinking/ substantive communication/ deep understanding Quality Learning Environment: engagement Significance: Background knowledge Related strategies view and print Modelled/Guided Background knowledge/connectedness view and print Activate prior knowledge about the world under the sea. Ask the students what kinds of things may be seen if they went diving in The Great Barrier Reef? Show students only the title of the poem and ask them to make a prediction about what the poem may be about. Understand vocabulary - Each student should have their own copy of the text with sufficient place to annotate. Read the text aloud to or with students. Ask students to underline words they do not understand as you read. After whole class reading ask students to read the text once more and underline words they do not know/understand. Invite students to share their words and note the words on the board/IWB. Discuss the meaning of each word in context. Mini- Lesson-Self- Monitoring- tell the class that this is a strategy that good readers use to make sure they understand what they are reading. Read the first verse/ line/ section of the poem out loud and model how good readers construct meaning by retelling what they have just read. Call on volunteers to self-monitor from the first verse of the first poem. Model the retell for students: In these lines the poet wears his equipment to go underwater to explore. Set a purpose for reading- Student need to be aware of why they are reading the poem. The teacher can set this agenda according to the levels of the students. For this lesson, the aim is to concentrate on the diction to find out what the poem is about. Follow on lessons can focus on form or language and imagery etc. Deconstructing poetry Independent As students gain confidence in unpacking a poem, they may independently annotate other poems and present their findings to their peers VARIATION 'Exploding a poem' is a strategy sourced from www.teachit.co.uk. It provided prompt questions to guide detailed readings of poetry. view and print back to top The diver I put on my aqua-lung and plunge, Exploring, like a ship with a glass keel, The secrets of the deep. Along my lazy road On and on I steal – Over waving bushes which at a touch explode Into shrimps, then closing, rock to the tune of the tide; Over crabs that vanish in puffs of sand. Look, a string of pearls bubbling at my side Breaks in my hand – Those pearls were my breath! ... Does that hollow hide Some old Armada wreck in seaweed furled, Crusted with barnacles, her cannon rusted, The great San Philip? What bullion in her hold? Pieces of eight, silver crowns, and bars of solid gold? I shall never know. Too soon the clasping cold Fastens on flesh and limb And pulls me to the surface. Shivering, back I swim To the beach, the noisy crowds, the ordinary world. Ian Serraillier 3 sitemap NAPLAN 2011 TEACHING STRATEGIES » Literacy » Reading » Interpretive Comprehension (Poetry) »Deconstructing poetry » 3-4 teaching strategies Stages 2-4 3-4 overview K–6 Outcome 4-5 RS3.7: Students infer a character's changing feelings Skill Focus: Deconstructing poetry STAGE 3-4 Although the following teaching strategies relate specifically to poetry, they can also be used to assist the development of students' interpretive and inferrential skills in deconstructing prose texts. The challenge of reading poetry Students often struggle with poems because they do not always make immediate sense. It would be useful to discuss with students why poets might choose to write such apparently impenetrable texts: Poetry often communicates complex thoughts and feelings. More direct ways of communicating for example, through prose might not capture this complexity of thought and feeling. The fact that most poetry is so brief compared to other imaginative forms of writing means that poets are more likely to use the considerable resources of language to communicate in intense and subtle ways. Often the language can deliberately carry different meanings at the same time. Poets often want their readers to work with them in contributing to making meaning of the poetry. Of course this is true of all texts to some extent, but it is particularly true of poetry. The fact that we often have to work hard is all part of the challenge and delight of poetry. KLA Outcomes English 4.1.7: Students learn to respond to and compose texts beyond the literal level English 4.1.18: Students interpret metaphorical, figurative language and themes in poems English 4.1.18: Students learn about inference, figurative language and alternative readings as strategies for responding to and composing texts beyond the literal level English 4.5.10: Students learn about the ways in which inference, emphasis and point of view shape meaning English 4.7.9: Students learn to make predictions, infer and interpret texts Some poets might even say that their purpose in writing poetry is to express their own private thoughts and feelings, and that the communication of these thoughts and feelings to an audience is only of secondary importance, so why should they be concerned about obscurity? Such a view, however, begs the obvious question: why then would poets go to the trouble of publishing their poetry if they did not want it to be read? Item & Stimulus Reading Yr 5 Q: 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 Yr 7 Q: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 Strategy for reading a poem Here is an easy three–step strategy that can be used to assist in the reading of any poem: Item Descriptor Identifying and deconstructing poetry in terms of language and themes Statements of Learning for English Students have the opportunity to draw on their knowledge of texts and language to clarify meaning. Related Strategies Identification of language features that are used to construct persuasive texts (modality) Links http://www.poetryarchive.org/ poetryarchive/singlePoem.do? poemId=7075 Quality Teaching Framework Intellectual quality: Metalanguage; Deep understanding view and print view and print Students may need access to a glossary explaining the meanings of some of the metalanguage needed for analysing poetry, highlighted above. Such glossaries are readily available in text books as well as on the internet. Remember: Looking seeing Listening hearing Thinking understanding Activities to support the strategy These activities are based on 'Wasp', a poem by Douglas Stewart. view and print Exploring metalanguage (QTF) Consider Question 30, 2008 Year 7 NAPLAN Reading Test. Ask students: How do you know that the first verse is a question, and not a statement, instruction or exclamation? (Despite the unusual syntax of the first verse, students will identify the question mark, and eventually the word what.) Who is the poet addressing through this question? What is the poet asking in this question? Rewrite the question so that the meaning is clearer. Choose another verse (or stanza). Note again the unusual syntax, or arrangement of words. Rewrite in your own words. What has been gained and lost by rewriting the verse in more simple and direct language? (Hopefully students will see that although the meaning, or at least a meaning, may be clearer, the verse will have lost some of its poetic effect.) Ask students to write down the meanings of the following words: cool, web, dumb, hot. Now consider the title and first verse of this poem by Robert Graves: view and print Discuss: Are the words cool, web, dumb and hot being used in the way you expected them to be used? What sort of web might be described as cool? In what sense are children dumb? We all know what a hot day is, but how can the scent of a summer rose be hot? Now consider the second verse in Graves' poem: But we have speech, to chill the angry day, And speech, to dull the rosess cruel scent, We spell away the overhanging night, We spell away the soldiers and the fright. Discuss by asking probing questions like: How are the meanings of the four words confirmed or challenged in the light of the second verse? Is it clear now what dumb means? Who is the word we referring to? Can you guess now what the cool web refers to? For a summary of Graves' life and a discussion of this poem, see: http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoem.do?poemId=7075 Discuss by asking probing questions like: How do poets play with the different meanings of language? Why do they do this? How does this impact on the ways in which we read poems? Exploring deep understanding (QTF) Get students to apply the easy three–step strategy to your reading of 'Wasp'. Discuss whether it makes the meaning of the poem clearer? Responding to techniques to make meaning when reading Consider Question 33, 2008 Year 7 NAPLAN Reading Test. This question does not ask students to identify or comment upon any of the poetic qualities used in the third verse or stanza. However, a consideration of these poetic qualities will assist students to understand what is being described here. Ask students to use the TIE strategy to analyse the techniques used in the third stanza. T: Identify the Technique. I: Illustrate with examples. E: Explain its effectiveness. The following tables show a blank pro-forma and a sample completed analysis: view and print view and print Clearly, the third stanza describes what the wasp longs for, in contrast to what it is currently experiencing. This exercise demonstrates: how composers use techniques, particularly drawing upon the resources of language, to create meaning in their texts how good readers consider the ways these techniques are shaping their response to the text and helping them to make meaning. Discuss how readers could use an understanding of techniques in the poem to help them identify the answers for other inferential questions in this section, such as Questions 31, 32, 34 and 35 NAPLAN 2008 Year 7 Reading Test. Perspective The poem is written from the point of view of the poet. The fact that he is addressing the wasp indicates the use of second person – notice the references to you and your. However, what he is encouraging readers to do is to see the world from the perspective of the wasp. He does this by: imagining what the wasp is thinking, e.g. World's all wrong imagining how the wasp sees things in its world, e.g. Air itself in treason/Turns a sudden solid/ And shuts you in prison directly capturing the feelings of the wasp, e.g. happy goes wasp indirectly capturing the feelings of the wasp, e.g. the repetition and heavy rhythm of But up wasp down wasp/ Climb wasp and fall shows the wasps frustration and weariness Consider Question 29 NAPLAN 2008 Year 7 Reading Test. Can you see now why the correct answer is that the poem is encouraging the reader to think about a wasp's view of the world? Exploring deep understanding (QTF) Students are to write a paragraph from the wasp's point of view which is considering the human and how he or she might see the world. Then write a paragraph addressed to another animal (other than a wasp) in which the student captures the perspective of that animal. Students are to use their knowledge of poetic techniques gained from these exercises to convert one of the above paragraphs into a poem. They should try to use the poetic techniques described above to take readers into the world of the subject of their poem, so that they really see things from this other perspective. back to top Technique Illustration(s) Effect Imagery Flowers (trigger-flower, daisy and gold billy-button) in long green paddocks Creates in the mind of the reader a scene of beauty, presumably the natural home of the wasp. Repetition and Suggests the vast expanse of flowers in the paddocks, as if stretching forever. Alliteration wall wasp Continuous sound created through the alliteration suggests the impenetrability of the windscreen, despite the wasp’s efforts. Strong sounds add to the sense of liveliness presented in the scene of flower-filled paddocks. billy-button Rhythm Conveys the joy of flitting about the Irregular beats in longer lines, natural environment, denied to the with more syllables than other stanzas, creates a tripping, playful wasp trapped behind the glass. rhythm Contrast The third stanza contrasts with other stanzas in terms of imagery and sound qualities. Emphasised by the use of but at the start of the next stanza. Highlights for the reader the contrast between the misery and frustration of the wasp when it is trapped, compared to the happiness and freedom it enjoys in its natural world. Technique Imagery Repetition Alliteration Rhythm Contrast Illustration(s) Effect The Cool Web Children are dumb to say how hot the day is, How hot the scent is of the summer rose, How dreadful the black wastes of evening sky, How dreadful the tall soldiers drumming by, But we have speech, to chill the angry day, And speech, to dull the roses’s cruel scent, We spell away the overhanging night, We spell away the soldiers and the fright. There’s a cool web of language winds us in, Retreat from too much joy or too much fear: We grow sea-green at last and coldly die In brininess and volubility. But if we let our tongues lose self-possession, Throwing off language and its watery clasp Before our death, instead of when death comes, Facing the wide glare of the children’s day, Facing the rose, the dark sky and the drums We shall go mad, no doubt, and die that way. Wasp Well wasp what’s To do about you Battering at the windscreen You can’t get through? World’s all wrong, Air itself in treason Turns a sudden solid And shuts you in prison. And still through the wall wasp The long green paddocks sweeten With trigger-f lower and daisy And gold billy-button; But up wasp down wasp Climb wasp and fall, Can’t beat your way Through the clear strange wall. Out and away then When the car stops; World’s come right again And happy goes wasp. Douglas Stewart 8 THINK about the poem. Consider the words and their meanings. Summarise each stanza in the poem in your own words. Then put these summaries together to develop an overall understanding of the poem. How has the poet used particular techniques to add to the impact of the meaning of the poem? Consider: Imagery and other appeals to senses igurative or metaphorical language (such as metaphors, similes F and personification) hetorical devices (such as repetition, rhetorical questions and R unusual syntax) Structure Sound qualities, as described above. After several re-readings, in groups or alone, decide if there are other more subtle meanings at work in the poem. Does it matter that the poet might not have intended all these meanings? Does it matter that one reader’s meaning may be different to that of another reader? LISTEN to the poem. In fact, listen to the poem read out loud several times. Traditionally, most poetry was accompanied by music – not surprisingly, it often retains musical qualities. The word lyrical, sometimes used to describe such poetry, actually comes from the word lyre, a musical instrument. You could even consider poetry as an art form that lies somewhere between prose (which depends on language for meaning and effect) and music (which depends on sounds for meaning and effect). What moods and feelings do the sounds stir in you? Even before you consider the meanings of the words in the poem, are the sounds communicating something to you? Pay particular attention to sound qualities: Rhythm Rhyme Alliteration: repetition of consonant sounds Assonance: repetition of vowel sounds sitemap NAPLAN 2011 TEACHING STRATEGIES » Literacy » Reading » Interpretive Comprehension (Poetry) »Deconstructing Poetry » 4-5 teaching strategies Stages 2-4 3-4 overview KLA Outcomes 4-5 English 4.1.7 Students learn to respond to and compose texts beyond the literal level Skill Focus: Deconstructing Poetry STAGE 4-5 Strategy English 4.5.10 Students learn about the ways in which inference, emphasis and point of view shape meaning English 5.7.3 Students learn to infer from and interpret texts Deconstructing poetry texts to understand how they convey meaning Activities to support the strategy Item Descriptor Exploring metalanguage (QTF) Interpreting ideas in a complex poem It is important that students understand the metalanguage of poetry as this provides them with a language for deconstructing poetry and for articulating their interpretation and analysis of poems. Following is an extensive list of poetic techniques. Teachers should consider the ability level of their students when deciding which techniques to focus on in the teaching of a poetry lesson or unit. Statements of Learning for English p. 14 Alliteration Enjambment Paradox Allusion Figurative language Persona Quality Teaching Framework Apostrophe Hyperbole Personification Assonance Imagery Refrain Intellectual quality: Metalanguage; Deep understanding; Higher-order thinking Caesura Irony Rhetorical questions Significance: Connectedness Connotation Metaphor Rhyme Consonance Motif Rhythm Diction Narrative voice Simile Dissonance Onomatopoeia Symbol Emotive language Oxymoron Tone There are many comprehensive glossaries that can be accessed online. Some are listed below. http://www.poetsgraves.co.uk/glossary_of_poetic_terms.htm http://www.poeticbyway.com/glossary.html http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/glossaryIndex.do The Poetry Archive site provides detailed explanations of poetic terms, a section on 'How to use this term', and related poems that employ the technique to convey meaning. Modelled Choose a poem to deconstruct with students. Model how to annotate the poem by identifying the language techniques the poet uses to shape and convey meaning. Once the language techniques have been identified, discuss the effect of these techniques on meaning. Write statements about the techniques to model the TIE strategy for students. T : Identify the technique I : Illustrate with examples E : Explain its effectiveness For example: The considered use of alliteration and assonance in the opening stanza of Kenneth Slessor's 'Beach Burial', "At night they sway and wander in the waters far under", creates an eerily quiet and sombre mood lamenting the dead soldiers. Guided The teacher supports students in deconstructing the poem 'No one is a loser' by Ben Okri, from Mental Fight by Ben Okri, Phoenix House, U.K., 1999. view and print Exploring metalanguage (QTP) Together, the teacher and students read the poem and discuss its meaning. Get students to suggest what they think the poem is about and the underlying message that the poet wants to convey. Ask students: What do you think the poem is about? What negative aspect of contemporary life is the poet commenting on? How do we label people in our world? Are labels usually positive or negative? What do you think the poet would like to see individuals do? What do you think is the overall message of the poem? A discussion of the meaning of the poem will allow students to better understand how poetic techniques are used for effect by the poet. After class discussion, the teacher gets students to write a short paragraph consolidating their ideas about the meaning of the poem. Students share their responses with the class so that the teacher can monitor student understanding. The teacher provides students with a list of poetic techniques that can be found in the poem. Working in pairs, and with teacher support, students identify the language techniques the poet has utilised. These include: cummulation imperative language metaphor emotive language contrast repetition enjambment inclusive language caesura. To provide more structured support, the teacher can provide students with a copy of the poem that has the poetic techniques underlined/highlighted. Students then have to match the given techniques to the examples identified. As a class, discuss the effect of the techniques. Students should further annotate their copies of the poem as the discussion takes place. Independent Activity one Exploring metalanguage (QTF) Get students to answer the following questions on the poem, reminding them that they need to produce comprehensive answers that include examples from the poem and explain the effectiveness of the techniques the poet has utilised. 1. According to the poet, how does society label individuals in a variety of ways? 2. What words does the poet use to signify the immediate need for change? 3. How does the poet contrast the negative reality of the world with his positive aspirations for change? 4. What does the poet mean when he refers to "masterly application"? 5. What does the poet mean by "Those who transcend their apparent limitations / Are greater than those who apparently / Have little to transcend"? 6. Explain the metaphor "Our handicaps can be the seed of our glories". 7. How does the poet use inclusive language to position the reader? 8. What is the tone of the poem? 9. What is the overall message of the poem? Activity two Exploring deep understanding and higher-order thinking (QTF) The poem explores the importance of not allowing ourselves to be restricted by actual or perceived limitations. Students write a 400 word analysis of HOW the poet uses language to shape and convey meaning for the reader. Activity three Exploring connectedness (QTF) Students compose a poem that utilises a number of different language techniques for effect. The poem must explore how to overcome a problem in the students' world, for example, bullying, poor self-image, discrimination, peer pressure etc. Students must draft their composition and edit it themselves before getting feedback from a peer and the teacher. Their published work should reflect a consideration of the critical analysis of others. Students write a reflection statement that: explains the way they used language to shape and convey meaning illustrates a deep understanding of the way language works appropriately uses the metalanguage of poetry is self-reflexive and comments on the strengths and weaknesses of the composition illustrates a critical awareness of the process of writing. back to top Type of language Example Formal language But is it used consciously or Helps to communicate complex instinctively? ... the golden ratio’s ideas more precisely. ubiquity in nature ... Informal language Blame it on the art cover ... Suddenly we see it everywhere ... Relaxed and friendly approach helps to engage the reader and makes challenging ideas/language more palatable. Jargon ... the golden ratio ‘phi’, an irrational number derived from the Fibonacci sequence. Reflects the content of the book, which is written by a physics professor, and appeals to the scientific interest of Cosmos readers. Figurative language ... Atalay’s elegant book has a whiff of opportunism about it. Effect on how meaning is made Communicates ideas in more colourful and imaginative ways. Context Review is fairly recent – written after the publication of the bestseller, The Da Vinci Code. The recognisable layout and engaging style indicate that the review was published in a popular print medium – information in the Acknowledgements confirms that the review first appeared in a magazine, Cosmos – the Science of Everything. Audience Readers of Cosmos are people with an interest in science. This is confirmed by the use of some mathematical/scientific jargon, e.g. the golden ratio ‘phi’, an irrational number derived from the Fibonacci sequence. Purpose Like most reviewers, Jeremy Chunn’s purpose in writing this text is to inform readers about a new book and present his personal opinions about it. Math and the Mona Lisa: The Art and Science of Leonardo da Vinci by Bülent Atalay ISBN 0-06-085119-8 Collins 336 pages A$24.99 Reviewed by Jeremy Chunn Leonardo da Vinci will be long remembered after every copy of The Da Vinci Code has turned to dust, so it’s a shame that Bülent Atalay’s elegant book has a whiff of opportunism about it. Blame it on the cover art, because what lies within is a devoted work where the relationship between science and art is investigated, and it’s not until halfway through that da Vinci becomes the primary focus. Atalay, a professor of physics, starts with the golden ratio ‘phi’, an irrational number derived from the Fibonacci sequence. Suddenly we see it everywhere, in the pyramids, the Parthenon and in art from all ages. But is it used consciously or instinctively? Atalay can’t answer that question; he just reveals patterns. When he points to the golden ratio’s ubiquity in nature, however, it is the perfect time to introduce da Vinci, who instructed others — scientists and artists — to ‘learn from nature, not from each other’. It was the famous Italian’s capacity to observe, conduct experiments and collect data that made him the first scientist, the author claims. It was also this curiosity and diligence that informed da Vinci’s art: the curls in hair became a reference to the way water moves; a subject’s gaze revealed his intimate knowledge of the human eye, having dissected so many of them. Leonardo produced maybe 14 000 pages of notes, but we are left with less than a third of that amount. In his work he anticipated inventions that were realised hundreds of years later. Atalay himself is a Renaissance man: appearing within the book are etchings by the author and he casts wide for references, including quotes from Milton on Galileo and Tom Wolfe on sculptor Frederick Hart. The other cheek Atalay veers off to findings of sophisticated modern research, including why we generally turn the left cheek when being photographed by a friend. It turns out the right side of the brain, associated with emotions and which controls the left eye and cheek, tells us to turn to the right, and show the left. Right?