A study of reading comprehension achievement in a reading class
Transcription
A study of reading comprehension achievement in a reading class
48 REFERENCES Aebersold, J & Field, M. (1997). From Reader to Reading Teacher: Issue and strategies for second language classroom. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Ajideh, P. (2003). Schema Theory-based Pre-reading Tasks: A neglected Essential in the ESL Reading Class. The Reading Matrix, Volume 3 (No.1). Retrieved August 25, 2008, from http://www. readingmatrix.com/articles/ajideh/aricle.pdf Alderson, J (1996). The Testing of Reading. In Nuttall, C. Teaching Reading Skills in a Foreign Language (pp. 212-228). London: Heinemann Anderson, N. (1999). Exploring Second Language Reading: Issues and Strategies. Boston: Heinle & Heinle Publishers. Brown, H. D. (1994). Teaching by principles: an interactive approach to language pedagogy. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall Regents. Brown, N. J. (1999). Reading Relationship. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company Bamford, J & Day, R.R. (2004). Extensive Reading Activities for Teaching Language. New York: Cambridge University Press. Carrell, P. L. (2002). Interactive text processing implication for ESL/second language reading classrooms. In P. L. Carrell, J. Devine, and D. E. Eskey (eds), Interactive approaches to second language reading. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Carrell, P. L. (2002). Some causes of text-boundedness and schema inference in ESL reading. In P. L. Carrell, J. Devine, and D. E. Eskey (eds), Interactive approaches to second language reading. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Devine, T. G. (1986). Teaching Reading Comprehension: From Theory to Practice. Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon Inc. Elkin, J., Train B., & Denham, D. (2003). Reading and Reader Development: The Pleasure of Reading. London: Facet Publishing. 49 Eskey, D. E. (2002). Holding in the bottom: and interactive approach to the language Problems of second language readers. In P. L. Carrell, J. Devine, and D. E. Eskey (eds), Interactive approaches to second language reading. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Greenwood, J. (1988). Class Readers. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Harmer, J. (1991). The Practice of English Language Teaching. New York: Longman. Heaton, J. (1975). Writing English Language Tests. New York: Longman. McCombs, B & Pope, J. (1994). Motivating Hard to Reach Students. Washington: American Psychological Association. Mikulecky, B. S. & Jeffries, L. (1996). More Reading Power. Essex: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. Ministry of Education. (2001). Thai Basic Educational Curriculum Year 2001. Bangkok: Ministry of Education. Nunan, D. (1999). Second language teaching and learning. Boston, MA: Heinle & Heinle Pubishers. Nuttall, C. (1996). Teaching Reading Skills in a Foreign Language. London: Heinemann Silberstein, S. (1994). Techniques and Resources in Teaching Reading. Oxford: Oxford University Press. The National Capital Language Center. (2003). Developing Reading Activities. Retrieved August 25, 2008, from http://www.nclrc.org/essentials/reading/ developread.htm. Wallace, C. (2000). Reading. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Wiener, H. S. & Bazerman, C. (1999). A reader’s Guide. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company. Williams, M & Burden, R. (1997). Psychology for Language Teachers: a Social Constructivist Approach. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 50 APPENDIX A Learning Activity Plan: the Story of Amelia Earhart Course: Supplementary English (Reading) Level: Intermediate (Mattayomsuksa 5) Number of the students: 40 Students Time: 2 periods (50 minutes each) Date planned to teach: Monday 19th and Tuesday 20th January 2009 Objectives: 1) To activate students’ background knowledge 2) To motivate interest and enthusiasm for reading 3) To develop students’ self-monitor reading and recognition point of miscomprehension 4) To help students reflect on and respond to the text Students will be able to: 1) Brainstorm and describe what an aviator does 2) Predict what information might be found in the text 3) Analyze kinds of questions and answer them correctly 4) Recognize the important information in the story 5) Construct a flow chart in order to identify and extract important information Skills focus: Reading a biography Materials: Reading handouts about a story of Amelia Earhart Questions paper and comprehension sheets Evaluation: Worksheets: Questions paper and summary sheets Authentic assessment: -pair work -group work -participation 51 After teaching notes: 1. The teaching outcome________________________________________________ 2. Sugesstions________________________________________________________ 3. Problems__________________________________________________________ 4. Things need to be improved___________________________________________ Steps Language Content Prereading pilot flyer airman Procedures 1. Teacher (T) states that Amy Johnson was a pioneering aviator who made a record -breaking flights to Australia and South Africa in the 1930s and writes a word “aviator” on the board. 2. T asks students (Ss) who want to be the aviator in the future. fly a plane Aviator 3. T divides Ss into groups of five and has them brainstorm what the aviator does. serve passengers work for an airline l control an aero plane 4. T lets Ss in each group tell their classmates what they have already discussed. 5. T and Ss describe things that the aviator does. 6. T has Ss predict what information about aviator might be found in the reading text. 1. T talks about the news that an American aviator saved his passengers from the plane accident. Whilereading Charles Lindbergh Amelia Earhart 2. T has Ss think about the famous aviators and tell about his/her life. A flowchart of the important events in Lindbergh’s life 3. T shows Ss pictures of Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart and asks Ss about their lives. In 1859, Charles Lindbergh was born in Sweden family immigrated to the United States. 4. T shows a flowchart of Charles Lindbergh biography and lets Ss read. On the 1st of April 1922, he began his first flight as a passenger. 5. T talks about Lindberg’s life and explains Ss about the usefulness of making a flowchart. 6. T distributes a reading text about Amelia Earhart’s biography to the students. 52 Steps Whilereading Language content Procedures Eight days later, he took the first solo flight and he rarely made the mistakes. At day's end he had mastered his plane and learned flight under his control. 7. T has Ss read the first two sentences of the passage and has them underline the word that links the meaning of those two sentences. In 1925, he graduated from U.S Air Service flying School and became Chief Pilot, Robertson Aircraft Co., St. Louise. 8. T writes the words “later” on the board and tells the Ss that it is a signal word for a text pattern called chronological order or time order. On 21st May 1927, Lindbergh lands at Paris' Le Bourget airfield, becoming the first pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. 9. T has Ss look at the passage quickly and tell signal words in the passage. T adds other important time order words to the Ss. In 1964, Lindbergh became a leader of conservationist causes. He would later say, “If I had to choose between planes and birds, I'd choose birds.” 10. T has the Ss guess what is going on in the passage. In August 1974, Lindbergh died of cancer at the age of 72 at his island retreat in Maui, Hawaii. Signal words for a chronological order patterns the first before until in on after that continued next later then the second the third the last finally at last Example of a flowchart of Amelia Earhart’s life Amelia Earhart was born in Kansas in 1897. When she was thirty one year olds, she was invited to be the first women passenger across the Atlantic Ocean in a plane. After that flight, Earhart became a famous person. A lot of people congratulated her including President Coolidge. Then, she wrote a book about her flight across the Atlantic, called 20 Hrs., 40 Min. 11. T lets Ss read the passage in pairs and make a flowchart represented the event in Earhart’s life using signals words for time order. 12. T invites some pairs of Ss go to the front of the class and present their flowchart to their classmates. 53 Steps Whilereading Language content Procedures In June 1937, Earhart departed from Miami with Fred Noonan. They did not take any important communication and navigation instruments. Twenty one days later, they arrived at New Guinea and then left for Howland Island. Unfortunately, the last communication from Earhart and Noonan was on July 2, 1937. The United States Navy conducted a massive search for more than two weeks, but they found nothing. People believe they got lost, ran out of fuel and died. Post- Three kinds of questions: reading Where is the answer found? 1. Right There (Literal) The answer is in the story. It’s ‘Right There’ for you to read. 2. Think and Search (Inferential) Search for clues in the story and think about your answer. 3. On My Own (Evaluative) The answer won’t be told by the words in the story. You must find the answer in your head. Think: “I have to answer this question on my own. The story won’t be much help.” Questions 1. When did Amelia Earhart begin her first flight? 1. T distributes each S a paper written down questions about the reading text. 2. T describes three kinds of questions and gives example to the Ss. 3. T asks Ss to identify the kinds of question on the given paper then answer the questions. 4. T and Ss check the answer together. 5. T asks Ss to close their handouts and gives the comprehension sheets to the Ss. 6. T lets students correct the mistakes in the comprehension by recognizing the important information from the reading text individually. 7. T lets students tell the correct answers and check with their friends 54 Steps Postreading Language content 2. What is the passage mainly concerned? 3. Why Amelia Earhart was called “Lady Lindy”? 4. Why did Amelia Earhart write a book 20 hrs, 40 min? 5. What is media sensation? 6. What would happen, if Amelia accomplished flying around the world? 7. How was Amelia Earhart’s physical appearance? 8. What did Amelia Earhart do in order to support the women’s achievement? 9. Who was Amelia Earhart navigator? 10. What did Amelia Earhart think about her job? 11. When did people hear the last communication from Earhart and Noonan? Procedures 55 A Story of Amelia Earhart Amelia Earhart was born in Kansas in 1897. Thirty one years later, she received a phone call that would change her life. She was invited to become the first woman passenger to cross the Atlantic Ocean in a plane. The flight took more than 20 hours – about three times longer than it routinely takes today to cross the Atlantic by plane. Earhart was twelve years old before she ever saw an airplane, and she didn’t take her first flight until 1920. But she was so thrilled by her first experience in a plane that she quickly began to take flying lessons. She wrote, “As soon as I left the ground, I knew I myself had to fly.” After that flight Earhart became a media sensation. She was given a ticker tape parade down Broadway in New York and even President Coolidge called to congratulate her. Because her record-breaking career and physical appearance were similar to pioneering pilot and American hero Charles Lindbergh, she earned the nickname “Lady Lindy.” She wrote a book about her flight across the Atlantic, called 20 Hrs., 40 Min. Earhart continued to break records, and also polished her skills as a speaker and writer, always advocating women’s achievements, especially in aviation. Her next goal was to achieve a transatlantic crossing alone. In 1927 Charles Lindbergh became the first person to make a solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic. Five years later, Earhart became the first woman to repeat that feat. Her popularity grew even more and she was the undisputed queen of the air. She then wanted to fly around the world, and in June 1937 she left Miami with Fred Noonan as her navigator. No one knows why she left behind important communication and navigation instruments. Perhaps it was to make room for additional fuel for the long flight. The pair made it to New Guinea in 21 days and then left for Howland Island, a tiny island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The last communication from Earhart and Noonan was on July 2, 1937 with a nearby Coast Guard ship. The United States Navy conducted a massive search for more than two weeks but no trace of the plane or its passengers was ever found. Many people believe they got lost and simply ran out of fuel and died. 56 Questions 1. When did Amelia Earhart begin her first flight? ____________________________________________________________ 2. What is the passage mainly concerned? ____________________________________________________________ 3. Why Amelia Earhart was called “Lady Lindy”? ____________________________________________________________ 4. Why did Amelia Earhart write a book 20 hrs, 40 min? ____________________________________________________________ 5. What is media sensation? ____________________________________________________________ 6. What would happen, if Amelia accomplished flying around the world? ___________________________________________________________________________ 7. How was Amelia Earhart’s physical appearance? ____________________________________________________________ 8. What did Amelia Earhart do in order to support the women’s achievement? ____________________________________________________________ 9. Who was Amelia Earhart’s navigator? ____________________________________________________________ 10. What did Amelia Earhart think about her job? ____________________________________________________________ 11. When did people hear the last communication from Earhart and Noonan? ____________________________________________________________ 57 Comprehension Directions: Reading the summary of the story of Amelia Earhart and correct the mistakes. Amelia Earhart was born in Kansas in 1997. When she was thirty-one year olds, she was invited to become the first woman aviator to cross the Atlantic Ocean in a plane. Earhart was twelve years old before she ever saw an airplane, and she took her first flight after 1920. She was so thrilled by her first experience in a plane that she quickly began to take flying lessons. She wrote, “I want to fly.” After that flight Earhart became a popular person even President Coolidge called to congratulate her. Her record-breaking career and attractive personality were similar to pioneering pilot and American hero Charles Lindbergh, she earned the nickname “Lady Lindy.” She wrote a poem about her flight across the Atlantic, called 20 Hrs., 40 Min. Earhart continued to make new records, and also polished her skills as a singer, always advocating women’s achievements. In 1927 Charles Lindbergh became the first person to make a solo nonstop flight across the Pacific. Fifteen years later, Earhart became the first woman to repeat that feat. She then wanted to fly around The United State, and in June 1947 she left Boston with Fred Noonan as her navigator. Everybody knows why she left behind important communication and navigation instruments. Earhart and Noonan arrived at New Guinea in 21 days. The last communication from Earhart and Noonan was on March 2, 1937 with a nearby Coast Guard ship. The United States Navy conducted a massive search for more than one month but no trace of the plane or its passengers was ever found. Many people believe they got lost and had no food and died. 58 Questions 1. When did Amelia Earhart begin her first flight? Right there ____________________________________________________________ 2. What is the passage mainly concerned? Think and search ____________________________________________________________ 3. Why Amelia Earhart was called “Lady Lindy”? Right there ____________________________________________________________ 4. Why did Amelia Earhart write a book 20 hrs, 40 min? Think and search ____________________________________________________________ 5. What is media sensation? Think and search ____________________________________________________________ 6. What would happen, if Amelia accomplished flying around the world? On my own ___________________________________________________________________________ 7. How was Amelia Earhart’s physical appearance? Right there /Think and Search ____________________________________________________________ 8. What did Amelia Earhart do in order to support the women’s achievement? Think and search ____________________________________________________________ 9. Who was Amelia Earhart’s navigator? Right there ____________________________________________________________ 10. What did Amelia Earhart think about her job? On my own ____________________________________________________________ 11. When did people hear the last communication from Earhart and Noonan? Right there ____________________________________________________________ 59 Comprehension mistakes Amelia Earhart was born in Kansas in 1997. When she was thirty-one year olds, she was invited to become the first woman aviator to cross the Atlantic Ocean in a plane. Earhart was twelve years old before she ever saw an airplane, and she took her first flight after 1920. She was so thrilled by her first experience in a plane that she quickly began to take flying lessons. She wrote, “I want to fly.” After that flight Earhart became a popular person even President Coolidge called to congratulate her. Her record-breaking career and attractive personality were similar to pioneering pilot and American hero Charles Lindbergh, she earned the nickname “Lady Lindy.” She wrote a poem about her flight across the Atlantic, called 20 Hrs., 40 Min. Earhart continued to make new records, and also polished her skills as a singer, always advocating women’s achievements. In 1927 Charles Lindbergh became the first person to make a solo nonstop flight across the Pacific. Fifteen years later, Earhart became the first woman to repeat that feat. She then wanted to fly around The United State, and in June 1947 she left Boston with Fred Noonan as her navigator. Everybody knows why she left behind important communication and navigation instruments. Earhart and Noonan arrived at New Guinea in 21 days. The last communication from Earhart and Noonan was on March 2, 1937 with a nearby Coast Guard ship. The United States Navy conducted a massive search for more than one month but no trace of the plane or its passengers was ever found. Many people believe they got lost and had no food and died. 60 APPENDIX B Learning Activity Plan: William Sydney Porter Course: Supplementary English (Reading) Level: Intermediate (Mattayomsuksa 5) Number of the students: 40 Students Time: 2 periods (50 minutes each) Date planned to teach: Friday 23rd and Monday 26th January 2009 Objectives: 1) To activate students’ background knowledge 2) To review and clarify new vocabulary 3) To recall and recognize text organization 4) To identify and extract important information 5) To memorize what have been read Students will be able to: 1) categorize and discuss things related to an occupation 2) predict and discuss the meaning of the new vocabulary 3) identify the signal words of chronological order pattern 4) summarize the important events in William Sydney Porter’s life 5) rearrange the events in the life story of William Sydney Porter’s life Skills focus: Reading a biography Materials: Evaluation: Picture of William Sydney Porter, Porter’s biography, word categories paper, and ordering puzzle sheets Worksheets: word categories, ordering puzzle Authentic assessment: - pair & group work - participation 61 After teaching notes: 1. The teaching outcome_________________________________________________ 2. Sugesstions_________________________________________________________ 3. Problems___________________________________________________________ 4. Things need to be improved____________________________________________ steps Prereading Language content Writer book pen pencil paper dictionary draft Procedures 1. Teacher (T) has students (Ss) work in pairs and gives each pair a paper written down words that relate to occupations. type imagination fiction nonfiction pseudonym novel short story 2. T lets Ss circle around the words that relate to the occupation “writer”. literature creative translate publish 3. T and Ss check the answers. 4. T talks about things that relate to the writer and T has Ss discuss why they are important to the writer. 5. T asks Students about the famous writers in Thailand and in the world. 1. T writes the name O Henry on the board and asks Ss “Whose is this pseudonym?” Whilereading 2. T shows a picture of William Sydney Porter to the Ss whether they have ever read any stories of him or not. William Sydney porter Key words of the passage 3. T gives Ss the biography of William Sydney Porter. 1st paragraph herding sheep companion incorporate nd 2 paragraph humor venture subsequent indictment embezzle 3rd paragraph guilty sentence 4. T has Ss recall the signal words for chronological order and has them find out the signal words from this text again. 5. T and Ss check the answers. 6. T has Ss read the passage and underline the difficult vocabulary. defeat emerge 7. T has Ss tell the words that they do not know the meaning. 62 steps Whilereading Language content A summary of the first paragraph William Sydney Porter was born in North Procedures 8. T has Ss read the passage again and then has them circle only the key words that are important to the main idea of the story. Carolina. When he was young, he studied in his aunt school until the age of fifteen. In 1881, 9. T discusses about the importance of key words in the story. he worked as a pharmacist and then he moved to live in Texas to work as a herding sheep. By 10. T has Ss review the passage again and tell the key words of each paragraph. spending time in a ranch life, he wrote many short stories there. 11. T and Ss check the answers together. 12. T lets Ss read the first paragraph of the passage. After Ss finish reading, T shows Ss the summary of the first paragraph. 13. T has Ss read and tell whether they still understand the story or not when it has been summarized into a shorter paragraph. 14. T explains how to summarize and a good summary to the SS. 15. T has students read the rest two paragraphs and has them summarize into one short, clear paragraph. 16. T has Ss read their summary to their classmates. Post – reading Ordering puzzle William Sydney Porter or O. Henry, was born in North Carolina. 1. T has Ss work in group of four and gives them ordering puzzle sheets about William Sydney Porter’s life to Ss. At the age of fifteen, he graduated from Lina’s school 2. T has Ss rearrange the puzzle sentences and correct some mistakes of sentences according to the story. In 1881, he was a licensed pharmacist and then he moved to La Salle County in Texas 3. T and Ss check the answers together. 4. T distributes the questions about the story to the Ss individually. 63 steps Language Content At the ranch, he works as a herding sheep for reading two year, and his constant friend was Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary. Post- Procedures 5. T has Ss answer the questions by using information from the ordering puzzle sheet. 6. T and Ss check the answer together. Porter gained lots of knowledge of ranch life for writing several short stories. Then, he moved to Austin for three years, and his pseudonym appeared there In 1887, Porter married Athol Estes as he worked as a draftsman. Then he changed to work as a bank teller for the First National Bank. In 1894, Porter wrote the “Rolling Stone”, and later wrote a column for the Houston Daily Post. Next, Porter then fled to New Orleans because the police stated he had embezzled funds. Then, in 1898 Porter entered prison as a defeated man. Three years later he had his freedom back and reborn as O. Henry. After that he went to New York City, where he published more than 300 stories and gained fame as America’s favorite short Story writer. Finally, he died in New York City at the age of forty-eight in 1910. O. Henry’s stories have been translated all over the world. 64 William Sydney Porter William Sydney Porter (1862-1910), who wrote under the pseudonym of O. Henry, was born in North Carolina. His only formal education was to attend his Aunt Lina’s school until the age of fifteen, where he developed his lifelong love of books. By 1881 he was a licensed pharmacist. However, within a year, on the recommendation of a medical colleague of his Father’s, Porter moved to La Salle County in Texas for two years herding sheep. During this time, Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary was his constant companion, and Porter gained knowledge of ranch life that he later incorporated into many of his short stories. He then moved to Austin for three years, and during this time the first recorded use of his pseudonym appeared, allegedly derived from his habit of calling “Oh, Henry” to a family cat. In 1887, Porter married Athol Estes. He worked as a draftsman, then as a bank teller for the First National Bank. In 1894 Porter founded his own humor weekly, the “Rolling Stone”, a venture that failed within a year, and later wrote a column for the Houston Daily Post. In the meantime, the First National Bank was examined, and the subsequent indictment of 1886 stated that Porter had embezzled funds. Porter then fled to New Orleans, and later to Honduras, leaving his wife and child in Austin. He returned in 1897 because of his wife’s continued ill-health, however she died six months later. Then, in 1898 Porter was found guilty and sentenced to five years imprisonment in Ohio. At the age of thirty five, he entered prison as a defeated man; he had lost his job, his home, his wife, and finally his freedom. He emerged from prison three years later, reborn as O. Henry, the pseudonym he now used to hide his true identity. He wrote at least twelve stories in jail, and after regaining his freedom, went to New York City, where he published more than 300 stories and gained fame as America’s favorite short Story writer. Porter married again in 1907, but after months of poor health, he died in New York City at the age of forty-eight in 1910. O. Henry’s stories have been translated all over the world. 65 Which belong to “Writer”? Circle around them book pen broom microphone taxi imagination nonfiction pseudonym novel literature publish photo chalk mop songs plane pencil paper draft car pot head phone fabric box calculator television dictionary fiction radio computer clock gun children cupboard shelf type fire engine flower cap truck shirt pump basket short story mobile phone pencil case basket 66 Ordering puzzle sheet Directions: rearrange these sentences according to the story ______After that, he went to New York City, where he published more than 300 stories and gained fame as America’s favorite short Story writer. _______In 1881, he was a licensed pharmacist and then he moved to La Salle County in Texas. _______Porter gained lots of knowledge of ranch life for writing several short stories. _______At the ranch, he works as a herding sheep for two year, and his constant friend was Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary. _______Finally, he died in New York City at the age of forty-eight in 1910. O. Henry’s stories have been translated all over the world. _______Next, Porter then fled to New Orleans because the police stated he had embezzled funds. _______In 1894, Porter wrote the “Rolling Stone”, and later wrote a column for the Houston Daily Post. _______In 1887, Porter married Athol Estes as he worked as a draftsman. _______William Sydney Porter or O. Henry was born in North Carolina. _______ Then he changed to work as a bank teller for the First National Bank. _______At the age of fifteen, he graduated from Lina’s school _______Then, he moved to Austin for three years, and his pseudonym appeared there _______Three years later, he had his freedom back and reborn as O. Henry. _______Then, in 1898 Porter entered prison as a defeated man. 67 APPENDIX C Learning Activity Plan: a Snowfall Course: Supplementary English (Reading) Level: Intermediate (Mattayomsuksa 5) Number of the students: 40 Students Time: 3 periods (50 minutes each) Date planned to teach: Tuesday 27th , Friday 30th January, and Monday 2nd February 2009 Objectives: 1) To activate students’ background knowledge 2) To raise awareness of the processes involved in reading 3) To link the existing knowledge to the new information 4) To think about the information and ideas while reading the new information 5) To identify important information after reading a reading text Students will be able to: information 1) brainstorm and link their knowledge to new 2) clarify and identify the purpose for reading 3) search for the important words and describe the meaning by using their own words 4) draw a diagram to show a process from the reading text 5) ask and answer questions about the information from the reading text. 6) conclude the significant information from the reading text. Skills focus: Reading informational text Materials: a reading text “A Snowfall”, A picture of Winnie the Pooh, and KWL table 68 Evaluation: Worksheets: KWL table, graphic organization Authentic assessment: - pair work - group work - participation After teaching notes: 1. The teaching outcome_________________________________________________ 2. Sugesstions_________________________________________________________ 3. Problems___________________________________________________________ 4. Things need to be improved____________________________________________ steps Language content Procedures 1. Teacher (T) shows students (Ss) a picture of Winnie the Pooh and his friends. Prereading 2. T asks Ss questions about the picture. Winnie the pooh 1. What do you see in the picture? 2. What are Pooh and friends doing? 3. What is the weather like in the picture? 4. What is covering the ground? 5. What is snow? 6. Have you ever seen snow? 6. Where does the snow come from? 7. What is the shape of the snow? 3. T distributes KWL table to the Ss and has them fill out the first column “What I know about snow” 4. T has Ss tell what they know about snow and has them write what they want to know about snow into the second column. 5. T has Ss tell what they want to know about snow to their classmates. Kay words Ice crystals frozen precipitation reading atmosphere minuscule nucleus Liquid water droplets moisture snowflake Words or phrases about snow formation process While- 1. Ice crystals in subfreezing strata supply the moisture of present. 1. T gives out a passage “A snowfall” to the Ss. 2. T has Ss read the text quickly and has them tell the topic of the reading text. 3. T discusses about the topic and has the Ss read the passage again. 69 steps Language Content While2. A minuscule at the core of the ice crystal reading condenses and freezes. 3. The ice crystals rob the liquid droplets and grow continuously. 4. The process can be very rapid and quickly creating sizable ice crystals. 5. The ice crystals adhere to each other to create a snowflake. Procedures 4. T has Ss underline the key words in the reading text by using blue ink and circle the words or phrases that relate to the process of the formation of snow by using red ink. 5. T has Ss tell the key words and phrases about the snow formation process to their friends. 6. T and Ss discusses about the formation of snow together. Diagram about the formation of the snow 7. T has Ss divide into groups of four and gives each group a blank paper. 8. T has Ss in each group draw a diagram to represent the process of the formation of snow. 9. T has each group of Ss go to the front of the class and display the diagram to their classmates. 10. T and Ss conclude about the detail of the reading text. Post- Teacher’s questions reading 1. Where do the ice crystals come from? 1. T has Ss work in pairs. 2. T has Ss look back to the questions that they wrote before reading a passage. 2. What is a minuscule nucleus? 3. Why do the ice crystals rob the liquid droplets? 4. What is a snowflake? 5. What is the normal form of a snowflake? 6. How can you see the shape of a snowflake? 7. Where is the source of moisture for snowfalls of the Rocky mountain? 8. What are the other geographical features that can supply the moisture for snowfalls? 3. T has Ss take turn to ask and answer questions that they want to know about the snow. 4. T has Ss write down the answer of each question into the third column of KWL table. 5. T encourages Ss to ask more questions about the reading texts. 6. T asks Ss her own questions. 7. T has Ss write down additional information that they have learnt from the reading text into the third column. 70 A Snowfall A snowfall consists of myriads of minute ice crystals that fall to the ground in the form of frozen precipitation. The formation of snow begins with these ice crystals in the subfreezing strata of the middle and upper atmosphere when there is an adequate supply of moisture present. At the core of every ice crystal is a minuscule nucleus, a solid particle of matter around which moisture condenses and freezes. Liquid water droplets floating in the super-cooled atmosphere and free ice crystals cannot coexist within the same cloud, since the vapor pressure of ice is less than that of water. This enables the ice crystals to rob the liquid droplets of their moisture and grow continuously. The process can be very rapid, quickly creating sizable ice crystals, some of which adhere to each other to create a cluster of ice crystals or a snowflake. Simple flakes possess a variety of beautiful forms, usually hexagonal, though the symmetrical shapes reproduced in most microscope photography of snowflakes are not usually found in actual snowfalls. Typically, snowflakes in actual snowfall consist of broken fragments and clusters of adhering ice crystals. For a snowfall to continue once it starts there must be a constant inflow of moisture to supply the nuclei. This moisture is supplied by the passage of an airstream over a water surface and its subsequent lifting to higher regions of the atmosphere. The Pacific Ocean is the source of moisture for most snowfalls west of the Rocky Mountains, while the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean feed water vapor into the air currents over the central and eastern sections of the United States. Other geographical features also can be the source of moisture for some snowstorms. For example, areas adjacent to the Great Lakes experience their own unique lake-effect storms, employing a variation of the process on a local scale. In addition, mountainous section or rising terrain can initiate snowfalls by the geographical lifting of a moist airstream. 71 KWL chart What I know about snow I want to know about snow What I learn about snow 72 APPENDIX D Learning Activity plan: The Anasazi Course: Supplementary English (Reading) Level: Intermediate (Mattayomsuksa 5) Number of the students: 40 Students Time: 3 periods (50 minutes each) Date planned to teach: Tuesday 3rd, Friday 6th, and Tuesday 10th February 2009 Objectives: 1) To activate students’ background knowledge 2) To link the existing knowledge to the new information 3) To predict the main subject of the story 4) To tell the meaning of the important words in a reading text 5) To extract the important information and significant detail from the reading text Students will be able to: 1) identify the locations of American tribes 2) skim the passage and tell about the best title of the reading text 3) categorize the subheading or subtopics of the reading text 4) find out the groups of synonym and antonym in the reading text 5) make a pyramid chart to describe the topic, subtopics and detail of the reading text. 6) answer the questions about the reading text Skills focus: Reading informational text Materials: pictures of Native American, a map of the United States, word cards: Ancient American tribes. a reading text “The Anasazi” 73 Evaluation: Worksheets: questions about the reading text Authentic assessment: - pair work - group work - participation After teaching notes: 1. The teaching outcome________________________________________________ 2. Sugesstions_________________________________________________________ 3. Problems___________________________________________________________ 4. Things need to be improved____________________________________________ steps Language Content Procedures 1. T has Ss look at the pictures of native American and asks them questions. Prereading 2. T asks Ss whether they know any ancient tribes and what they know about the ancient American tribes. 3. T discusses about the ancient American to the Ss. Questions 1. Have you ever seen these people? 2. Who are they? 3. Do you think they are still alive? 4. Did they live in our country? 5. Where did they live? 4. T attaches an American map on the board. 5. T has Ss look at each part of the United States and asks them to guess where most of the ancient American lived? 6. T has Ss divide into group of four and distributes the paper written down the names of ancient American tribes and the brief detail about their locations (each group gets different colors). 7. T has each group of Ss compete to stick the names of the tribes on the map. An American map 8. T and Ss check the answers together. 9. T shows Ss a map of the ancient American tribes to the Ss and talks about the American tribes. Ancient American tribes 74 Steps Whilereading Language Content Procedures 1. T gives Ss a reading text and lets them guess about the topic of the text. The subtopics 1. people Basket makers Zuni matrilineal Pueblo female Hopi chief 2. house adobe wood pit multistoried complexes pueblo village subterranean room kiva chapels 3. agriculture irrigation harvest plant grow crops 2. T has Ss recall where the Anasazi lived, and their featured characteristics. 3. T has Ss read the first sentence and guess what information will be in the reading text. 3. T has Ss read the text quickly and categorize the subtopics of the Anasazi presented the reading text. 4. T has Ss tell the subtopic of the reading text. 5. T lets Ss read the reading text and underline the 4. crafts basket pottery turquoise jewelry textile words that deal with the subtopics. 6. T and Ss discuss about the subtopics and the content of the reading text. Synonyms • construct build • agriculture crops • grow • house home village community pueblo complex organization 9. T explains Ss about the synonym and has them find the groups of words that have the similar meaning from the reading text. • matrilineal female • fighting conflict dispute war 10. T writes down the words “ancient and advanced” on the board and asks Ss for the relationship between them. • pit 11. T explains about the antonym to the Ss. 7. T writes the words “construct and build” on the board. harvest 8. T asks for the relationship between these two words. plant woman hole underworld Antonym • ancestor • plant • ancient • under above • men women descent harvest advanced 12. T has Ss find the groups of antonym from the reading text. 13. T has Ss tell their friends about the groups of the synonym and antonym from the reading text. 75 Steps Post- Language Content Example of a Pyramid reading Procedures 1. T has Ss work in pair and gives each pair a picture of a learning pyramid to the Ss. Subject 2. T has Ss name the top of the pyramid with the word “subject”, the middle with “sub-heading” and the bottom as “detail”. Sub-heading 3. T has Ss in each pair fill out the pyramid with the detail from the story. Detail 4. T walks around the class and gives advice to the students. 5. T has each pair of the Ss go to the front of the class and describe about their pyramids. Questions 1. Where did the Spanish move to in 1500? 2. What are the other names for the Anasazi? 3. Why did the Anasazi become the advanced agricultural people? 4. What were the features of the early Anasazi’s house? 5. What was the Kiva? 6. Who was the leader of the Anasazi’s family? 7. When did the crops belong to the men? 8. What did the jobs that men and women of Anasazi usually do? 9. How many chiefs were there in the Anasazi tribe? 10. What did the two chiefs do for the tribes? 6. T gives out the questions paper to the Ss and has them answer the questions by using the information from their pyramids. 7. T and Ss check the answer together. 76 Topic: _________________ In the 1500's when the Spanish moved into what later was to become the southwestern United States, they encountered the ancestors of the modernday Pueblo, Hopi, and Zuni peoples. These ancestors, known variously as the Basket Makers, the Anasazi, or the Ancient Ones, had lived in the area for at least 2,000 years. They were an advanced agricultural people who used irrigation to help grow their crops. The Anasazi lived in houses constructed of adobe and wood. Anasazi houses were originally built in pits and were entered from the roof. But around the year 700 A.D., the Anasazi began to build their homes above ground and join them together into rambling multistoried complexes, which the Spanish called pueblos or villages. Separate subterranean rooms in these pueblos – known as kivas or chapels – were set aside for religious ceremonials. Each kiva had a fire pit and a hole that was believed to lead to the underworld. The largest pueblos had five stories and more than 800 rooms. The Anasazi family was matrilineal; that is, descent was traced through the female. The sacred objects of the family were under the control of the oldest female, but the actual ceremonies were conducted by her brother, or son. Women owned the rooms in the pueblo and the crops, once they were harvested. While still growing, crops belonged to the men, who, in contrast to most other Native American groups, planted them. The women made baskets and pottery; the men wove textile and crafted turquoise jewelry. Each village had two chiefs. The village chief dealt with land disputes and religious affairs. The war chief led the men in fighting during occasional conflicts that broke out with neighboring villages and directed the men in community building projects. The cohesive political and social organization of the Anasazi made it almost impossible for other groups to conquer them. 77 Ancient American tribes Word cards Cherokee Blackfoot Delaware 78 Anasazi Chickasaw Chinook Natchez 79 The Cherokees are original residents of the American southeast region, particularly Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Most Cherokees were forced to move to Oklahoma in the 1800's along the Trail of Tears. "Blackfoot" is the English translation of the word siksika, which means "black foot." It refers to the dark colored moccasins the people wear. The Blackfeet Indians are original residents of the northern Plains, particularly Montana, Idaho, and Alberta, Canada. Most Blackfoot people still live in this region today. The Lenni Lenapes or the Delaware were original people of the mid-Atlantic area. Here are some maps showing the geography of the Lenapes and their neighbors in New Jersey, Delaware, New York and Pennsylvania. Most Lenape Indians were driven out of their homeland by the British. Here is a partial map of the forced travels of the Lenape Indians. The Anasazi were located in the Four Corners region ( Northern New Mexico west of the Pecos River, southwestern Colorado, most of southern Utah, and northern Arizona south to the Little Colorado River). The Anasazi existed around two thousand years ago and are thought to be the ancestors of modern Indian tribes like the Hopi, the Zuni and the Pueblo. The Chickasaws are original people of the American southeast, particularly Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky and Missouri. Most Chickasaws were forced to move to Oklahoma in the 1800's, and their descendants live in Oklahoma today. Some Chickasaws escaped by hiding or pretending to be white, and the descendants of these people are still living in the original Chickasaw homelands. The Chinook Indians are original people of the Pacific Northwest Coast. They live in Washington state. The Chinooks live on a reservation, which is land that belongs to them and is under their control. The Chinook Nation has its own government, laws, police, and services, just like a small country. The Natchez were original residents of Mississippi and Louisiana. The Natchez tribe was defeated by the French in the early 1700's, and the survivors scattered. People of Natchez descent live in many different places today, but most of them live among the Chickasaw, Creek and Cherokee tribes of Oklahoma. 80 81 APPENDIX E Reading Comprehension Pre & Post Test Passage A 8 items Passage B 5 items Passage C 7 items Total 20 items Directions: Read the following passages, and choose the best answer for each question. Mark X under the letter a, b, c, or d on your answer sheet. Passage A (1-8) By about A.D.500 the Mound Builder culture was declining, perhaps because of attacks from other tribes or perhaps because of severe climatic changes that undermined agriculture. To the west another culture, based on intensive agriculture, was beginning to flourish. Its center was beneath presentday St. Louis, and it radiated out to encompass most of the Mississippi watershed, from Wisconsin to Louisiana and from Oklahoma to Tennessee. Thousands of villages were included in its orbit. By about A.D.700 this Mississippian culture, as it is known to archaeologist, began to send its influence eastward to transform the life of most of the less technologically advanced woodland tribes. Like the Mound builders of the Ohio region, these tribes, probably influenced by Meso-American culture through trade and warfare, built gigantic mounds and burial and ceremonial places. The largest of them, rising in four terraces to a height of one hundred feet, has a rectangular base of nearly fifteen acres, larger than that of Great Pyramid of Egypt. Built between A.D. 900and 1100, this huge earthwork faces the site of palisaded Indian city which contained more than one hundred small artificial mounds marking burial sites. Spread among them was a vest settlement containing some 30,000 people by current estimations. The finely crafted ornaments and tools recovered at Cahokia, as the center of Mississippi culture is called, include elaborate ceramics, finely sculpted stonework, careful embossed and engraved copper and mica sheets, and one funeral blanket fashioned from 12,000 shell beads. They indicate that Cahokia was a true urban center, with clustered housing, markets, and specialists in tool-making, hide-dressing, jewelry-making, weaving, and saltmaking. 82 1. What a. b. c. d. is the main topic of the passage? The Mississippi culture The decline of Mound Builder culture The architecture of Meso-American Indians The eastern woodland tribes 2. The paragraph preceding this one most probably discussed… a. the Mound Builder culture b. warfare in A.D. 500 c. the geography of the Mississippi area d. agriculture near the Mississippi river 3. In relation to the Mississippi culture, the Mound builder culture was located… a. in essentially the same area b. farther south along the watershed c. to the east d. to the west 4. The Mississippian culture influenced the culture of the … a. eastern woodland tribes b. Mound Builders c. Meso-American d. Egyptians 5. According to the passage, the mounds were used as… a. palaces for the loyal families b. fortresses for defense c. centers for conducting trade d. places for burying the dead 6. According to the passage, how does the mound at Cahokia compare with the Great Pyramid? a. It is higher. b. Its artifacts are more elaborate. c. It is fifteen times as heavy. d. Its base covers a large area. 83 7. The mound at Cahokia was made of… a. stone b. dirt c. ceramics d. metal 8. Which aspect of the Mississippi culture is discussed the LEAST in the passage? a. The construction of mounds b. Agricultural methods c. Urban settlement d. The forms of artwork Passage B (9-13) Magnesium is another mineral we now obtain by collecting huge volume of ocean water and treating it with chemicals, although originally it was derived only from brines or from the treatment of such magnesium-containing rocks as dominate, of which whole mountain ranges are composed. In a cubic mile of seawater, there are about four million tons of magnesium. Since the direct extraction method was developed about 1941, production has increased enormously. It was magnesium from the sea that made possible the wartime growth of the aviation industry, for every airplane made in the United States (and in most countries as well) contains about half a ton of magnesium metal. And it has innumerable uses in other industries where a lightweight metal is desired, besides its longstanding utility as an insulating material, and its use in printing inks, medicines, and toothpastes. 9. What a. b. c. d. is the main topic of this passage? Uses of seawater Treatment of seawater Chemical properties of magnesium Derivation and uses of magnesium 10. According to the passage, magnesium was first obtained from… a. rocks found on land b. great amounts of ocean water c. the sea floor d. major industrial sites 84 11. According to the passage, which of the following was a direct consequence of the new method of obtaining magnesium? a. The development of insulation materials b. Increased airplane production c. Improved medical facilities d. The development of cheap inks for printing 12. According to the passage, why is magnesium important to industry? a. It is strong. b. It conducts heat well. c. It weighs little. d. It is inexpensive to produce. 13. It can be inferred from the passage that during the past fifty years the demand for magnesium has… a. declined greatly b. remained stable c. increased slightly d. risen dramatically Passage C (14-20) Russian-born Max Weber grew up in New York, studied art there, and then went back to Europe to familiarize himself with contemporary artistic developments. On returning to the United States, Weber worked in the new styles he had discovered in Paris and soon became recognized as a pioneer of American abstract painting. An example of his work at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., is a 1915 painting entitled “Rush Hour, New York.” Using abstract and geometrical forms, Weber expressed the movement, noise, and vibrancy of the great metropolis. The picture blends elements of two European styles: cubism, which shows objects from a number of different angles of vision at the same time, and futurism, which portrays speed and objects in motion. Forceful line and spiky forms throughout the composition convey the energy and vitality of the city. Weber expresses the city’s diversity by juxtaposing forms with rounded and angular shapes to suggest specific elements of the urban landscape: skyscrapers, flashing lights, and hurrying people. 85 14. Which of the following would be the most appropriate title for this passage? a. b. c. d. Cubism American Art Works of the National Gallery of Art An Innovative American Artist 15. According to the passage, which of the following best describes the development of Weber’s art? a. It began as a hoppy late in his life. b. It gradually inspired diversity among his European contemporaries c. It evolved as one of American’s earliest examples of abstract painting. d. It came to represent the first purely American style. 16. The painting discussed in the passage can be found in… a. b. c. d. Paris, France Washington New York Moscow, Russia 17. “Rush Hour, New York” was completed in the … a. b. c. d. early nineteenth century late nineteenth century early twentieth century late twentieth century 18. The mood of the painting “Rush Hour, New York” can be best described as a. b. c. d. depressing vigorous hostile cheerful 86 19. According to the passage, Weber uses the style of cubism when he… a. b. c. d. shows an object simultaneously from many viewpoints portrays objects with geometric exactness leave all human faces blank represents all forms isolated within boxes 20. According to the passage, an element of futurism that Weber’s painting displays is the… a. b. c. d. impression of movement inclusion of many human forms portrayal of skyscrapers application of forceful colors @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ 87 APPENDIX F Sample of students’ works 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97