Transcript Document

Determining Important
Ideas
6 Thinking Strategies
Literacy Inservice
March 2005
I understand the main ideas of
the text and what the
author's message is.
The text was mostly about...
The autho r is trying to tell us that...
I learned...
The important details were...
© Readinglady.com
SUMMARIZING
IS TAKING LARGER SELECTIONS OF TEXT
AND REDUCING THEM TO THEIR BARE
ESSENTIALS:
•THE GIST
•KEY IDEAS
•MAIN POINTS THAT ARE WORTH NOTING AND
REMEMBERING
When we summarize, we strip away the extra
wording and focus on the heart of the
material.
When students SUMMARIZE they:
•pull out main ideas
•focus on key details
•use key words and phrases
•break down the larger ideas
•tell only enough to convey the gist
Proficient
Readers…
•Identify key ideas or themes as they read
•Utilize text structure and text features (such as bold or
italicized print, figures and photographs) to help
them distinguish important from unimportant
information
Writers…
•Observe their world and record what they believe is significant
•Make decision about the best genre and structure to
communicate their ideas
Mathematicians…
•Evaluate and think critically about information
•Make decisions about the quality and usefulness of information
•Decide what is important to remember and what is not
Strategies for Summarizing:
Save the Last Word
Most Important Word
“ Somebody Wanted But So ”
2 Column Chart: topic/details
Text frames
Save the Last Word:
•After reading a text, students choose passages they like and copy
each passage on a card.
•Then , on the reverse side of that card, they write why they liked
that passage.
•Once students have completed this, they get into small groups.
•One at a time, they read the passages they selected.
•The other students comment on what they liked or didn’t like
about each passage.
•Then, the student who wrote it on his card gets to have the last
word as he reads his reason for choosing that passage
s
Most Important Word
s
•To encourage a lively debate, ask students to choose what they
consider to be the most important word from the text
they’ve just read.
•This strategy forces the students back into the text to consider what
was the most important aspect of that text.
•When students have made their choices, make sure they can point to
places in the text where the word is used and explain why they
chose that word as important
Steer them away from using a character’s name or word in the title
If students choose “of” and “the”? Have them count ‘em! :)
Most Important Word
Determining Impor tance With Non-Fiction
What?
Who?
When?
Word
Where?
How?
Why?
“Somebody Wanted But So”
Summarizing a short story or a novel appears to be too
overwhelming for many students. SWBS offers students a
framework as they create their summaries.
Students read a story and then decide who the
somebody is, what that somebody wanted, but what
happened to keep something from happening, and
so, finally, how everything works out.
SWBS also moves students beyond summary writingSomebody= deciding main characters
Wanted= events of the plot- main ideas and details
But= examining conflict
So= looking at resolutions
Som e bo dy
(ch a r acte r )
Wa n ted
Bu t
(go al /mo tiva tion ) (con flict)
So
(r es o lu tion )
2 Column Chart: Topic and Details
The topic and detail form is effective in allowing for the
students to list essential information. The third column can be
added for connections or questions.
Topic
Detail
Response
Text Frames
The intent of the text frame is to help children develop independent
comprehension skills. They can be used to help organize
information in order to identify important ideas and learn to use text
structure to support comprehension.
Constructing the frames:
1. Read the text, determine the focus.
2. Sketch out a paragraph which focuses on the problem.
3. Delete words, phrases, and sentences except those which
are needed to sustain the purpose of the paragraph.
4. Modify the frame to be used in a variety of situations.
STORY SUMMARY WITH ONE CHARACTER INCLUDED
OUR STORY IS ABOUT_________________________________________________.
_______________________
IS AN IMPORT ANT CHARACTER IN OUR ST ORY.
__________________________
T RIED TO _________________________________
__________________________________________________
. THE STORY ENDS
WHEN __________________________________________________________
.
IMPORTANT IDEA OR PLOT
IN THIS ST ORY, T HE PROBLEM STARTS WHEN_________________________
_____________________________________
. AFTER THAT, ________________
______________________________________________________________________
NEXT, _______________________________________________________________
__________________________________
. THEN, __________________________
____________________________________________________
. THE PROBLEM
IS FINALLY SOLVED WHEN __________________________________________
___________________________________________
. THE STORY ENDS______
___________________________________________________________
.
When students highlight or mark text in
nonfiction materials, they should keep
the following guidelines in mind:
•Look carefully at the first and last line of each paragraph
•Highlight only necessary words and phrases
•Don’t get thrown off by interesting details
•Try not to highlight more than half of a paragraph
•Make notes in margins
•Cue words-followed by important information
•Nonfiction has many features that signal important
information
Determining Important
Ideas
6 Thinking Strategies
Literacy Inservice
March 2005