The body of work in which the author purports to tell us about the real world, a real experience, a real person, an idea, or a belief.
Concrete learners who mostly understand the world from their own point-of-view (Piaget) and don’t yet have the ability to follow an author’s logic or to recognize if the author is implying anything beyond what is directly stated .
A book about real people or real things is called nonfiction. There won’t be any talking animals or flying people in a book about real things. A counting book and books about trucks or dinosaurs or the planets are examples of nonfiction. When you read nonfiction ask yourself, “What did I learn?”
Meaningful work ; engaged; focused; curious ;independent and cooperative; student-led; asking questions; making connections; reading more and more complex text
It is the reader’s responsibility to question his or her own beliefs and assumptions while determining what is true—or not—in the text because the author is offering one version of the truth or not offering the truth.
Can apply some rules of logic to a situation or task as long as it is still concrete and can think from another’s perspective .
Literacy skills that can be applied across a variety of subjects (i.e. summarizing , skimming and scanning).
Struggling readers often lack knowledge in two areas:
1. How reading works
2. How content works
First step is to have students identify the “it” in “I don’t get it.” Blame the author.Nonfiction books are about real people and real events. Some nonfiction might be about ideas or beliefs. A book about your favorite sports player or a book about a musician is nonfiction. So is a book about how the weather is changing. When you read nonfiction, you should ask yourself, “What does the author want me to understand?
Raise rigor by focusing on the reader’s engagement with the text
The unique tools that experts in a discipline use to engage in that discipline (i.e. understanding author’s bias , understanding how to read specific symbols of calculus).
1. Explain
2. Model
3. Students Try
4. Students reflect
Can think abstractly, apply rules of logic to real-life situations, and reflect on their thinking, has the ability to hold several competing images in mind, and can use complex thinking .
The author thought I’d know what this word means. (Vocabulary)
The author thought I could picture this. (Visualizing)
The author thought I’d know something about this. (Prior Knowledge)
The author thought I’d get how this happens. (Sequencing or causal relationships)
History: Read like a historian. Who is the author and what is his background?