Dave,
Could you suggest a textmapping lesson with a book like Little Bear or Frog
and Toad?  Thanks,
Heather

On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 6:56 PM, Dave Middlebrook <
davemiddlebr...@verizon.net> wrote:

> Hi Diane,
>
> I'll start with a simple idea: Try scrolling a short novel that the
> students have read, and post the scroll on the wall somewhere in the room.
>  Do a quick walk-through summary -- literally, by walking along the scroll
> and saying what happens.  As you walk and talk, make marks or use sticky
> notes along the scroll.  You'll come back to these later.  Encourage your
> students to interrupt you as you are doing this.  They may want to mention
> something that you  missed -- for example, an observation about the plot or
> the characters, or some detail.  Others may want to weigh in, as well.
> Encourage conversation.  Post sticky notes to record student observations.
> Have them tell you where the notes should go.  If a student needs to find a
> particular event so that a note can be posted there, have the other students
> help -- tell them that their job is to be detectives.  If, for instance, one
> student finds an event that happened before the one in question, that's a
> useful clue as to where to look.  Help your students be strategic about
> bracketing and homing in on specific parts.  These are useful searching
> skills that are even more important in bound books.
>
> If you let the students engage and share their thoughts, you will likely
> not make it through your summary.  I'd consider that a success!  Student
> engagement in the conversation is the real goal.  You're walk-through is
> just a conversation-starter.  The scroll will help your students remember
> the story.  It will help them generate questions and inferences.  I will
> help them determine importance.  It will help them with sequencing,
> recalling details, and putting it all together for a much richer
> comprehension.
>
> There are significant differences between the process of doing this by
> paging through a bound book and doing this on a scroll.  The spatial
> diimension -- the physical sense of the scroll's length and of where
> different observations tie to the text (the scatter-plot trail of sticky
> notes -- is very powerful.  The fact that you and your students can see it
> all at once is very powerful.
>
> You can do a lot with scrolls.  If this sounds like it might work for you,
> then save it and use it.  Contact me if you want to talk through the lesson
> in more detail.  Or if this doesn't sound right for you, tell me what you
> might be starting off with next Fall and I'll suggest a way that scrolls can
> help improve the lesson.
>
> I hope that this is helpful.  Thanks for your interest!
>
> - Dave
>
> Dave Middlebrook
> The Textmapping Project
> A resource for teachers improving reading comprehension skills instruction.
> www.textmapping.org   |   Please share this site with your colleagues!
> USA: (609) 771-1781
> dmiddlebr...@textmapping.org
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Diane Smith" <dianelyn...@yahoo.com>
> To: <mosaic@literacyworkshop.org>
> Sent: Thursday, June 04, 2009 9:24 PM
> Subject: [MOSAIC] Textmapping for beginners
>
>
>
>
>>
>> Hi!
>> I am going to be teaching fourth graders next fall and just heard about
>> the idea of textmapping. I find it intriquing. No one I know has heard of
>> this concept at my school, so my students will not have any previous
>> experience with it. Can you give suggestions on how to begin and types of
>> text to use?
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>>
>>
>
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