Sunday, April 13, 2008

Teaching Non-Fiction Reading

Teaching Non-Fiction Reading:
Non-fiction reading has great appeal to young children who are curious about the world and are eager to learn about a variety of topics. However, non-fiction reading and writing require a set of skills and a foundation of knowledge that is different from reading fiction. The reader has different goals and must use different strategies. Thematic units in science, health, and social studies can incorporate a set of comprehension and information processing skills that we can begin to teach in early literacy.


Non-Fiction Reading:

A good way to start children on becoming non-fiction readers is to provide books on topics that interest them.


>Start a KWL chart with your students on the topic. What do I know about the topic? What do I want to know? What did I learn? This chart is developed with the children over the course of the unit.


>Develop a reading and writing vocabulary chart that contains words they will encounter in the texts. (For example, if your topic is butterflies, your vocabulary chart might include words such as chrysalis, pupa, and metamorphosis. Write the words on a separate chart and work them into your talk about the topic. This will facilitate decoding and encoding later on.)


>Teach visual literacy by spending a good deal of time discussing the illustrations, charts, and graphs that appear on the cover and in the book. These materials have been provided to teach readers about the topic and provide essential information as well as to stimulate interest.

-Model looking at the illustrations before reading the text.

- Ask students what the illustrations tell us about the topic. (Always keep your questions open-ended.)


>Keep the learning ongoing. At the end of each shared reading lesson have the children work with you by recording what they have learned about the topic on your KWL chart. Have them use their own words.


>Demonstrate that non-fiction reading is different than reading fiction.

-Point out that the important thing is the gathering of information and learning about new things.

-We have to stop and think about what we are reading.

-We might have to look in other books for more information or to understand what we are reading.


>Once you feel your students have had enough exposure to non-fiction, you should have them practice the skills on their own. You will need to assemble sufficient copies of leveled text for your guided reading groups and for independent reading. You will want to be sure that your students are studying the graphics and practicing visual literacy, discussing the information with their peers, and recording--in their own words--the important information they are gathering from their reading. They should also be encouraged to make their own illustrations to support their understandings.




----Next week: Teaching Non-Fiction Writing... ;)

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