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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Scaffolding
Instruction
Assisting Reading Performance
Workshop 2
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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What Is a Scaffold?
A scaffold is a temporary learning aid
designed to help the student grow in
independence as a learner.
Once the skill the scaffold is intended to
help has been mastered, the scaffold
should be withdrawn.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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What Is Scaffolding Instruction?
A set of pre-reading, during-reading, and
post-reading activities specifically
designed to assist a particular group of
students in successfully reading,
understanding, learning from, and
enjoying a reading passage.
(Graves & Graves, 2003)
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Why Use Scaffolding Instruction?
Scaffolding a reading passage offers the
teacher a flexible plan that takes into
consideration:
1. The particular group of students
2. The text they are reading
3. The purpose for reading the text
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Why Use Scaffolding Instruction?
Scaffolding a reading experience also
provides:
1. Temporary support for students to use in
understanding and discussing the reading
selection.
2. Methods to enhance student engagement
with the text, allowing for deeper
understanding of knowledge.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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What Advantages Does
Scaffolding Instruction Offer?
A temporary support structure to assist the
student’s comprehension of text.
A support structure that allows students to
complete tasks and gain knowledge.
Activities which can be used to self-monitor and
internalize reading skills.
Activities which provide ways for students to
discuss and write about reading passages.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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What Advantages Does
Scaffolding Instruction Offer?
Scaffolding provides for a plan to develop
independent readers
Scaffolding is a temporary support plan
which should be removed when the leaner
reaches an independent reading level and
can self-monitor their reading.
Scaffolding includes an instructional
framework.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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What Are the Components of an
Instructional Framework Scaffold?
Initiating students toward reading at
independent levels.
Constructing meaning from the text.
Utilizing text meanings to apply or act
upon the meanings students have
constructed.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Initiating Component
Teachers should:
Introduce content
Assess prior knowledge
Identify purpose for
reading
Stimulate curiosity
Develop a strategic plan
Students should:
Preview the content
Assess prior knowledge
Build upon prior knowledge
Determine purposes
Raise questions/issues
Recognize a need to know
Develop a strategic reading
plan
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Constructing Component
Teachers should
consider:
Class size
Needs of students
Diverse learning styles
Complexity of subject
matter
Time spent on a reading
assignment
Students should :
Engage
Interact
Process information
Associate with life
experiences
Organize
Think about the
passage
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Utilizing Component
Teachers should:
Explain
Clarify
Model
Demonstrate
Guide the student using
the scaffold activity
selected
Students should:
Write ideas
Synthesize information
Clarify and organize
ideas
Refine concepts
Move toward
independence from
using the scaffold
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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How Are Scaffolding Instruction
Activities Sequenced?
Before Reading Scaffolds
During Reading Scaffolds
After Reading Scaffolds
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Two Minute Preview Description
Provides students with an overview of the
selection
Helps students develop a plan for reading
a selection
Previewing a reading passage can help
students become active and engaged with
the text.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Two Minute Preview Procedures
Can be used with pairs or whole class
Good scaffold for predicting text structure
and organization of content
Teacher leads the class in discussion of
preview findings
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Two Minute Preview Guide
What is the author talking about?
What are the heading and subheading topics?
Can I interpret graphs, charts, tables and maps?
Are there any margin notes?
Is there a passage overview and summary ?
Do questions cover the major ideas in the
reading?
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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K-W-L Scaffold
A widely used strategy to foster active
reading, consists of three steps:
K- What do I already know?
W-What do I want to find out?
L-What did I learn, and still need to learn?
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Why Use the K-W-L Scaffold?
Provides a structure which:
Activates prior knowledge
Builds upon prior knowledge
Elicits student input
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Sample K-W-L Scaffold Chart
K
W
L
K: What do I
already know?
W: What do I
want to find out?
L: What did I
learn?
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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During Reading Scaffolds
Key Questions
Note Taking: Do it Yourself
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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The Key Questions Scaffold
This scaffold strategy is designed to help
students process the basic elements of of
( Who? What? When? Where? And How?)
of what they read.
Students use this scaffold to note and
present information to a small group or
whole class.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Why Use the Key Questions
Scaffold?
This scaffold is used:
When working with readers who have
trouble comprehending at the literal level.
To present the new information helps
integrate it into existing schemata.
When teachers need a quick,informal
assessment tool to judge student reading
performance on a text passage.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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The Key Questions Procedure
Teacher models five key questions in a selection
Students read and record information to answer the five
key questions using the key questions worksheet.
Students may design a flipchart of notes.
Students present the information orally to the class
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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The Key Questions Scaffold:
Student Worksheet
Use the key questions scaffold below with the reading assignment.
Who ? What ? When ? Where? How?
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Note Taking: Do It Yourself
Effective note taking is one of the most
important skills students can develop.
Real value in note taking is revisiting the notes
and reacting, organizing, and using them in
some way.
Revisiting notes and using them in classroom
instruction leads to deeper understanding and
integration into one’s schema.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Note Taking: Do It Yourself
There are many types of note taking
systems.
Any note-taking system should present
information in an organized manner that
can be adapted for verbal and visual
presentations.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Note Taking Using the R3 System
Students perform the following actions:
Read the text passage
Record important notes
Respond to the notes by writing questions and
answering those questions
React by writing a summary about what they are
learning.
Make associations to learn new material by
linking to existing knowledge
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Note Taking Using the R3 System
Use the R3 note taking scaffold below.
Notes: Questions
and
Answers:
Reaction Summary:
Associations:
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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After Reading Scaffolds
Think Aloud Strategy
Writing to Learn Strategy
The Last Word
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Think Aloud Strategy
This scaffold helps students understand
the thinking required by a specific task.
The teacher models the thinking process
as she/he reads aloud.
Students see how the teacher constructs
meaning from unfamiliar vocabulary, and
new text content.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Think Aloud Strategy Scaffolding
Includes the following activities:
Reading aloud
Developing questions
Verbalizing thoughts
Making predictions as you read
Explaining how one connects new content
with prior knowledge.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Think Aloud Activities
Coping strategies you can model include:
Making predictions
Forming a hypothesis
Creating analogies
Verbalizing Fix-Up Strategies
Using retelling to review a process or
procedure
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Think Aloud Guide Sheet
Make predictions
Form mental pictures
Connect to prior
Knowledge
Create Analogies
Verbalize Confusing
points
Use fix-up strategy
None A Little Most of Always
the time
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Writing To Learn Strategy
Can be incorporated across the curriculum
Helps students personalize learning
Encourages high-level thinking skills
Assists in helping students construct
meaning from the text
Writing activities are brief
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Writing To Learn Strategy Steps
1.Select the concept you want students to
explore.
2. Assign the Writing to learn activity
any time during the class.
3. Give students three to five minutes think
time to consider a response
4. Have students write five minutes on the
topic.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Writing To Learn Strategy
Writing to learn discussion can be
centered on the written response
Writing to learn helps students reflect on
information under discussion.
Writing to learn can be effect in helping
Students construct summaries of their
reading assignment.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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The Last Word Strategy
The Last Word is a writing to learn activity
used at the end of a discussion or reading.
Students spend the last ten minutes of class
completing the Last Word Writing guide.
In the guide, students write the teacher a brief
letter about information they do not understand,
need clarified, or reviewed.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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The Last Word Strategy Guide
The Last Word
Name _________, Date____, Class______
Today, I understood:__________.
Today, I did not understand:________.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Writing to Learn: Guidelines
1. Identify appropriate topic and writing
activity.
2. Keep content the central focus.
3. Provided sufficient writing time.
4. Design the writing activity to review,
question and summarize knowledge
5. Provide time to students to discuss their
written responses.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Scaffolding Instruction Review
In this program, we have presented:
1. A rationale for scaffolding.
2. A reading frame work for using
scaffolding: before, during and after the
reading process
3. Six scaffolding activities teachers can
integrate with their content reading
assignments.
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Temple CTE Reading Project
D. Garnes, FRA
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Resources Used in This Program
Billmeyer, Rachel & Barton, Mary Lee. ( 1998) Teaching Reading in
the Content Areas: If Not Me, Then Who?, McREL, Aurora, CO.
Brozo, W.G., & Simpson, M.L. (1999) Readers, Teachers and
Learners: Expanding Literacy Across the Content Areas, Prentice
Hall: Upper Saddle River, NJ.
Graves, Michael & Graves, Bonnie. ( 2003) Scaffolding Reading
Experiences: Designs for Student Success, Christopher-Gordon
Publishers: Norwood, MA.
Stephens, Elaine & Brown, Jean. (2000) A Handbook of Content
Literacy Strategies: 75 Practical Reading and Writing Ideas,
Christopher-Gordon Publishers: Norwood, MA.