1 / 10

Reader’s Notebook: Enhancing Reading Skills through Reflection and Engagement

Discover everything you need to know to set up your Reader’s Notebook and develop your reading skills through serious study. Keep track of your ideas, connections, and questions for further exploration and sharing.

browning
Download Presentation

Reader’s Notebook: Enhancing Reading Skills through Reflection and Engagement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reader’s Notebook Everything you need to know in order to set up your Reader’s Notebook

  2. Purpose of Reader’s Notebook • The purpose of a Reader’s Notebook is to engagewith the text through serious study. • Develop reading skills by being aware of how we are reading and what we are reading. • Keep track of the ideas, connections, and questions that come to mind so we can think more about them later and/or share them with others.

  3. Guidelines for Reader’s Notebook • If you are keeping your Reader’s Notebook in your journal, make sure that each entry is written on a new page. • Complete at leastONE page of response for each act • Part one: Write a concise summary of the act. Keep your summary under 10 sentences. • Part two: Reflect on the reading. This can include: reaction to events, drawings about what you are reading (w/ explanation), collected pictures, observations about characters, connections to current events

  4. Notebook Entries • Below is an example of how your heading should look like for each entry: The Crucible Act ____ Date Reader’s Notebook Pgs.

  5. Entries in your “Notebook” • As you read, have your reader’s notebook next to you as you write your personal response in them. State your feelings, thoughts, reactions, and questions about situations, ideas, actions, characters, settings, symbols, plot, theme, and any other elements of the book. • Be honest. Write about what you like or dislike, what seems confusing or unusual to you. • Make predictions about what might happen later. • Relate your personal experiences which connect with the plot, characters, or setting. • Refrain from summarizing the plot in Part 2, although sometimes it may be unavoidable to include a summary to support your thought and get your point across.

  6. Response Page Ideas Make a Prediction (Remember to include details that support your prediction) • I predict that… • I wonder… • I think that… • I wonder why… • I wonder how… • Since this happened __________, then I think the next thing that is going to happen is … • Reading this part makes me think that this __________ is about to happen… • I wonder if…

  7. Ask a question • Why did… • What’s this part about… • How is this ________ like this _____... • What would happen if… • Why… • I really don’t understand the part where… • What does this mean… • How did this section of my book make me feel?

  8. Make a Comment • This is good because… • This is difficult because… • This is confusing because… • I like the part where… • I dislike the part where… • I don’t like this part because… • My favorite part so far is… • I think that… • I think this setting is important because… • This part is very realistic/unrealistic because… • I think the relationship between ______ and ______ is interesting because… • I like/dislike (name the character) because… • The character I most admire is _______ because… • If I were (name of character) at this point, I would… • I wish _______ would have happened because…. • I wish the author had included… • My opinion of (name the character) is… • I noticed while reading that I … • I love the way… • I can’t believe… • If I were… • I like the way the author… • I felt sad… • I was so happy… • This story teaches…

  9. Make a Connection • This reminds me of… • This part is like… • This character _______ is like _______ because… • This is similar to… • The differences are… • I also… • I never… • This event made me think… • This character makes me think of… • This setting reminds me of… • This character reminds me of somebody I know because… • This character reminds me of myself because… • This character is like (name of character) in (title of book) because… • This scene reminds me of a similar scene in (title of book) because… • This part of the story makes me think about _______ because… • This situation reminds me of a similar scene in (title of book) because… • Did it remind me of anything that has happened in my life? • Did I learn anything from it? • Can I take anything from this story to improve myself?

More Related