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Evoking Sensory Images to Deepen Comprehension By A. Frasier

Evoking Sensory Images to Deepen Comprehension By A. Frasier. March 2009 . Purpose of Strategy Instruction. Goal of strategy instruction is active processing, NOT use of strategies.

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Evoking Sensory Images to Deepen Comprehension By A. Frasier

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  1. Evoking Sensory Images to Deepen ComprehensionBy A. Frasier March 2009

  2. Purpose of Strategy Instruction • Goal of strategy instruction is active processing, NOT use of strategies. Ex: Using a KWL, Venn Diagram, or 2-column notes is not the purpose of that “lesson”. It serves only as a tool for organizing information to foster the active processing of knowledge to understanding.

  3. Sensory Images “People who read without visualizing are simply gliding across the surface of a text, missing out on the rewarding experience of being immersed completely in another world or the complete cognitive engagement that comes from using all their mental resources to understand what they read.” (Kelley & Grace)

  4. What Are the Results of “Sensing” Text? “Mental images bring forth not only snapshots of reading, but smells, tastes, feelings, and chills and thrills as well.” (Zimmerman, Hutchins)

  5. “When Sensory Images Form In a Child’s Mind, • It is an ongoing creative act. • Pictures, smells, tastes, and feelings burst forth and his mind organizes them to help the story make sense. • It is this ongoing creation of sensory images that keeps children hooked on reading.” (Zimmerman, Hutchins)

  6. Proficient Readers. . . • Allow the images and emotions to emerge from all five senses. These are anchored in a reader’s prior knowledge. • Spontaneously and purposefully create mental images while and after they read.

  7. Proficient Readers. . . • Allow themselves to be engaged more deeply, making the text more memorable. • Use images to immerse themselves in rich detail as they read. (The detail gives depth and dimension to the reading.)

  8. Phase 1:Sensory Experiences • Have students name words that describe the five senses. • Bring in fragrances, textures, colors, tastes, sounds. • Have students identify the samples. • Discuss the qualities of each object. • Provide the vocabulary.

  9. Concrete Experience • Different objects • Ask students to look at the object carefully and feel its texture. Smell it. Listen to it. (Some objects may have a sound.) • Put the object away. Have students close their eyes and see the details in their minds. • Have students draw a picture of the object or describe it in writing. Toilet paper rolls/Jewelers Loops

  10. Connect to Reading & Writing

  11. Phase 2:Evoking the Senses • Visual Thinking (photographs/paintings) • Wordless Picture Books (Good Dog, Carl) • Music/ Sounds (nature)

  12. What Does it Feel Like? • Short bio of Dorthea Lange • Lange created images that frequently juxtapose signs of human courage and dignity • Famous photo: Migrant Mother • Carefully look at the photograph • Complete the Visual Thinking Chart • Discuss responses with group

  13. Phase 3: Visualizing from Vivid Pieces of Text • Read/Aloud Think Aloud • Poetry Poetry, Poetry • Split Screen Notes (Brings Rigor!) • Noticing Author’s Crafts/ Figurative Language • Visualizing is a form of inference! (BK+ Text= Image)

  14. Standard 14: Poetry • GRADES PREK–2 14.1 Identify a regular beat and similarities of sounds in words in responding to rhythm and rhyme in poetry. • GRADES 3–4 14.2 Identify rhyme and rhythm, repetition, similes, and sensory images in poems. • GRADES 5–6 14.3 Respond to and analyze the effects of sound, figurative language, and graphics in order to uncover meaning in poetry: • • sound(alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhyme scheme); • • figurative language (personification, metaphor, simile, hyperbole); and • • graphics(capital letters, line length).

  15. Standard 15: Style & Language • GRADES PREK–2 15.1 Identify the senses implied in words appealing to the senses in literature and spoken language. • GRADES 3-5 15.2 Identify words appealing to the senses or involving direct comparisons in literature and spoken language. For example, after reading The Great Yellowstone Fire, by Carole G. • GRADES 5–6 15.3 Identify imagery, figurative language, rhythm, or flow when responding to literature. • 15.4 Identify and analyze the importance of shades of meaning in determining word choice in a piece of literature.

  16. Adult Learning Experience; What Does it Look like? • Follow the 5 step Split-Screen Notes • Dakota Dugout • Discuss your drawings with your group • What words/phrases did the author use to evoke sensory images?

  17. Poems are Sensory Treasure Chests The Woman’s 400 Meters (L. Morrison) Skittish, they flex knees, drum heels and shiver at the starting line waiting the gun to pour them over the stretch like a breaking wave. Bang! They’re off careening down the lanes, each chased by her own bright tiger.

  18. Phase 4: Creating and Sustaining Movies in the Mind • Notice as Our Images Change throughout the text SKETCH to Stretch • Nonfiction~ Visualize to understand facts/details (Determine what is important!) • Move to independent use of strategy, share visualizations in book clubs/ literature discussion groups • Use conferring questions

  19. All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened and after you are finished reading one, you will feel that all of that happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you: the good and the bad, the ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was. (Hemingway)

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