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Home › Classroom Resources › Lesson Plans
Lesson Plan
Skimming and Scanning: Using Riddles to Practice Fact Finding Online
| Grades | 3 – 5 |
| Lesson Plan Type | Standard Lesson |
| Estimated Time | One 45-minute session |
| Lesson Author |
Cookeville, Tennessee |
| Publisher |
Student Assessment/Reflections
STUDENT OBJECTIVES
Students will
- Develop skills in skimming and scanning online by exploring a website and searching for information to complete riddles
- Understand the purposes of using skimming and scanning by varying use of these strategies when searching for key information on a website
- Develop navigational skills by making decisions about where to click on a webpage to locate specific information
- Adjust reading rate and strategies according to their purpose
Instruction & Activities
Teacher Modeling
| 1. | Seat students so that they may view your computer screen. The use of a video projector or large-screen monitor is ideal for this part of the lesson. |
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| 2. | Introduce and demonstrate how to navigate a website as follows:
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| 3. | Discuss the terms skimming and scanning. You might start by asking students what they think these terms mean. You want them to understand that skimming is reading quickly to get the main idea of the text, while scanning is rapidly viewing the text in search of key terms, phrases, or information. During the discussion, ask questions that will help students understand the difference between these strategies and how the use of them differs from careful reading of text. Some possible points that can be discussed include:
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| 4. | To help students differentiate between careful reading, skimming, and scanning, click on Texas on the Explore the States webpage as you pose the following questions:
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| 5. | Using the Explore the States website, continue to model how to use skimming and scanning as follows:
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| 6. | Model how to solve a riddle by selecting appropriate links and then skimming and scanning to find the information needed to solve the riddle as follows:
If students need more modeled practice, work through one or two of the student riddles using the process described above. Otherwise, proceed to the Student Practice section, which can be implemented during a subsequent session if needed. |
Student Practice
| 7. | Students should work with the partners you have assigned at computers using their Eliminate the State sheets to solve as many riddles as you have time for them to finish. Five sample riddles are included on the State Riddles handout, or you may choose to write your own riddles to suit other content area objectives. As students work on the riddles, circulate among them to assist when needed and to observe students’ use of skimming and scanning. Use the Online Reading Assessment Checklist to record anecdotal notes. Note: If some pairs of students finish early, have them work on the Extension activity below. |
Closure
| 8. | Discuss the answers to the riddles and the strategies students used to find the answers. Ask for specific examples of how students used skimming and scanning to find the answers. For example, you could ask, “In the fourth riddle, what key words did you scan for when you wanted to determine if you would visit the state to travel to Space Camp?” Also, use observational data for discussion prompts. For example, you could say, “I noticed that (student’s name) kept repeating ‘Providence’ when he was solving the first riddle. Can you tell me why he may have been doing this?” |
| 9. | Discuss challenges that students faced during the activity. You might ask what part of the activity was most challenging or what was most challenging about navigating the website. |
| 10. | Review the definitions and purposes of skimming and scanning and discuss how these strategies differ from careful reading. Ask students how they use skimming, scanning, and careful reading when they are reading print materials. Remind students that their choice of reading strategy should be based upon the goal of reading the text. |
EXTENSIONS
Ask each pair of students to create an original set of riddles based on the America’s Story from America’s Library: Explore the States website. They can then use the riddles to make a crossword puzzle with the online Crossword Puzzles tool. The riddles can be the clues. Students can solve each other’s puzzles online or print and swap puzzles. See Creating Puzzles: A Guide for Teachers for more information.
STUDENT ASSESSMENT/REFLECTIONS
In addition to assessing students’ response to the riddles, use the Online Reading Assessment Checklist for informal assessment purposes. Based upon your observations, indicate plus (+) or minus (-) in the columns for traits observed and record observational data in the Anecdotal Notes column. Use the results to determine which students would benefit from future instruction in the skills assessed.

