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Five 50-minute sessions plus independent writing and research time

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| Overview |
In this lesson, picture books give students frames for structuring research projects, freeing them from the language of their encyclopedia sources and allowing them to focus their attention on the content of their papers. Using picture books as models, students are able to think more about what to say and less about how to say it, which leads to better learning experiences and better writing. When matched to the research students are doing, these picture-book frames encourage
writers to shape their content in ways that facilitate meaningful learning.
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| From Theory to Practice |
Research papers can fill any teacher with dread. Deborah Dean explains that in
her experience, most research papers “sounded
like encyclopedias: voiceless stacks of facts loaded on top of each other with a few
quotes thrown in randomly” (32). Since her students did not have exposure
to other alternatives, Dean continues, “their default strategy was to mimic the sources they used—encyclopedias or Internet sources that sounded like encyclopedias” (32). Dean’s search for more effective ways to frame student writing led her to James
Collins, who states: “We use default writing strategies precisely because
we can do so without thinking much about them; this frees the mind for thinking
about problems and challenges encountered while writing” (138). In this
lesson, picture books give students frames for structuring research projects,
freeing them from the language of their encyclopedia sources and allowing
them to focus their attention on the content of the paper.
This lesson plan was adapted from Deborah Dean’s “Framing Texts: New Strategies
for Student Writers,” Voices from the Middle 11.2 (December 2003):
32-35.
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| Student Objectives |
Students will
- practice doing research.
- improve their research-based writing.
- practice writing cooperatively in groups.
- build a strategy for understanding texts that will help them as writers in
a variety of situations.
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| Instructional Plan |
Resources
Preparation
- Choose a framing picture book (or books) for students. Megan McDonald’s My
House Has Stars and David Smith’s If the World Were a Village are
ideal for this project. Other possible framing texts are also available.
- Read the sample
brainstorming list and research questions for McDonald’s My House
Has Stars, and determine the kinds of
opening questions and prompts to ask students as they compile lists and research
questions of their own for the project.
- Customize discussion starters and tasks for
the particular picture book that you’ve chosen:
- McDonald’s My House Has
Stars includes similar information for each house, so a shared list and
search guide is appropriate for the class.
- David Smith’s If
the World Were a Village includes a different topic on each page. Students
might brainstorm their lists and establish guiding research questions in
small groups, based on the topic
for the pages their group will create. The unifying focus for projects modeled
on Smith’s book will be finding numerical data that can be calculated for
a village of 100 (e.g., a village of 100 in your state or county).
- If you choose one of the framing texts that is based on
calendar dates (such as
Burleigh’s Black
Whiteness or
McKissack and McKissack’s Christmas in the Big House, Christmas in the
Quarters),
students can identify key dates as they are brainstorming their lists.
- Customize the Picture-Book Research Paper
Rubric as necessary to match the framing picture books that your students
are using for this project.
- Build in time during this lesson for students to complete their research,
draft their pages, and share their drafts with peers. Work can be completed
as homework or
you may provide independent or group research time in class. Allowing time
for library and Internet research is highly recommended. This lesson includes
details for the formal group sessions only.
- Test the Printing
Press Student Interactive on your computers to familiarize
yourself with the tool and ensure that you have the Flash plug-in installed.
You can download the plug-in from the technical
support page. Explore the options that the tool provides so that you can
guide students’ decisions during Session Five, matching the available templates
to the picture book frame that you are using for the project. In most cases,
the Flyer or the Newspaper template will be most appropriate.
Instruction and Activities
Session One
- Read the introduction, at least two individual story pages, and the conclusion
of the picture book to the class. Be sure that students understand the
way that the book is set up and the point that it is making.
- Divide students into small groups, and ask students to read and explore more
pages in the framing picture book.
- As they explore the picture book, ask students to list the kinds of details
that the author has included in each of the individual descriptions. Ask students
to think about what writers choose to write about and what they leave out.
You can consult the sample
for Megan McDonald’s My House
Has Stars to guide the brainstorming.
- Have students share their lists at the end of the session, listing the items
on the board or on chart paper. Save the lists so that you return to them in
the following session.
Session Two
- Give students their research writing assignment, based on the framing text:
- For McDonald’s My House Has Stars, ask students to research
a country of their heritage for a class book like McDonald’s.
Each student contributes a page on a house in his or her country. This
activity can be focused further by asking students to consider a specific
state,
province, or other geographic region.
- For Smith’s If the World Were a
Village, ask students to research a village in the country of their heritage—to
describe the average village in that country for a book like Smith’s.
If desired, students can choose several pages from the book to focus their
research on, rather than completing a page on every topic that Smith explores.
Alternately, students can each focus on a particular story from Smith’s
book (e.g., Languages or Religion). Again, the activity can be focused further
by asking students to consider a specific
state, province,
or region.
- Explain that students will include the sources that they use for their
research on a separate bibliography sheet.
- If you’re planning on formal assessment of the pages, share the Picture-Book
Research Paper Rubric with students and discuss the criteria for the project.
- Divide students into small groups to review the lists from the
previous session.
- In these small groups, ask students to
identify
the
key questions
that they will answer as they complete their contribution to the
text.
Give students 10 to 15 minutes to compile a list of guiding questions.
- Circulate among students, providing feedback and answering questions as
students work. Encourage students to return to the framing texts when appropriate.
- Gather students as a class and invite each group to share their guiding
questions.
As students share questions, create a running list on the board or on chart paper.
- Once all groups have shared their questions, group similar questions together
and eliminate redundant ideas. At the end of this session, students should
have compiled a well-defined list of the guiding questions for their project.
- Allow time after this session for students to complete their research, independently
or during class.
Session Three
- After students have completed their research, return to the book as a frame.
Ask students what things they notice first about each of the pages in their
framing book—what stands out as part of the organization on every page.
For example, in McDonald’s book, students will likely notice that each page
ends
with the sentence “My house has stars.” In Smith’s book, students
will likely identify the division of the resources and information as it
applies to the “village of 100.”
- As students identify features, map out the structures on
the board or on chart paper.
- Ask students to look at the
elements of organization on the pages and share their observations:
what
comes
first,
second,
and
so forth?
How
does
the author
connect
the ideas?
- Encourage students to notice the kind of information that is included on
each page. Reread a page or two and ask students to identify things other
than the specific words that are used to connect the pages in the book.
In McDonald’s My House Has Stars, the information starts descriptively
and then moves to an activity, some retelling of what the people do in this
place. Smith’s If the World Were a Village includes a narrative introduction
on each page that weaves the numbers that are included into a specific context.
On the Languages page, for example, Smith includes greetings in many of the
languages that are spoken in the “village of 100.”
- Once students have identified the organizing structures of the book, use
the list to establish the pattern of the book. Ask students to suggest how
the details on the chart or board can be organized to provide a guide for
the pages that they are writing for the class book. Place numbers beside
items or copy them to a fresh piece of chart paper to create the guiding
pattern for students to return to as they draft.
- Ask students to start drafting their ideas and thinking about how the
options of organizational patterns from the framing text they have read can
work for their papers. Remind students that the
pattern is a guide, not a formula.
- Leave students with specific questions that focus their attention on the
connection between the research they have conducted and the structures that
they have identified in the framing book. For McDonald’s book, for instance,
you might ask students to consider what research findings can lead into the
night and include the stars quotation.
Session Four
- After students have written a draft, look again at the pages of your framing
text, noticing the things that makes the text enjoyable to listen to and
read. Ask students to look for the ways that the author has put the words
and ideas together in the book. Look for similes, repetition, a variety of
lengths of sentences, and even some chunks that aren’t whole sentences.
- As students explore their books, ask them to think critically about the
features that they find, using questions such as the following:
- What is the difference between an effective simile and a cliche? Are the
similes in the book effective?
- What kinds of words or ideas are worth repeating, and what is the effect
of repetition? Why does McDonald repeat the sentence “My house has
stars”? Why does Smith repeat the “village of 100”? What
other reasons might a writer have to use repeated words, phrases, or sentences?
- After exploring the language use in the framing text, ask students to apply
the same analysis to their own drafts. Since their own papers will follow
the form of the framing text, the features from the picture book should be
represented in their papers.
- Allow time for students to complete revision and peer review during the
remainder of the session.
Session Five
- Demonstrate the Printing
Press Student Interactive for students, showing the pertinent options.
- As a class, decide on layouts and templates
you’ll use so that
the pages
of
your
book will
match.
- In addition to creating their own pages for the class book, ask
groups to provide a shared bibliography page. Again, choose a template for
the bibliography pages so that the collection will match.
- Finally, assign each group a framing portion of the book to complete. The
book still needs a title page, introduction, dedication/acknowledgements,
and conclusion. Customize these shared pages based on the framing text that
you’re using. Distribute this shared work among the groups.
- Review the work that students are to complete during this session. Each
group will complete the following parts of the shared class book:
- Pages for the story composed by each group member
- A bibliography page listing all the resources used by the group members
- The assigned shared page that frames the book (e.g., the title page or the
introduction)
- This will be a busy, active session so ensure that students understand
the products they are to submit by the end of the class before releasing
them to work on their final copies in their groups.
- Allow students the remainder of the class to print copies of their own
pages for the class book. If resources allow, make a copy of the book for
each class member. If you can make only one or at best several copies, the
book can become part of the classroom library and students can check out
the book to read and explore on their own.
- If possible, schedule an additional class session where students will read
from and share the portions of the book.
Extensions
For basic mini-lessons on the features of a research paper, consider these
Research Building Blocks lesson plans:
Web Resources
- Research and Documenting Sources
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/
- The Purdue OWL provides details on bibliographic format and research strategies
that can supplement classroom instruction.
- Landmarks Citation Machine
http://www.landmark-project.com/citation_machine/index.php
- Students can use the Citation Machine to format MLA or APA bibliographic
citations for the resources that they use in their papers.
- The World Factbook
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/index.html
- This online almanac provides details on the geography, people, government,
economy, communications, transportation, and military for dozens of countries.
- National Geographic MapMachine
http://plasma.nationalgeographic.com/mapmachine/index.html
- The MapMachine includes maps and facts on geography, population, climate,
and much more for nearly every county in the world. The interactive maps
on this site allow students to zero in on particular streets.
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| Student Assessment/Reflections |
Invite students to share
feedback on the collected book as they read the stories written by their peers.
This informal feedback from students
demonstrates the role that a real audience plays in responding to a text and
provides feedback from those closest to the writers. Feedback from peers
is often more effective than that from the teacher because of the authentic
relationship between reader and writer.
One effective way to encourage feedback is to set up a graffiti feedback session.
Make a copy of each student’s page. Give each student a 1/2 sheet of chart
paper and the copy of their page from the book. Have students tape
their story page in the center of the chart paper. Distribute the mounted pages
around the room. Students can circulate through the room, stopping and reading
each story, then adding feedback on the chart paper border. Remind
students
of
the importance of making supportive and positive feedback. At the end of the
session, each author has a graffiti-decorated copy of his or her story.
For more formal assessment of the individual stories in the collected book,
use the Picture-Book
Research Paper Rubric. Be sure to share the rubric with students early in the writing
process so that they are aware of the criteria that will be used to assess
their work.
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1 - Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
4 - Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.
6 - Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g., spelling and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique, and discuss print and nonprint texts.
7 - Students conduct research on issues and interests by generating ideas and questions, and by posing problems. They gather, evaluate, and synthesize data from a variety of sources (e.g., print and nonprint texts, artifacts, people) to communicate their discoveries in ways that suit their purpose and audience.
8 - Students use a variety of technological and information resources (e.g., libraries, databases, computer networks, video) to gather and synthesize information and to create and communicate knowledge.
11 - Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative, and critical members of a variety of literacy communities.
12 - Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).
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