Knowledge and Skills Statement
Provide students with a graphic organizer to keep track of thoughts in order to make and correct or confirm logical predictions. Students should make predictions based on specific text features or characteristic of the genre. Assess whether the students’ predictions are accurate, inaccurate, or possible.
Predictions might stem from these questions:
- Mystery—How will it be solved?
- Biography—What will happen in the person’s life?
- Tall tale—What will be the outlandish combination of fact and fiction?
- Fable—What is the moral lesson of the fable?
- Argumentation—What is the claim? Do I think it is valid?
The graphic organizer might include the following:
Prediction #1 Title, cover, title page, first page of text |
Prediction |
Evidence |
Adjustment |
Prediction #2 Stopped on page _ |
Prediction |
Evidence |
Adjustment |
Prediction #2 Stopped on page _ |
Prediction |
Evidence |
Adjustment |
Further Explanation
This assessment requires students to make predictions based on text features or genre characteristics and provide text evidence to support those predictions. Students should be able to recognize the characteristics that make a genre unique in order to make and correct or confirm predictions. They must understand how to formulate hypotheses about content at different stages of the reading process including using prior knowledge to make predictions and text features to correct or confirm predictions.
Research
Risko, V. J., Walker-Dalhouse, D., Bridges, E. S., & Wilson, A. (2011). Drawing on text features for reading comprehension and composing. The Reading Teacher, 64(5), 376–378. doi:10.1598/RT.64.5.12
Summary: The authors of this article present text features as a primary factor in reading comprehension and writing. The article also includes a discussion on genres and multimodal and graphic texts, as well as the use of text features and genres to make, correct, and confirm predictions.