what are you looking for? scaffolding topic selection - pamela kessinger
TRANSCRIPT
What are you looking for?scaffolding topic selection
Pamela Kessinger, Portland Community College, Oregon, USA
Introductions whip-around -- if time allows
❖ Your name?
❖ Affiliation?
❖ Something you are looking to learn from this workshop?
Agenda
❖ Reading Apprenticeship (RA)
❖ Intersections with Info literacy
❖ Practice
Björn Laczay aka dustpuppy - http://www.flickr.com/photos/dustpuppy/78871005/, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=486043
Reading Apprenticeship© is . . .❖ An approach to improving students’ ability to read critically
and to write about and discuss texts in a range of disciplines--an approach that builds their academic literacy.
❖ A Framework of intersecting dimensions...
Schoenbach, Ruth., Greenleaf, Cynthia, and Murphy, Lynn. Reading for Understanding : How Reading Apprenticeship Improves Disciplinary Learning in Secondary and College Classrooms. Second ed. 2012.
© WestEdhttp://readingapprenticeship.org/our-approach/our-framework/
Teacher (or librarian) makes visible their reading processes and text-based problem solving
Students make visible to themselves and others their motivations, strategies, knowledge and understandings in reading academic texts
Students improve their engagement and comprehension of texts, and develop awareness of their personal reading identity
Metacognitive conversations take place between students; students and texts; and between students and the threshold concepts for the knowledge they are working toward building.
WestEd. Reading Apprenticeship Strategic Literacy Initiative. Available from: Association of American Colleges and Universities. © 2014 [2015]. https://www.aacu.org/sites/default/files/files/STEM15/RAframework.pdf
What Works Clearinghouse. Institute of Education Sciences. U.S. Department of Education. WWC Intervention Report: Reading Apprenticeship (R). July 2010. http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wWc/interventionreport.aspx?sid=414
College critical reading and information literacy
❖ Are not one time, basic skills, but students (and instructors) still assume they should just ‘get it’
❖ Intersect at problem solving and require metacognition
ACRL Framework for Information Literacy“the set of integrated abilities encompassing the reflective discovery of information, the understanding of how information is produced and valued, and the use of information in creating new knowledge and participating ethically in communities of learning.”
And, IL “draws . . . upon the concept of metaliteracy. . . .in which students are consumers and creators of information who can participate successfully in collaborative spaces.. . . [It] demands behavioral, affective, cognitive, and metacognitive engagement with the information ecosystem.”
“The Framework opens the way for librarians, faculty [and others] to redesign instruction sessions, assignments…”
American College and Research Libraries. American Library Association. 2015. Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education. http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/ilframework
Pam Kessinger and Theresa Love, Portland Community College 2015
Frameworks Matrix
Reading Apprenticeship
Scenario: scaffolding towards topic selectionFor example, Diesel welding students, many of whom assume “library work” is something left to writing courses-- that is, long behind them
Their instructor has required that each identify a topic they will use for locating one factual, reliable source. They can work in teams.
Why is this important? I’ve got things to do….
Magicboy1942. Jerome_Cabeen_-_Author_of_"Memoirs_of_a_Reluctant_Servant.".jpg
Model: “Think Aloud” while reading a text
Librarian uses a text to demonstrate her/his own (invisible) strategies to:
Problem solvePersist in readingGet information
Refeia PRISM I https://flic.kr/p/xwnAc
Silent, shared reading
1. Read the selected text silently, for five minutes.
2. If you finish the text early, re-read it
3. While you are reading, mark the text where you made a move to persist, solve a problem, or found something you are curious about
Model: annotate, ‘talk’ to a text
Librarian uses a text to demonstrate her/his own (invisible) strategies to capture:❖ ideas which are new, or interesting❖ facts which are new ❖ statements he/she questions❖ where he/she made a connection
➢ understand something➢ disagree with something➢ are curious
Individual reflection about the text and your reaction(s)
1. On the left, copy words, or sentences, which you made a connection with
2. On the right, write in your reason(s)
Evidence Interpretation
I saw, I heard, I read in the text . . . . I wondered, I made a connection, I thought . . . .(This reminds me of; I didn’t expect; I think the point is; I disagree and think instead . . . .)
Think-pair-share
Share with a partner:
Begin by introducing yourself. . . Without interruption by your partner, share your connections or questions, from your Evidence/Interpretation log (E/I)
Switch partners:
Second person shares without interruption her/his connections or questions while the first listens
California Comprehensive Early Learning Plan Los Angeles Regional Workshop. 2012.
Reflect for topic connections
1. Individually review your E/I and any notes you made during your conversations.
2. Pick a couple of possible phrases, or related ideas, that you could use in a search for more information
Tom Taker. St Johns Bridge
“final word” protocol--to expand on your phrase
1. First person talks for two minutes, sharing their working knowledge of the phrase (or idea, or question). The partner listens, without interruption.
2. Second person talks for one minute in response
a. Add to the idea
b. Suggest a correction, or a question
3. 1st person talks for one minute
a. Agree or disagree?
b. Learned something new?
4. Switch roles, and follow the protocol again until everyone gets a chance
2 - 1 - 1 repeat
Report out, discussion
What topic statements or questions are emerging?
What new ideas have been sparked?
Did anyone identify strategies which might be needed for information searching?
Concluding thoughts
College reading as an academic literacy--
Information seeking as knowledge practice and dispositions--
Metacognition about knowledge and understandings, and gaps--
fear-frozen no more!
BibliographyWhat are you looking for? Scaffolding topic selection. LILAC 2016. Dublin, Ireland. Pam Kessinger, Portland Oregon.
Armstrong, S. L., Norman S. and M. J. Kantner. 2015. "What Constitutes College Ready for Reading? An Investigation of Academic Text Readiness at One Community College." Technical Report Number 1. Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Language and Literacy. 2015.http://www.niu.edu/cisll/_pdf/reports/TechnicalReport1.pdf
Framework for Information Literacy in Higher Education. 2015. Association of College & Research Libraries.. http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/ilframework
Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education. 2000. Association of College & Research Libraries.http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/informationliteracycompetency
Kessinger, P. 2015. Course Specific Research Support for DS 103. Portland Community College Library. http://guides.pcc.edu/DS103_CSRS
Kessinger, P. 2013. Integrated instruction framework for information literacy. Journal of Information Literacy, 7(2), pp. 33-59.http://dx.doi.org/10.11645/7.2.1807
Kessinger, P. 2015. RA (Reading Apprenticeship). Portland Community College. http://guides.pcc.edu/RA
Schoenbach, R., Greenleaf, C., and Murphy, L. 2012. Reading for Understanding : How Reading Apprenticeship Improves Disciplinary Learning in Secondary and College Classrooms. WestEd. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
WestEd. 2015. Reading Apprenticeship at WestEd: Community College Overview. http://readingapprenticeship.org/community-college-overview/
WestEd. 2014. Reading Apprenticeship Framework http://readingapprenticeship.org/our-approach/our-framework/
WestEd. 2015. Reading for Understanding Downloadable Resources. http://readingapprenticeship.org/publications/downloadable-resources/