Showing posts with label anchor charts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anchor charts. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Preview - Predict - Confirm

I love this strategy for activating students' prior knowledge and for exposing them to vocabulary they will encounter in a text.

The strategy Preview, Predict, Confirm (PPC) is designed to build content-specific vocabulary by requiring students to think about and use language of a discipline. Through the use of PPC, students are accessing their background knowledge as well as building background knowledge on the topic of a text. Students are exposed to the vocabulary of their peers and are encouraged to pay close attention to the author's language while reading or listening to the text. Students learn from their peers, who may have different experiences and other knowledge of a topic.
                       --Ruth Helen Yopp & Hallie Kay Yopp, 
                                                  The Reading Teacher (Vol. 58, No.1, September 2004)

BEFORE READING 

1. Preview key pictures in the text and important terms/vocabulary.  
2. Sort words into meaningful categories and label the categories. 
3. Predict what the text will be about. 

AFTER READING 
Confirm predictions while reading and discuss predictions and new ideas after reading. Add new words after reading the text.


Student written responses in my 4th-grade classroom in 2019: 

Teacher written responses in my 2nd-grade classroom in 2017 








Monday, February 10, 2014

2013-2014 Anchor Charts

Below is a sampling of some of the anchor charts that were created during workshop time in my classroom. Some were developed during mini-lessons, while others were created over periods of time during inquiry work.























Monday, April 15, 2013

My students are on their second go round of Inquiry Circles. They are working on science topics related to the Plant and Animal Life Cycle unit. They are having a great time with this once again. I have found that they need to focus more on developing relevant questions and use those questions to guide their research. I conducted a few minilessons revolving around questioning and monitoring for meaning. Seems to be helping a great deal.  Below are a couple of anchor charts.