avid college readiness working with sources grades 11-12

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AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

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Page 1: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

AVID College Readiness

Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Page 2: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Introduction

AVID College Readiness is designed for student completion in the AVID elective during their junior and senior years.

In this curriculum students focus on four essential skills: 1) Analyzing a Prompt or Academic Task; 2) Selective and Purpose Driven Reading, 3) Focused Note-Taking; and 4) Integrating Sources into Texts (otherwise known as ASFI)

Student are encouraged to practice these skills often with different content, readings, and writing tasks.

Page 3: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Why?

This curriculum was the result of research into the rigor required from academic reading and writing tasks across the post-secondary curriculum, tasks for which many secondary student seem to be underprepared.

In the next slide you will see the testimony of a couple of students who struggled their first year of college.

Page 4: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Testimony:

Copy and paste the following web address on your browser.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXwHJqBQKh4

Page 5: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Discovering the Four Skills

Using the handout “A Writing Assignment for College Freshmen” (Handout1) you will be answering questions in “Finding the Four Essential Skills: A Textual Scavenger Hunt” (Handout2) .

The powerpoint will guide you through the activity and in the end review your answers.

This activity can also be done with your students with a different prompt as you help them in their writing.

Page 6: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Analyzing a Prompt or Academic Task

Analyzing the prompt is particularly important for a timed writing, a common type of essay examination in colleges and universities.

A writing prompt tells students what to do and think about when they write. As you analyze the prompt think of the following questions: Where is the prompt? Is it only in one place? What does the prompt tell you to do? What is missing from the prompt that you need to know to

complete this assignments?

Page 7: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Analyzing a Prompt or Academic Task

As you read through and identify the prompt on Handout 1, complete the following sentence in Handout 2 under Essential Skill1: As a writer I need to…

Page 8: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Selective and Purpose-Driven Reading

Using readings from sources is important to good academic writing. What sources does this assignment tell you to read and integrate into your text? What are you to read selectively for? Keep in mind that word “text” can refer to

anything that is written, not only a textbook. Sometimes text even refers to a picture, video, or another type of visual. In all cases, these “texts” are used as sources for the assignment students are writing.

Page 9: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Selective and Purpose-Driven Reading

After reading Handout 1 determine what sources need to be research to complete this prompt.

In Handout 2 complete the following question in Essential Skill2:

As a reader, I need to…

Page 10: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Focused Note-Taking

When you begin to take notes for a writing task or an exam, remind students to consider what approach will help organize their work noting the… audience problem causes of the problem possible solutions (often created based on the

research you have gathered)

Page 11: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Focused Note-Taking

Take a look at Handout 1. Does this assignment tell you how to take notes? What kinds? If notes are not mentioned, what do you think you should take notes on? When should you take notes?

Complete the following sentence in Handout 2 in Essential Skill3: I need to take notes on…when…

Page 12: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Integrating Sources into Texts

Using sources in your own academic writing will be very important in many college classes. What does the assignment tell you about how you should use sources when you write your papers?

Complete the following sentence in Handout 2 Essential Skill4: To provide authority for the claim I plan to make, I

need to…

Page 13: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Review: Scavenger Hunt

Essential Skill1: Analyzing a Prompt. As a writer, I need to… Introduce the problem/issue. Discuss the persona of each writer. Discuss the claims and evidence in each text. Talk about the strategies the writer use. Compare and contrast the presentation of the

issues in two texts with what the interviewee says.

Conclude with comments on the issue.

Page 14: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Review Scavenger Hunt

Essential Skill2: Selective and Purpose-Driven Reading. As a reader, I need to: Identify the “persona” of the authors. Find the elements of the argument: the claim and

evidence. Think, as I read, about how the authors can be

compared or contrasted. Identify the devices, or strategies, used by the

authors.

Page 15: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Review Scavenger Hunt

Essential Skill3: Focused Note-Taking. When responding to this prompt, I need to take notes on … when… Where the “persona” of the writer(s) is shown in

the reading(s). Where the claim and evidence appear in each

text. (I may need to paraphrase the claim.) The “story” of the person I interview. The opinion of the person I interview about the

issue that has been selected.

Page 16: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Review Scavenger Hunt

Essential Skill4: Integrating Sources into Texts. To provide authority for the claim I plan to make, I need to… Correctly cite my sources through direct quotation

(particularly of the person interviewed), paraphrase or summary.

Analyze or synthesize the three sources when I compare and contrast them.

Page 17: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Final Thoughts

For each of the skills listed in this presentation there are many activities and graphic organizers that would be helpful. Please feel free to contact me if you wish to obtain any or are looking for ideas.

Page 18: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Follow Up Questions

1. What did you learn? 2. Can this knowledge be applied to your classroom? 3. Did you find this information useful or relevant? 4. Do you have any follow up questions or comments?

Page 19: AVID College Readiness Working with Sources Grades 11-12

Contact information

Christal BuckleyPhone: 5528

[email protected]