"Synthesizing while reading is critical to understanding the big ideas in informational texts" (Cummins & Stallmeyer-Gerard 395).
Throughout my schooling experience, I had always considered English/Language Arts to be my strong suit when it came to academics. I loved to write, I could spell any word you threw at me, and I was a self-proclaimed member of the "Grammar Police" who lost respect for anyone who could not distinguish between "you're" and "your" by our senior year of high school. But for some reason, I struggled when it came to reading and responding because I faced a great deal of difficulty when it came to synthesizing information. To this day, I feel that I have to work harder than the average college student to complete assignments that require synthesis skills. I have a slew of devices that I rely on when attempting to synthesize, one of which is quite similar to the article's cake baking analogy. I have found that while reading any kind of text, it is helpful to extract and write down key points (the baking ingredients). I then examine everything I have written, and try to formulate some type of umbrella statement (the cake) that incorporates the details I have noted. After establishing an effective active reading strategy that works for me, I feel much more comfortable with my synthesis skills. However, it bothers me that I am unable to remember specifically being taught how to synthesize information in my younger years of schooling. All I can recall is having to "identify the main idea" of a passage countless times, feeling confused, and resorting to guessing. It has become clear, especially with the newly developed informational text focused ELA Common Core State Standards, that a great deal of emphasis should be placed on teaching and developing students' synthesis skills in the classroom.
In my 4th grade practicum classroom, I have thankfully already seen synthesis skills being taught. The other day, my teacher gave a lesson on determining the main idea of a text, and identifying details that support that main idea. The students were given a text about Inuit culture, and a worksheet with 5 partially completed charts that corresponded to 5 different sections in the text. Each chart had blank spaces for the "Main Idea" and "Supporting Details." Some sections were filled in already, and it was the students' job to complete each chart by identifying the missing information. My cooperating teacher asked me to work with a few struggling students at the back table of the classroom. I read the passages aloud while the students followed along in their text. I explained to the students before beginning to read that they should listen to the descriptive details in the text, and think about one big idea that they all point to. By talking my students through each step of synthesizing, I watched as their eyes lit up with enough confidence to volunteer answers for the charts. Upon finishing the worksheet, I felt that my students had a greater grasp of synthesis than I had at their age. I hope that my cooperating teacher continues to give our students more practice with synthesizing so they can learn this important skill, and so I can have more opportunities to practice teaching it!
I completely agree and synthesizing is a great skill in fifth grade. It asks students not only to communicate their understanding of a text, but also to discuss it and think of it at the highest of levels.
ReplyDeleteI think it's great that you are getting experience with some differentiated instruction and helping those students who may need some assistance in smaller group.
It is great that students are being provided with opportunities to not only locate the main idea of a text but to also see how you, a teacher gets from simply taking in the information to determining what is central and what is supporting. Its interesting to me how much exposure to this skill is required before automaticity is developed. I think that because we are so far removed from learning to read and process information, we sometimes diminish the challenge such a task presents. This being so, we must never stop giving kids thorough, and concrete steps to take in dissecting what they read and even what is read to them.
ReplyDeleteI can't remember ever being taught to synthesize what I had read either, and I have also noticed how much class time is devoted to finding the main idea and supporting details in today's elementary schools. I think that synthesizing the information in a text is one of the most important skills a student develops, and I relate to how you are feeling about getting opportunities to teach this skill. I like that your teacher goes beyond just highlighting the key facts, and instead has created a tool to help students more effectively synthesize new material. I think that modeling it with them consistently for both individual reading and read-alouds will definitely help your class, and keep them from feeling the anxiety you remember experiencing.
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