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360249 - PPT Presentation

Super Strategies for Teaching Paraphrasing and Summarizing Cristin A Boyd Studies in American Language San Jose State University San JoseSilicon Valley California USA superteachcristinandericcom ID: 360249

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Slide1

Super Strategies for Teaching Paraphrasing and Summarizing!

Cristin A. Boyd

Studies in American Language,

San Jose State University, San Jose/Silicon Valley California USA

superteach@cristinanderic.com

http://boydsteachingresources.pbworks.com/

Slide2

Some ‘slightly Random’ thoughts Little to no research about teaching paraphrasing Limited resources for actual “how to” (most grammar focused)Activities based on 17+ years of teaching reading & writing (and a search for resources)Not an exhaustive collection (share ideas) How-to/what of citation is not black & white Accessible readings = soft sources (popular magazines)Justification: build skills & confidence Today’s Outline Challenges, activity, practice, variations, repeat End: more Q & A and create resources Slide3

terms & meaning for this presentationParaphrase:A restatement of an author’s idea.Usually a shorter piece of text -- sentence or two. Length of restatement can be as long as or longer than original.Attribution is required for every paraphrase.Paraphrasing is a fundamental part of writing a summary. Summary: A series of restatements about an article, essay, etc.Restatements work together as a whole.Summary is much shorter than original.Generally requires one attribution. Slide4

Challenges for ESL/EFL Students Ownership of ideas varies between cultures. Memorized sections of Confucianism Mother: Person I admire (Yongfang 2003)Paraphrasing may be interpreted differently. Restating words of scholars = bad news Common knowledge in collectivist culturesSome cultures are reader (vs. writer) responsible.Assumptions re: reader knowledgehttp://boydsteachingresources.pbworks.com/Slide5

More Challenges Reading skills Ss misunderstand originalSs depend on lower-level reading skills (decoding)Ss lack vocabularySs are preoccupied with grammar/sentence structure. Teacher feedback/learning focus on grammar/ sentence structure Grammar = mastery of languageTextbooks don’t explain “how” to paraphrase.Teachers don’t explain “how” either. Slide6

The most pressing challenge (in my experience/opinion). . .a misplaced focus on the word Slide7

Why is this a misplaced focus? Meaning in English is not character/word-levelSentences and paragraphs carry meaningCited source info used to support paragraph-level ideas1 paragraph = 1 idea (topic sentence, supporting, conclusion) Paraphrase = restatement of an idea (that is used to support another idea) Slide8

Why do some students focus on words?Desire to understand everythingLow-level reading/learning skills Words are tangible; ideas often elusive Native country learning (lang = math) Grammar-based paraphrase activities Heavy reliance on bottom-up processingMemorization-focused learning Word-focused L1 Example Slide9

L1 Influence on Word focus mu ('tree') shows a trunk and two leafless branches of a tree. The bottom half of the character may be hanging branches or the roots of a tree .… the character doubles to represent "forest" and triples to represent "dense forest." It joins with the character for "person" to represent "rest,” . . . mo ('last' or 'top') shows a tree in which the top is marked with a horizontal stroke, while ben ('source' or 'origin') shows a tree in which the root is marked with a horizontal stroke.Relationships between characters complex also From: http://www.mmtaylor.net/Literacy_Book/DOCS/pt1.htmlSlide10

Where is Meaning? In English . . . -- a collection of words (groups of sentences and paragraphs) -- “discourse blocks” (Christensen 1963, Pitkin 1969) -- paragraphs (Kaplan 1972) By focusing on Words, Ss = Miss & Misunderstand main ideas when reading Worry too much about individual words, grammar & sentence structure Paraphrase slowly & laboriously

End up with stilted, awkward, incorrect paraphrases (plagiarized content?

)

http

://

boydsteachingresources.pbworks.com

/Slide11

Problems with Grammar-based paraphrase activities Some combination of changes to original: compliment and subject positions verb from positive to negative verb from active to passive Focuses too much on wordsResult: Missed/misunderstood ideaPoor/Jumbled/Stilted RestatementExamplesProblems Slide12

To To overcom

To overcome these challenges & resulting problems:

all paraphrase work in my classes

is based on . . .

First

understanding an idea

then restating it

. Slide13

Where to begin: Good Reading Skills (understanding ideas)Pre-read to get overall gist of article/sectionRead fast, multiple times Focus on IDEA/sFocus on content words (vs. function) Scan for main ideas In paragraphs and sentencesAvoid getting side tracked on individual words

http://

boydsteachingresources.pbworks.com

/Slide14

Reading Skills (continued) RMmy ading Skills Work through ambiguity.Avoid translation. Use dictionaries very rarelyUse context for meaningLook up: important & repeated keys words only when main idea truly

can’t be deciphered.

Embrace a new style of reading!

Resource: What good readers do handout

Slide15

#1

paraphrasing resource!

Steps for paraphrasing Well

Introduced and regularly practiced & reviewed. . .

on board,

in quizzes

& front page of class wiki

Resource: “Paraphrase Well” handout Slide16

Steps for Paraphrasing well 1) Read the section repeatedly  to understand the main idea. 2) List  important key words. 3) Cover original & restate the main idea in your different words. 4) Don’t worry about grammar! Restate idea first!5) Check restatement for clarity of original idea (& original structure)6) Check grammar & edit as needed. 7) Check attribution.Slide17

As the teacher… I consistently walk the talk and focus mainly on Ss’ restated ideas I address grammar only after the idea is clear. Slide18

Paraphrase “on the run” Slide19

Paraphrase “on the run” A fun, active activity for practice with word meanings from context (definitions)Original text posted outside class‘Runner’ reads a definition outside (2 minutes)‘Scribe’ is told meaning inside classroom Collaboratively write a new definitionSame activity with steps/list articleSs can exchange and check others’ work Limit Time! Don’t allow Ss time to memorize! Slide20

Verbal Restatement do activity Slide21

Verbal Restatement Ss retell main idea verbally Speaking = less worry about grammar, sentence structure, perfection T can draw out some missing points/details; walk S toward main idea. “You almost have it, but isn’t there something about X ?”Slide22

Magazine Blubs Do activity Slide23

Magazine Blubs Use short blurbs from magazines.Provide a context for paraphrase. Ss work in pairs Limited time – about 5 minutes. Makes Ss focus on idea, can’t get side tracked w/ vocabulary, no time to look up words, pressure to report main idea.Short blurbs focus students on one ideaContext makes paraphrasing more realistic Context focuses reading on using an idea for supportSlide24

Summary Resources “Finding main ideas” handout Summary GridHow to Write a Summary handout (on wiki) Debate in Costco Connection magazine Slide25

Integration work To integrate paraphrased source into a paragraph Sentence 1: introduces topic (topic sentence) Sentence 2: introduces paraphrase Sentence 3: connects/integrates source & main idea.Resource: integration handoutSlide26

Source list 1: New York Times Up Front Nov 22, 20102: New York Times Up Front Oct 25, 20103: Health June 20094: Mothering Jan 2010Slide27

Thank You! http://boydsteachingresources.pbworks.com/ Slide28

What is sentence-level Paraphrasing?Where does it fit into steps for restating main ideas?Using synonymsChanging sentence from active to passive and vice versa.Changing parts of speech.Combining sentences.Inverting complement and predicate. See grammar toolbox web link/handout on wiki page.

Only after main idea has been restated.

Word level focus = lost main idea.

Back to L1 reading skills.

Only as a means to fine-tune a paraphrase; make it less like original.

In some classes I never give out a sentence-based handout!

Sentence-level paraphrase work

When and where?

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