Reciprocal Teaching
Description
Reciprocal Teaching is an instructional strategy used for teaching strategic reading. It is a form of a dialogue between teacher and student. The teacher and the student take turns assuming the role of teacher in leading the discussion about a story or passage of the text.
Purpose
Students teach themselves to read by modeling strategies that good readers use.
Procedure
Use the following for student reading:
- Have students write down three things that they think good readers do.
- Ask students to tell one thing they have written on their paper.
- Pass out book dividers (bookmarks).
- Explain and define each of the five parts. Prediction, clarification, visualization, questioning and summarizing. Explain they may use highlighters or Post-its to teach strategies in any order, but for this lesson they will be in order.
- Practice strategies with students.
Student Expectations
- Prediction activates students’ prior knowledge about the text and helps them make connections between new information and what they already know, and gives them a purpose of reading.
- Clarifying promotes comprehension. Students share their uncertainties about unfamiliar vocabulary, confusing text passages, and difficult concepts.
- Questioning (question generating) encourage students to actively engage in the text, rather than responding only to teacher questions.
- Summarizing collaboratively enables all students to increase comprehension of difficult tests.
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