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Presenter: Maryellen Rooney Moreau, M.Ed., CCC-SLP Oral Language Development: The Foundation of Literacy Woolfolk Conference OLLU’s Department of Communication and Learning Disorders

Woolfolk Lecture M.R. Moreau Oct. 12, 2015

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Page 1: Woolfolk Lecture M.R. Moreau Oct. 12, 2015

Presenter:

Maryellen Rooney Moreau, M.Ed., CCC-SLP

Oral Language Development:

The Foundation of Literacy

Woolfolk Conference

OLLU’s Department of

Communication and Learning Disorders

Page 2: Woolfolk Lecture M.R. Moreau Oct. 12, 2015

Maryellen Rooney Moreau, M.Ed. CCC-SLP,

President & Founder, MindWing Concepts, Inc., Springfield, MA

– Financial: Maryellen has ownership interest in MindWing Concepts,

holds intellectual property rights and patents. Maryellen is employed as

president of MindWing Concepts. In that capacity, She designed Story

Grammar Marker® and Braidy the StoryBraid® along with many other

books and materials. She consults, trains and presents on these topics.

– Nonfinancial: No relevant nonfinancial relationships exist.

Disclosures

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Beginning

Middle

End

Name:__________________________ Date:____________

Story Graphic Organizer

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Beginning

Middle

End

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Setting

Solution

Name:__________________________ Date:____________

Story Graphic Organizer

Problem

Character

Events

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PERSONAL NARRATIVES:

Also called AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL EVENT NARRATIVES

are the beginnings of narrative discourse.

• “The Personal Narrative” is often a second grade

English Language Arts State Standard.

• Personal narratives expand children’s conversational abilities

since they are the basis for exchange of information between and

among children.

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What is the

Story

Grammar

Marker®?

A hands on, multisensory

tool that has colorful,

meaningful icons that

represent the organizational

structure of a story. The

tool itself is a complete

episode, the basic unit of a

plot.

Character

Setting

Kick-off

Feeling

Plan

Planned Attempts (Actions)

Direct Consequence

Resolution

The Intersection of Research and Practice8

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MindWing Concepts, Inc. Instructional Materials

www.mindwingconcepts.com 9

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Example of the need for

Narrative Intervention

for Social Communication (and Writing).

Page 4.2 in It’s All About the Story

This 5th grade student was diagnosed with Asperger’sSyndrome. This is his personal narrative in response to a writing prompt.

PROMPT: Everyone has a day or an experience that they remember because they were special. Maybe you had a wonderful birthday party or a special person came to your home for a visit. Write about a day or experience that was special to you. Remember to write an exciting beginning and include details in your writing. 10

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My radio came on!“Better get up!”my mother shouted from downstairs.“They called and said they would be coming 15 minutes early.”I jumped up, pulled on my sweats and bolted down the stairs.I had 45 minutes left and I had a lot to do.They came in their big SUV.We had a really good time.We drove home in the rain and I was really tired after all that walking.I kept thinking of that thing. I will tell him about it at school.Even though I was mad, I had a great time. 11

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“Narratives offer opportunities to support

language use, emotional expression and

social cognition in an integrated social and

academic context.”

Carol Westby in Way, et. al. (2007). Understanding alexithymia and language skills in children: implications for assessment and

intervention. LSHSS, 38, 128-139.

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“We dream, remember,

anticipate, hope, despair, love,

hate, believe, doubt, plan,

construct, gossip and learn in

narrative.”

Westby, C. (1985, 1991). Learning to talk, talking to learn:

Oral-literate language differences. In C. Simon (Ed.),

Communication skills and classroom success.

Eau Claire, WI: Thinking Publications, Inc.

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We think in terms of stories. Not only do we

understand the world in terms of stories we’ve

heard, our interpretation of personal problems

and relationships is influenced by stories of

others who have experienced similar situations.

In fact, we understand-and explain-just about

everything in life through stories.”

Schank, R. (1990). Tell me a story: A new look at real and artificial memory. NY: Macmillan.

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A Focus on the

Discourse Level of Language:

It’s About Helping Students Develop

“Communicative Competence”

Referred to as the Oral Literate Continuum (Westby, 1985 in Simon,

Communication skills and classroom success: Therapy methodologies for language learning

disabled students. College Hill , San Diego, pp 182-213

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COLLEGE AND CAREER

CCSS

How does

“narrative” fit

into language

development?

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Without Discourse There is Not an Efficient

Connection between oral language and literacy!

CCSS

COLLEGE AND CAREER

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We help children develop literate

oral language by assisting them

in progressing along the oral

literate continuum (discourse).

CONVERSATION NARRATION EXPOSITION

The Oral-Literate Continuum

The “Here and Now”………………………………….The “There and Then”

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What is literate oral language?It is the combination of:

Macro-structure The overall organization of a story or expository text selection

&

Micro-structure The linguistic complexity of sentences that

make up the macro-structure

Elements of micro-structure connect

the elements of macro-structure. 19

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“The dynamic synchronicity between language, thoughts and world

experience - which provides the basis for students to tell the events

of their life while also learning to understand other’s experiences -

is best described as using narrative language.

At times lacking in coherence, demonstrating an over focus on

detail, failing to sequence events in a manner that makes sense to

the reader and/or exhibiting a weakness in conveying an emotional

voice, may be some of the elements weak or missing in the narrative

of our students.”

~ Michelle Garcia Winner,

Foreward, It’s All About the Story & Making Connections,

MindWing Concepts (2010)

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Strands of Language

Pragmatics

Phonology

Semantics

Syntax & Morphology

Discourse

Metalinguistics

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PRAGMATICS

Social Uses of Language

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PHONOLOGY

The Sound System

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SEMANTICS

Meaning

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SYNTAX and MORPHOLOGY

From Simple to Complex Sentences

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DISCOURSE

Spoken and Written Communication

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METALINGUISTICS

The Conscious Awareness of Language

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Two broad classes of language skills

have been identified as important for

later reading performance (literacy):

Code related skills:

• Phonological Awareness,

• Letter naming,

• Decoding,

• Emergent writing…

Oral language processes:

• The skill sets of vocabulary (receptive and expressive);

• Syntactic knowledge

• Semantic (schema/script) knowledge, and

• Narrative discourse processes (memory, comprehension

and storytelling).

NICHD Early Child Care Research Network (2005). Pathways to Reading: The Role of Oral Language in the Transition to Reading. Developmental Psychology,

41,2. 28

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We help children develop literate

oral language by assisting them

in progressing along the oral

literate continuum (discourse).

CONVERSATION NARRATION EXPOSITION

The Oral-Literate Continuum

The “Here and Now”………………………………….The “There and Then”

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“Broad Oral Language Skills should be an

integral part of reading instruction

beginning in preschool and throughout

elementary school.”

“If comprehensive language skills directly feed

nascent reading, then interventions and

assessments that focus only on phonemic

awareness and vocabulary development will

prove too narrow to support later academic

achievement…”

Storch, S. & Whitehurst, G. (2002). Oral language and code-related precursors to

reading: Evidence from a longitudinal model. Developmental Psychology, 38, 934-947.30

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Narrative retelling is a useful task for

predicting which children may be at

risk for later literacy problems.

Based on the results of this study, narrative macro-structure appears to

play an especially important role in the development of later literacy

skills…Language intervention involving oral narratives may boost

children’s reading comprehension as well as carry over to later written

language skills.

Wellman, et. al. (20011). Narrative ability of children with speech sound disorders and the prediction of later literacy skills. LSHSS,

42, 561-579.

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This 5th grade student is diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome.

This is his personal narrative in response to a writing prompt.

PROMPT: Everyone has a day or an experience that they remember because they

were special. Maybe you had a wonderful birthday party or a special person

came to your home for a visit. Write about a day or experience that was special

to you. Remember to write an exciting beginning and include details in your

writing.

My radio came on!

“Better get up!”my mother shouted from downstairs.

“They called and said they would be coming 15 minutes early.”

I jumped up, pulled on my sweats and bolted down the stairs.

I had 45 minutes left and I had a lot to do.

They came in their big SUV.

We had a really good time.

We drove home in the rain and I was really tired after all that

walking.

I kept thinking of that thing. I will tell him about it at school.

Even though I was mad, I had a great time.

Example of the need for Narrative Intervention (and its impact on

writing and communication)…. Page 4.2 in It’s All About the Story

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“How do we know whether a person has comprehended a text? Sadly, more often than not, at

least in school, the answer is that the person can complete short-answer questions about the text

that he or she has read. It was true before the last three decades of research and remains true

today (Pressley et al 1998):

Comprehension gets tested more

than students get taught how

to comprehend!”

Cathy Collins Block, Linda Gambrell & Michael Pressley (Eds.) (2002). Improving Comprehension Instruction: Rethinking research, Theory, and Classroom Practice. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass

Written Expression and Comprehension:

How literacy progress is monitored and how

achievement is measured in the classroom

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• Internalizing the Structure Of Stories

• Understanding Characters’ Motives

• Identifying Themes

Struggling Comprehenders

have problems:

Improving Comprehension Instruction: Rethinking Research, Theory, And Classroom Practice

Edited By: Cathy Collins Block, Linda B. Gambrell And Michael Pressley

ISBN: 0-87207-458-7 34

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Deep Comprehension

The reader needs to:

• construct a global meaning that integrates multiple sentences.

• take perspectives and infer, thus combining the individual sentence meanings across the text into a coherent structure.

• to fill in “missing information and build a coherent mental model that incorporates all the information inthe text.

Deep comprehension requires more than the

mere interpretation of individual sentences.

Kintsch, W. (1998). Comprehension: A paradigm for cognition. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.

Reading comprehension’s new look: Influences of theory and technology on practice.

Topics in language Disorders, 25, 2.35

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Next 11 slides are from It’s All About the Story (one of the 3 books in MindWing’s Autism Collection)38

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PLANNED ATTEMPTS

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The Narrative

Developmental Sequence:

Where It All Comes Together!

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Copyright © 2007, MindWing Concepts, Inc. • 1-888-228-9746 • Web: www.mindwingconcepts.com53

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Copyright © 2007, MindWing Concepts, Inc. • 1-888-228-9746 • Web: www.mindwingconcepts.com54

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Lauren, Age 6, Kindergarten (June of 2008)Using Braidy™ as a manipulative to Scaffold the Stages of Narrative Development

and using Braidy™ for Expository Text (listing)

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Narrative Development Correlated to the CCSS for

Reading, Key Idea and Detail #3 Using Clifford’s Pals

Clifford and his pals

At the work site in the cement

pit playing, jumping and

barking.

Clifford, a big, red dog and his

furry pals

At the work site in the cement

pit playing, jumping and

barking.

The work crew starts to pour

cement on Susie, Lenny &

Nero.

Clifford pushes the cement

chute aside.

Clifford, a big, red dog and his

furry pals

At the work site in the cement

pit playing, jumping and

barking.

All of a sudden, Clifford sees

the work crew start to pour

cement on Susie, Lenny &

Nero.

So, Clifford pushes the cement

chute aside.

CCSS Kindergarten

RL.K.3. With prompting and

support, identify characters,

settings, and major events in

a story.

CCSS Grade 1

RL.1.3. Describe characters,

settings, and major events in

a story, using key details.

CCSS Grade 2

RL.2.3. Describe how

characters in a story respond to

major events and challenges.

Narrative Development

Stage 1: Descriptive Sequence

Narrative Development

Stage 2: Action Sequence

Narrative Development

Stage 3: Reactive Sequence

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Clifford, a big, red dog and his furry pals

At the work site in the cement pit playing,

jumping and barking.

All of a sudden, Clifford sees the work

crew start to pour cement on Susie,

Lenny & Nero.

He is worried about his pals, because

they could get hurt.

Clifford knows that his pals will get hurt if

the cement fills the pit,

so decides to save them.

Clifford pushes the cement chute aside.

As a result, Clifford’s pals are safe.

Clifford is relieved.

Clifford, a big, red dog and his furry pals

At the work site in the cement pit playing,

jumping and barking.

All of a sudden, Clifford sees the work

crew start to pour cement on Susie,

Lenny & Nero.

He is worried about his pals, because

they could get hurt.

So, Clifford pushes the cement chute

aside.

Narrative Development

Stage 4: Abbreviated Episode

Narrative Development

Stage 5: Complete Episode

CCSS Grade 3

RL.3.3. Describe characters in a story

(traits, motivations, feelings) and explain

how their actions contribute to the

sequence of events.

CCSS Grade 4

RL.4.3. Describe in depth a character, setting or

event in a story or drama, drawing on specific details

in the text (character’s thoughts, words, actions).58

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Narrative Development Correlated to the CCSS for

Reading, Key Idea and Detail #3 Using

Chapter 1 of Charlotte’s Web

Fern, her parents, the Piglet

In the kitchen at home and

outside at the hog house, Fern is

arguing with her parents about

killing a runty piglet

(exploration of the setting using

questions and pictures in

important)

Fern, an eight year old, strong

willed, caring girl, her parents, a

thin, sickly Piglet

In the kitchen at home and

outside at the hog house, Fern is

arguing with her parents about

killing a runt pig

Fern shrieks at her mother

Fern struggles with her father to

get the ax away from him

Fern, an eight year old, strong

willed, caring girl, her parents, a thin,

sickly Piglet

In the kitchen at home and outside

at the hog house, Fern talks to her

mother about the new litter of piglets

All of a sudden, Fern notices her

father has an ax and means to kill

the runty Piglet

So, Fern shrieks at her mother and

struggles with her father to get the

ax and argues with him to let the

runty piglet live.CCSS Kindergarten

RL.K.3. With prompting and

support, identify characters,

settings, and major events in

a story.

CCSS Grade 1

RL.1.3. Describe characters,

settings, and major events

in a story, using key details.

CCSS Grade 2

RL.2.3. Describe how

characters in a story respond

to major events and

challenges.

Narrative Development

Stage 1: Descriptive Sequence

Narrative Development

Stage 2: Action Sequence

Narrative Development

Stage 3: Reactive Sequence

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Fern, an eight year old, strong willed, caring girl, her

parents, a thin, sickly Piglet

In the kitchen at home and outside at the hog house, Fern

talks to her mother about the new litter of piglets

All of a sudden, Fern notices her father has an ax and

means to kill the runty Piglet!

Fern is outraged and worried about the piglet.

Fern KNOWS that the runt of litter is not valuable on a

farm, she REALIZES that her father needs to kill the runt,

she REMEMBERS that her father has empathy,

she THINKS it is a case of injustice to kill a runty piglet just

because it is born too small

She intends to prevent her father from killing the piglet and

to convince him to let it live.

First, Charlotte shrieks at her mother

Then, she struggles with her father to get the ax

Finally, she argues with her father to convince him to let the

runty piglet live.

As a result, Charlotte’s father let’s her feed and care for the

runty piglet as if it were a baby and she names it Wilbur.

Fern was relieved that she had saved the piglet, thrilled to

be able to care for him, and triumphant that she had

overcome an injustice.

Fern, an eight year old, strong willed,

caring girl, her parents, a thin, sickly

Piglet

In the kitchen at home and outside at the

hog house, Fern talks to her mother

about the new litter of piglets

All of a sudden, Fern notices her father

has an ax and means to kill the runty

Piglet!

Fern is outraged and worried about the

piglet.

So, Fern shrieks at her mother and

struggles with her father to get the ax

and finally convinces him to let the runty

piglet live.

Narrative Development

Stage 4: Abbreviated Episode

Narrative Development Stage 5: Complete Episode

CCSS Grade 3

RL.3.3. Describe characters in a story (traits,

motivations, feelings) and explain how their

actions contribute to the sequence of events.

CCSS Grade 4

RL.4.3. Describe in depth a character, setting or event in

a story or drama, drawing on specific details in the text

(character’s thoughts, words, actions).61

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January

Chinese New Year

“In the Year of the Dog, 4645, there lived halfway across the

world from New York, a girl called Sixth Cousin. Otherwise

known as Bandit.

Once winter morning, a letter arrived at the House of Wong

from her father, who had been traveling the four seas. On the

stamp sat an ugly, bald bird. The paper was blue. When

Mother read it, she smiled. But the words made Grandmother

cry and Grandfather angry. No one gave Sixth Cousin even the

smallest hint of why.”

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A letter arrived from

Bandit’s father.

A letter arrived from

Bandit’s father.

A letter arrived from

Bandit’s father.

Mother felt happy

(smiled).

Grandmother felt

sad (cried).

Grandfather felt angry.

On the first page of In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson, there is an initiating event that causes 4 different feelings in 4

different characters. Because of the “mental states” of each character, this “kick off” made each of them feel a certain way. Each

character will have a different plan and different motivation based on these different feelings and mental states. This example makes

it clear to see how important the foundation of narrative development is in perspective-taking when reading novels (and this is just

page 1!!).

A letter arrived from

Bandit’s father.

Bandit felt confused

and concerned.

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Please Note:

In Rosie’s Walk, Rosie’s perspective of the story

is at Stage 2 – the Action Sequence. The Fox

has a PLAN (to eat Rosie) so he makes many

ATTEMPTS to catch her so that he can eat her.

Therefore, from the Fox’s perspective this is a

STAGE 5, The Complete Episode.

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What is literate oral language?It is the combination of:

Macro-structure The overall organization of a story or expository text selection

&

Micro-structure The linguistic complexity of sentences that

make up the macro-structure

Elements of micro-structure connect

the elements of macro-structure. 70

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Narrative Macro-structure

is…

…the global organizational structure

or “story grammar” of a narrative

(story) – independent

of content.

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Micro-structure: Gluing the Sentences Together

1. Micro-structure, as defined by Justice (2004), is the internal linguistic organization

of the narrative.

2. Micro-structure is commonly referred to as “story sparkle” (Westby). It focuses on

vocabulary and sentence development as well as cohesive ties (see page 39-40 of

SGM® manual.)

3. Micro-structure is the elaboration and cohesion that makes a story (narrative)

meaningful. (SGM® manual page 39-44.)

4. Micro-structure’s literate language features:

• Elaborated noun phrases (ex. The big, scary fish…)

• Verb phrases (tense use & adverb use, ex. The big, scary fish swam slowly.)

• Mental State verbs (the character may: remember, know, think, realize, etc.)

• Linguistic verbs (whispered, yelled, asked, etc.)

• Conjunctions (and, but, so, because, first, then, next, finally, etc.)

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Cohesive Tie ActivityA Differentiated Instruction Activity

Focused on Micro-Structure, Fluency and

the Semantics, Syntax & Morphology Strands of Language

Materials Needed:

1. Old Tie

2. Stick-on letters

3. Conjunction word cards from Our Friend Braidy™ Poster

4. Clothes pin (wooden or plastic)

5. Sentence Strips (optional)

6. 3 volunteers to participate

C

O

H

E

S

I

V

E

#1 #2 #3

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Large Group Activity:

Analyzing Children’s Literature

at Each Stage of

Narrative Development

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The Boston Tea Party

Story Grammar Marker® Style

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The King was desperate.

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Expository or informational text is…

• found in text books such as history, geography, social studies,

science and technology.

• the structure of college lectures, newspapers and weekly

readers.

• particularly important for organizing and comprehending

information in: news articles, textbook chapters, research

papers, advertisements, content area texts, the Internet

• in everyday life; for example: in driving directions, recipes, to-

do lists, current events, decisions to purchase products or

services, work problems, home and property maintenance or

local politics.

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“Using informational text to teach social

studies [and science] is crucial in

developing content area knowledge and

reading comprehension skills in

elementary students.”Pennington et al. (2014). Reading informational Texts: A Civic Transactional

Perspective. The Reading Teacher, 63(7), 532..

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Improving Comprehension Instruction: Rethinking Research, Theory, and Classroom Practice

Edited By: Cathy Collins Block, Linda B. Gambrell and Michael Pressley

ISBN: 0-87207-458-7

• Expository texts present additional comprehension obstacles for struggling comprehenders…

…Because…

• Expository genres are written to provide information versus to tell a story

• The patterns in which authors organize their ideas and information differ depending on their purpose and the specific content area

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There is big box supercenter that

wants to build a location in the

city; there are many people for or

against this project.

A big box supercenter in the city will be beneficial to the residents of the city. The

location is zoned for business development, encouraging competition is

tantamount to a thriving economy, residents will have more options and better

prices for common goods, a supercenter will increase the business tax base and

alleviate the tax burden of homeowners, this type of store will offer convenience

of a variety of products under one roof.

The plan is to demonstrate reasons and evidence that show the negative

impact that a big box supercenter would present to the city.

Having a big box supercenter in

the city will be detrimental to the

residents of the city, although

there are people in favor of such

an endeavor.

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Traffic reports show that the road is already congested with a mall

and other shopping centers and is only two lanes. The lot is

adjacent to heavily populated public housing and a quiet residential

neighborhood.

Even though it is zoned

for business, this location

cannot accommodate a

supercenter type of

store.

This supercenter will

destroy small

businesses in the

local economy.

A study of small towns in Iowa showed lost sales for local

businesses amounting to a total dollar loss of $2.46 BILLION

over a 13-year period resulting from a supercenter being built.

The job offerings are

low paying and not

full time with benefits.

Tens of thousands of supercenter employees and their children

are enrolled in Medicaid and are dependent on the government for

healthcare. Due to supercenters ordering from China, the United

States has actually lost an average of about 50,000 good paying

manufacturing jobs PER MONTH since 2001.

Having a big box supercenter in the city will be detrimental to the city due to several

reasons and facts. The area cannot accommodate the traffic, it is too close to a

residential neighborhood, it will destroy local businesses and many of the jobs are low

paying and do not offer full time employment with benefits.

There is big box supercenter that wants to build a location in the city; there are many people

for or against this project. Some resident claim that a big box supercenter in the city will be

detrimental to the residents of the city, although there are also residents in favor of such an

endeavor. 109

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Connect with us!

• Follow us on Twitter @mindwingconcept

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https://www.facebook.com/mindwingconcepts

• And our NEW Facebook virtual Official Story Grammar

Marker® Professional Learning Community

https://www.facebook.com/groups/StoryGrammarMarker/

• Join our EMAIL list:

http://mindwingconcepts.com/contactus.htm

• Connect with Maryellen Rooney Moreau on LinkedIn 111

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Use discount code WF10

for 10% OFF all

MindWing Concepts products!

Order at this conference, get FREE shipping and

handling, too (another 10% savings)!

Order after the conference, and still get 10% off by

using this code WF10 on

www.mindwingconcepts.com

(discount code good through November 10, 2015).

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How to reach Maryellen:

Call her (toll free): 888.228.9746

Email her: [email protected]

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