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Strategies

Purpose
Phase One Building Knowledge of the Field

Strategy One Picture Walk


- Images reflecting droughts.

- To incite interest and engagement (Code breaker)

Strategy Two Picture Walk Pair-Share


- Inquiry questions:
- Describe what you see.
- Why do you think this image was made?
- Who do you think is the target audience?

- To activate students prior knowledge (Text participant)

Strategy Three Word Wall


- Words with similar onsets and rimes will be explicitly grouped together.

- To develop student whole-to-part phonic understanding (Hill 2013, p. 198) (Code


breaker).

Strategy Four Pair-Share-Create


- Focus activities:
- Write a caption for the image.
- Predict what will happen ten minutes after the scene in the image.

- Making meaningful connections to the text (Text user)


- To be used as a diagnostic tool to gauge textual knowledge and understanding.

Strategy Five - Shared Reading


- Water Witcher, by Jan Ormerod.
- Inquiry questions (using Reciprocal Reading Strategies):
- What does this story remind you of?
- Whose point of view is this story from/whose is missing?
- What pictures did you have in your head during the book?
- What message do you think the author wants us to get?
- What would you tell another person about the text?

- To develop knowledge and understanding of text structure and organization; build on


the familiar; how the purpose of texts may vary (ACARA 2015, ACELA1504); introduce
new vocabulary (Hill 2013, p. 298); print conventions (Hill 2013, p. 83) and build listening
comprehension (Schickedanz & McGee 2010) (Code breaker).

Phase Two Modeling the Genre


Strategy One Genre Comparison
- Comparisons are drawn between:
- Social purpose; field, tenor, mode; verbs/processes; noun
groups/participants; number of personal pronouns

- To compare language features of a narrative to a descriptive report (Text user)

Strategy Two Analysing Plot Structure


- Story map skeletons are filled in as a class, and compared with differing plot
structures from other books
Strategy Three Analysing Setting
- Using an excerpt from Water Witcher
- Inquiry questions:
- Where and when does the story take place?
- How do we know that?
- Which words, phrases, sentences give you clues about the setting?
Strategy Four Characterisation Role Playing
- Students take on the role of various characters in Water Witcher describing
their qualities and personality to the rest of the class
- The class asks the character what they think and feel about different events in
the story

- To understand how orientation, complication and resolution can be manipulated to suit


the purpose and style of the story (Code breaker)

- To determine how adjectives and noun groups are used to describe the setting through
imagery (Code breaker)

- To understand that characters in a story must have qualities that resemble people in
real life in order to be believable and interesting (Text analyst)

Phase Three Joint Construction


Strategy One Shared Reading
- Read the picture book, The Lost Girl by Ambelin Kwaymullina.
- Discuss narrative plot structure and whether the text follows a typical
convention.

Consolidate understanding of narrative sequencing (MacDonald 2013, pp. 73-75)


(Code breaker)

Strategy Two - Resolution Reconstruction


- Consider alternative narrative endings

- To recognize the different structures a narrative can follow (Code breaker)

Strategy Three - Finding Congruence


- Discuss how setting can be developed through language and illustration
(McDonald 2013, p. 160).
- Consider:
- How has the author used illustrations to create or enhance the setting?
- Does the setting affect the events of the plot?

Understand the importance of illustrations and how they help develop a setting and tell
a story (Code breaker)

Strategy Four - Character Development Through Noun Groups

- Acquire knowledge of functional language in relation to character development

- Discuss understanding of protagonists, antagonist and focaliser characters in


narratives.
- Develop and change noun groups to improve characterization and description.

(McDonald 2013, p. 97) (Code breaker)

Strategy Five Point of View


- Two students silently act out a scene while the other students watch
- The class jointly constructs brief narratives from each actors point of view

- To highlight that the perspective from which a story is told can change the point of
view (Text analyst)

Stage Four Independent Construction


Strategy One Group Text Analysis
- Groups to read and analyse, Drought by Tricia Oktober, focusing on plot
structure, setting or characterization.
Strategy Two Planning Presentation
- Students to become experts about their topic of analysis.
- Groups create a presentation illustrating narrative conventions, through a
modality of their choice.
- Groups report analysis to class in form of oral presentation at the Narrative
Expo (McDonald, 2013).
Strategy Three Conferencing
- Teacher conducts 5-10 minutes conference with groups.
Strategy Four Open Forum
- Each group to devise two open questions to ask the presenting group.

- Applying the knowledge obtained throughout the unit to show their skills in being
independent critical analysers of text (Code breaker)

- Allows students to develop collaborative and cooperation skills, communicating their


learning through oral means (Text user)

- To determine individual understandings of the key concepts presented by their group


- Ensures active participation and retention of information.

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