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ORC Resource Number #2814
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Guided Comprehension: Knowing How Words Work Using Semantic Feature Analysis
Best Practice
PROFESSIONAL COMMENTARY

Strategic reading allows students to monitor their own thinking and make connections between texts and their own experiences. Based on the Guided Comprehension Model developed by Maureen McLaughlin and Mary Beth Allen, this lesson introduces students to the comprehension strategy of knowing how words work. Students learn semantic feature analysis, a strategy that teaches them to identify characteristics associated with related words or concepts. In this lesson, students examine folktales, myths, and fables and use semantic feature analysis to better understand these terms and the texts that they are reading. Although this lesson focuses on characteristics of specific genres, the process may be adapted to many instructional situations. (author/ncl)

OHIO STANDARDS
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English Language Arts Standards
Reading Process: Concepts of Print, Comprehension Strategies and Self-Monitoring Strategies Standard
Reading Applications: Literary Text Standard
NATIONAL STANDARDS
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Standards for the English Language Arts
Range of materials and purposes for reading
Reading strategies, language use, and conventions
RESOURCE TYPE
Instructional Resource
PRACTICE LEVEL
Best Practice
STANDARDS ALIGNMENT
Grades 3–5
TOPICS
English Language Arts --
Reading-Strategies & Skills;
Literature;
Children's Literature;
KEYWORDS
myths;
folktales;
semantic feature analysis;
explicit strategy instruction
Publisher: IRA/NCTE
Author: Sarah Dennis