Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. The Building Blocks of Effective Close and Critical
Reading Lessons
Close Reading Defined
The Phases of Close Reading
How Much Frontloading Is Too Much (or Not Enough)?
Text-Dependent Questions Drive Close Reading
Use Text-Dependent Questions Judiciously
Question Yourself
Videos
Chapter 2. What Does the Text Say?
An Invitation to Read Closely: Literal-Level Questions
Why Students Need This Type of Questioning
Why Classroom Discussion Is Crucial
How Examining What the Text Says Addresses the Standards
Using Text-Dependent Questions About What the Text Says
Question Yourself
Practice Text: General Dwight D. Eisenhower′s D-Day Invasion
Statement to Soldiers, Sailors, and Airmen of the Allied
Expeditionary Force, June 6, 1944
Videos
Chapter 3. How Does the Text Work?
An Invitation to Read Closely: Structural-Level Questions
Why Students Need This Type of Questioning
How Examining How the Text Works Addresses the Standards
Using Text-Dependent Questions About How the Text Works
Question Yourself
Practice Text: "Jabberwocky" by Lewis Carroll
Videos
Chapter 4. What Does the Text Mean?
An Invitation to Read Closely: Inferential-Level Questions
Why Students Need This Type of Questioning
How Examining What the Text Means Addresses the Standards
Using Text-Dependent Questions About What the Text Means
Question Yourself
Practice Text: "Instances of the Communication of Cholera Through
the Medium of Polluted Water in the Neighborhood of Broad Street,
Golden Square" by John Snow
Videos
Chapter 5. What Does the Text Inspire You to Do?
An Invitation to Read Closely: Action-Oriented Questions and
Tasks
Why Students Need to Complete These Types of Tasks
How Examining What the Text Inspires You to Do Addresses the
Standards
Using Text-Dependent Tasks About What the Text Inspires You to
Do
Question Yourself
Practice Text: Excerpt From Introduction to A More Perfect Union:
The Creation of the United States Constitution by Roger A.
Bruns
Practice Text: The Bill of Rights: A Transcription
Videos
Coda
Appendices: Texts and Questions for . . .
Appendix I: High School English
Appendix II: Middle School English
Appendix III: High School Social Studies/History
Appendix IV: Middle School Social Studies/History
Appendix V: High School Science
Appendix VI: Middle School Science
References
Index
About the Authors
About the Contributors
Douglas Fisher, Ph.D., is Professor of Educational Leadership at San Diego State University and a teacher leader at Health Sciences High & Middle College. He is the recipient of an IRA Celebrate Literacy Award, NCTE's Farmer Award for Excellence in Writing, as well as a Christa McAuliffe Award for Excellence in Teacher Education. Doug can be reached at dfisher@mail.sdsu.edu. Nancy Frey, Ph.D., is Professor of Literacy in the Department of Educational Leadership at San Diego State University. The recipient of the 2008 Early Career Achievement Award from the National Reading Conference, she is also a teacher-leader at Health Sciences High & Middle College and a credentialed special educator, reading specialist, and administrator in California. Heather Anderson has a wide range of experience teaching at both the elementary and high school levels. She earned her M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction from San Diego State University, is BCLAD certified, has extensive experience in staff development, and spent part of her career as an elementary math specialist. Heather has shared her passion for education both nationally and internationally while presenting at conferences and consulting at individual school sites emphasizing the use of Gradual Release of Responsibility, differentiated instruction, close reading and collaborative grouping. Heather currently teaches English and higher level Spanish at Health Sciences High and Middle College, a charter school in San Diego. Marisol Thayre has a multifaceted range of teaching experience, from the middle and high school to university level. She earned her M.A. in English and Composition from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, is BCLAD and Leading Edge certified, and has experience teaching a large scope of students from various backgrounds. Marisol is especially interested in how students use different types of media to develop their own expertise as writers. Recently, Marisol has begun to share her knowledge with other teachers across the country as a presenter on Gradual Release of Responsibility, differentiated instruction, close reading and collaborative grouping. Marisol currently teaches English at Health Sciences High and Middle College, a charter school in San Diego.
"Fisher and Frey set the record straight about text-dependent
questions. They demonstrate that text-dependent questions can
address not only literal understanding but also understandings
about what the text doesn’t say, how the text works, what the text
means to and for the reader, how the text might be read in a
specific discipline, and more. With specific prompts and concrete
examples, Fisher and Frey show us how to use questioning as a
central tool to address the Common Core State Standards."
*NELL K. DUKE*
"Fisher and Frey have a knack for making complex topics accessible.
They write in a jargon-free style that teachers appreciate, and
their use of examples and analogies helps bring ideas to life.
These are qualities their readers have come to expect, and this
book does not disappoint. . . . Teachers will find here an
abundance of fresh, practical ideas that are easy to implement.
This book deserves a ‘close read,’ and I heartily recommend
it."
*MICHAEL MCKENNA*
"Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey are experts at linking research to
educational practice. Their latest book, Text-Dependent Questions,
provides teachers with the information they need to scaffold their
students’ deep comprehension through four levels of questioning. I
am excited to share this book with teachers and
colleagues!"
*LINDA DORN*
"Text-Dependent Questions solidifies Fisher and Frey’s well-earned
reputation as literacy experts who offer sane and nuanced
interpretations of the Common Core State Standards. They remind us
that close reading at its best is a social process, one involving
teacher-learner interaction as well as student-to-student
talk. While the recommended texts and sample questions are
useful, the extended classroom examples are the true heart of the
book, demonstrating how skilled practitioners flexibly devise and
deploy high-quality questions to serve varied instructional
purposes. "
*KELLY CHANDLER-OLCOTT*
"Fisher and Frey deliver another indispensable resource for
teachers of adolescents across the curriculum as they strive to
meet today’s more rigorous standards. Mentoring students to grow
from dependence on questions provided by others to developing the
capacity to "interrogate a text" themselves is fundamental to
proficient reading of complex disciplinary texts. Text-Dependent
Questions provides teachers with a carefully reasoned pathway for
questioning a text as a requisite for close reading."
*DOUGH BUEHL, Author of Classroom Strategies for Interactive
Learning*
"Everything about this book is genuine. From the authors’
candid appraisal of the myths surrounding close reading to their
forthright recommendations for teaching it is refreshing.
Fisher and Frey have been there, lived the pedagogy, and generated
much of the scholarship that makes Text-Dependent Questions both
compelling and unpretentious. Readers who have heard this
dynamic pair speak at conferences and other professional gatherings
are in for a treat; they are indisputably on the frontline when it
comes to engaging others in close reading."
*DONNA ALVERMANN*
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