Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Drawing Conclusions

Learning to teach your students to draw conclusions doesn’t have to be difficult.
·      Assure your students that they are using this reading strategy every day.
·      Use imaginary situations or pictures to draw conclusions.
·      Point out to your students that they have reasons to support their conclusions.
·      Highlight the importance of having enough support for the conclusions.

Practice
Choose a short story (or a part of a story) that is easy for your students to read and understand. After the first reading, ask students to write down 3 or 4 of the most important facts. Next, tell them to share their thinking about each fact. Put the facts and their thinking together to collectively make conclusions. Finally, write what the students learned and how it can help them in life.

This table will help your students organize their thinking.

Knowledge Interpretation and Application
What do you see/read?
Write down the facts.
What do you think about that?
Make careful observations and thoughtful interpretations, draw inferences.
What is the author’s message?
Draw conclusions.
What did you learn? What does it make you wonder? How can it help you in your life?




Raingsey practiced making conclusions.
Sovantey made interesting conclusions and connections.

More Practice
Teaching students to draw conclusions is essential in helping them understand how to read critically. 
Here are more activities that I selected from various sources. These activities for drawing conclusions will work for children at different grade levels. The more we practice with our students the better they become. Ideally, students should practice making conclusions every day during their reading activities.
- Conclusions from Movies
Students probably use the drawing conclusions strategy most often when they watch movies. Bring in a movie with an enjoyable scene that students can draw conclusions from (most movies will have a scene like this). Let students watch the movie and then work in groups to draw one or more conclusions from what they’ve watched. Encourage them to fill out a graphic organizer about one of their conclusions and emphasize the importance of basing their conclusion on facts from the movie.

Conclusions from Texts

Choose a text that you’ve already discussed to make this process easier for students the first time. Help them to use the graphic organizers to draw conclusions from the text. When they are successful, encourage them to use the same process to draw conclusions from an unfamiliar text.

- Guess the Emotion

Divide the class into groups and give each group an index card with an emotion written on it. Instruct each group to come up with several “hints" that would describe a person who is feeling that emotion. For example, the group that has the emotion “angry" might list “red-faced" and “fists clenched" as two of the hints.
Then have groups pair up and trade hints to see whether they can draw conclusions about how the person feels based on the given hints. This is a great drawing conclusion activity to teach students how to draw conclusions about characters in texts they are reading.

- You Are What You Bring

Tell the class that you will be describing the contents of someone’s bag, as well as what the bag looks like.
Explain that it will be their job to draw conclusions about the person based on what you say is in the person’s bag. You might describe a tiny pink purse lined with sequins and feathers with a tube of lipstick and a hand mirror, a bulky gym bag with a sweatband and a set of hand weights, or a knapsack filled with library books about Abraham Lincoln.
After you’ve given them several examples, let them break into groups and come up with bags of their own.
Encourage them to trade their descriptions with other groups and see whether the second group draws the same conclusions that the first group had in mind. Then discuss whether any of their conclusions lacked enough support to be probable.

- Pictures

For students who are having trouble drawing conclusions from texts, it can be helpful to give them a different medium with which to practice this skill.
Find some interesting pictures, either online or in some old photo albums, and ask students to draw conclusions based on what is happening in the pictures.
They might draw conclusions about the relationships of the people in the pictures, the emotions that each person in the picture feels, or the setting in which the picture takes place.
Then explain that reading a story is like seeing a snapshot in time, and that drawing conclusions about the picture the author presents us in the story can help us to better understand the story, just like drawing conclusions about the picture helped us better understand what was happening in the picture.
These drawing conclusions activities are the perfect way to engage your students and help them to practice this important reading strategy.
- Using a Graphic Organizer
Draw a graphic organizer on the board consisting of several squares connected with arrows to a larger rectangle. (You may want to place the rectangle above the squares to show that the information in the squares “supports" the conclusion.) Explain to students that in order to draw a conclusion (point to the rectangle), you need to make sure to have plenty of support (point to the squares).  

1 comment:

  1. Great post Tatiana! We have been discussing inferencing and drawing conclusions in Grade 1 over the past few weeks, more in terms of trying to understand that how we act causes other people to react in often predictable ways. One aspect of this inquiry has been how sometimes we can jump to conclusions (without enough evidence). We read a great book called Monkey and Elephant's Worst Fight Ever. It might be a good segue into why we need as much evidence as possible when inferencing/making conclusions so that we don't "jump to conclusions".

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