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Textbooks
This
section will be in three parts:
- Selecting Your Textbooks
- Using Difficult Textbooks
- Assignments for your Textbook Readings
- Selecting Your Textbooks
If you have the option of choosing the textbook
to use for your course, I recommend the following strategy:
- Gather as many books from which to choose
as possible. Some sources might be from textbook companies,
who are more than happy to send you desk copies for examination,
fellow teachers, who have books they have chosen for various
reasons, or local bookstores, who might have books that
are applicable as well.
- Make a list of content criteria that you
have for your course text. What are the areas of content
that are absolutely necessary for your course? What are
areas that you could easily supplement if necessary?
- Next, go through the books only looking
at the content. Immediately eliminate all of the books that
do not cover your minimum content needs. The remaining books
should cover the material necessary for your course.
- With the remaining books, select the one
that is the most reader-friendly for your students. You
might consider the following:
- What is the readability level of the
text?
How difficult or easy is it for your students to read? In
general, how complex are the sentences and how difficult
are the vocabulary words?
(See next section for how to do a general
readability assessment of the text)
- How "reader friendly" is
the text?
What is the overall organization of the text
(chronological, categorical, etc.)? Are the sections and
chapters organized logically?
What is the overall organization of the
chapters? Does the author
use headings and subheadings that clearly reflect the
information presented?
What are the learning
features in the text? Are there chapter previews,
summaries, review questions, etc? Does the book have a
glossary, index, appendix, maps, etc?
How does the text look visually?
Are there engaging photographs, charts, comics, etc? Is
there space in the margins in which students can annotate
or is it too dense for notetaking?
How is vocabulary
handled in the text?
Are new words written in bold or color or noted in the
margins? Is there a glossary? Are new words listed at
the end of each chapter?
How does the book represent diverse
cultures, races, ethnicities, languages, abilities, genders,
etc.? This might be reflected in the content or visuals.
- Extra Features
Does the book come packaged with a dictionary or Internet
website for the students?
- Cost
If you are still debating between texts that seem equal,
consider choosing the one that is the lower-priced.
- Using Difficult Texts
If you must use a text that you know is difficult
reading for your students, this section will discuss ways
to assist your students with their assignments.
- How difficult is my text?
While there is some controversy regarding "readability"
scales, you might find it helpful to do a simple estimated
readability analysis in order get a general idea of the
reading level of your textbook. (Please be aware, though,
that there are many other components that make a text more
or less difficult than sentence length and syllables.)
Here are two methods you can use to get
a quick estimate of a readability level of your textbook:
- Microsoft Word
Believe it or not, if you go to "tools", then
"preferences", select "spelling and grammar"
and check off "show readability statistics"
Word will calculate the estimated readability of a text.
After setting up the step I just listed,
type in 100 words of your text. Then, under "tools"
select "spelling and grammar." Word will
take you through a spelling and grammar check. When
the check is complete, Word will display an estimated
readability score of the text.
I recommend doing this three times for
your text, taking a 100 word passage from the beginning,
middle and end of the book, then averaging the estimated
reading level Word displays.
- The Fry Readability Formula
- Select three 100 word passages from
the beginning, middle and end of the book.
- Count the total number of sentences
from each and average them.
- Count the total number of syllables
from each and average them.
- Plot the results on the following
graph for your text's estimated readability.

- Teach your students specific reading
strategies for approaching your course's textbook.
Please see the ReQuest, SQ3R and REAP strategies
discussed in detail in the Reading Strategies section of
DREAM.
- Assignments for your Textbook Readings
I like to use the following types of assignments
because they help make students accountable for their reading
and follow the three stages of the reading process (before
reading, during reading, and after reading).
Note: Each of these assignments requires teacher
modeling.
- Outline of the chapter
I teach students to create a formal outline of the chapter
using the headings, subheadings and sub-subheadings, etc
of the textbook. Students write a brief summary of each
section after they read it.
To build on the preview, read, review concept,
you can have your students create the skeleton of the
outline in a preview, then go back to fill in the summaries
in each section as part of the read, then review and re-read
all their notes of the chapter.
As further motivation, I give a quiz on
the chapter at the beginning of class. Students may use
their notes while taking the quiz but not their textbooks.
The quality of their notetaking usually improves dramatically
after students understand their usefulness.
Regarding the grading of these assignments,
I quickly scan over the outlines and check them off with
a score of 4, 3, 2 or 1. As an assessment tool, it is
terrific because it is very difficult for a student to
make an outline of something she doesn't understand. When
reading over the outlines, you will easily see the students
who are having great difficulty understanding their text!
- Concept Map, Timeline, or Summary
of the Chapter
These can be used as options to the outline
assignment or to introduce variety to the assignment.
Depending on the individual student, one method of notetaking
will be more preferred over the others.
- Chapter Responses
Less formal than an actual outline or notes
on an entire chapter, this allows students to make a personal
response to their reading.
You can ask students to make questions,
appreciation's, confusions, relate the information to
another text, write about a memory it triggers, make a
collage based on the information, list their favorite
or least favorite quotation from the reading, list the
sentence that gives the most important idea from the reading,
etc.
These responses also provide you with immediate
class discussion materials (Since students have their
prepared comments sitting in front of them, it is easier
for them to speak up than having to remember the text
in class and formulate a comment on the spot.). You can
collect the responses and read from them randomly, ask
students to discuss their responses with a partner or
small group or open it up to a class discussion. (This
need not even take more than a few minutes of class time.
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