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Writing the Textbook External Feature Analysis Paper Reading 091 Today’s Agenda TODAY: Grading your annotations using the Textbook Project Rubric Improving Cornell Notes using internal text features and graphic organizers Writing/drafting the paper in your notebook. HOMEWORK: Textbook Analysis Project and Paper – 100 points READING RUBRICS: What is your instructor looking for? Review the grade rubric on the second page of the assignment handout. With a partner, discuss what you think would qualify as earning a 5,4,3,2 for each category. Review your annotations. Based on the discussion in class, what do point value do you think you would earn? What are some graphic organizers you can use to improve your notes? Definition with Examples The planning fallacy refers to the fact that people consistently overestimate how quickly and easily they will achieve a goal and underestimate the amount of time or effort that will be required to reach that goal. In a study that examined the planning fallacy, college students were asked to list an academic project that had to be completed within the next week and to estimate when they intended to begin the project, when they expected to complete the project, and how many hours they expected to put into it. A week later, the students were asked if they had completed the project and when. Although all the students had estimated that they would complete the project comfortably in the time indicated, one week later more than half the projects remained incomplete. Those that had been completed had typically taken, on average, nearly five days longer than had been estimated. So much for planning! What internal text features help you to know what term the author is defining to the reader? What examples or illustration does the author use as support? Definition with Examples The planning fallacy refers to the fact that people consistently overestimate how quickly and easily they will achieve a goal and underestimate the amount of time or effort that will be required to reach that goal. In a study that examined the planning fallacy, college students were asked to list an academic project that had to be completed within the next week and to estimate when they intended to begin the project, when they expected to complete the project, and how many hours they expected to put into it. A week later, the students were asked if they had completed the project and when. Although all the students had estimated that they would complete the project comfortably in the time indicated, one week later more than half the projects remained incomplete. Those that had been completed had typically taken, on average, nearly five days longer than had been estimated. So much for planning! What internal text features help you to know what term the author is defining to the reader? What examples or illustration does the author use as support? Definition and Examples Planning fallacy People think they will accomplish a task faster than the time it takes to do so EX: students think an assignment will take a short period of time and when they start on it they learn it takes much longer Time Order Hypothermia can kill at an amazing pace when cold temperatures and strong winds cause the body to lose heat quickly. Shivering starts first in order to produce body heat from the rapid muscular shaking. When the body's temperature drops to or below 35 deg C/95 deg F, dizziness and disorientation kick in, then the shivering stops. The body now only maintains heat around the vital organs - brain, heart and lungs, and shuts down blood circulation to the arms and legs. Heart rate becomes slow, intermittent and weak, and the blood vessels widen. This makes a person feel hot and want to remove all their clothes before they finally slip into unconsciousness. Ultimately, the heart stops. Stories are told of climbers being found naked and dead up on a mountain, with their clothes folded neatly a short distance away. This is because the person becomes confused and hot. Their brain tries to bring order to the scary and unfamiliar situation, although this can be potentially lethal. What internal text features show the reader the author is placing events in time order? Time Order Hypothermia can kill at an amazing pace when cold temperatures and strong winds cause the body to lose heat quickly. Shivering starts first in order to produce body heat from the rapid muscular shaking. When the body's temperature drops to or below 35 deg C/95 deg F, dizziness and disorientation kick in, then the shivering stops. The body now only maintains heat around the vital organs - brain, heart and lungs, and shuts down blood circulation to the arms and legs. Heart rate becomes slow, intermittent and weak, and the blood vessels widen. This makes a person feel hot and want to remove all their clothes before they finally slip into unconsciousness. Ultimately, the heart stops. Stories are told of climbers being found naked and dead up on a mountain, with their clothes folded neatly a short distance away. This is because the person becomes confused and hot. Their brain tries to bring order to the scary and unfamiliar situation, although this can be potentially lethal. What internal text features show the reader the author is placing events in time order? Time Order Process of Cold temps and strong wind accelerate death by hypothermia hypothermia 1. Shivering (to warm muscles) 2. Dizziness and disorientation (blood used for vital organs in core) 3. Person feels hot (heart rate slow, blood vessels widen) 4. Unconscious 5. Heart stops Compare and Contrast Personal or interpersonal channels of communication can occur in social settings when friends or acquaintances share information. Such word-of-mouth communication is a very powerful sources of information for consumers. Word-of-mouth communication is usually not under the control of the marketer. Commercial sources of interpersonal communication usually come in the form of personal selling efforts. Nonpersonal channels of communication, as defined earlier, do not involve direct communication between sender and receiver. Instead, information is shared through mass communication. Advertising, sales promotion, and publicity use nonpersonal techniques. Both interpersonal and mass communication are important in marketing. What internal text features help the reader identify the author is comparing and/or contrasting two ideas? Compare and Contrast Personal or interpersonal channels of communication can occur in social settings when friends or acquaintances share information. Such word-of-mouth communication is a very powerful sources of information for consumers. Word-of-mouth communication is usually not under the control of the marketer. Commercial sources of interpersonal communication usually come in the form of personal selling efforts. Nonpersonal channels of communication, as defined earlier, do not involve direct communication between sender and receiver. Instead, information is shared through mass communication. Advertising, sales promotion, and publicity use nonpersonal techniques. Both interpersonal and mass communication are important in marketing. What internal text features help the reader identify the author is comparing and/or contrasting two ideas? Compare/ Contrast Personal and Nonpersonal Communication Important in marketing Types of communication TYPE personal (nterpersonal) nonpersonal Definition Friends share info. No direct comm. directly or between socially send/rec. Marketer control Very little Great control examples Word of mouth; social media Ads, sales promos, mass production, publicity CAUSE & EFFECT Smoking is the single most preventable risk factor for fatal illnesses in the United States. Indeed, cigarette smoking leads to more deaths than all other drugs, car accidents, suicides, homicides, and fires combined. Further, nonsmokers who inhale smoke from other people’s cigarettes face an elevated face risk for lung cancer and other illnesses related to the lungs, a fact that has given rise to a nonsmoker’s rights movement in the United States. Bernstein, et al., (1999) Psychology, p473 What internal text features show the reader that the author is using cause and effect? CAUSE & EFFECT Smoking is the single most preventable risk factor for fatal illnesses in the United States. Indeed, cigarette smoking leads to more deaths than all other drugs, car accidents, suicides, homicides, and fires combined. Further, nonsmokers who inhale smoke from other people’s cigarettes face an elevated face risk for lung cancer and other illnesses related to the lungs, a fact that has given rise to a nonsmoker’s rights movement in the United States. Bernstein, et al., (1999) Psychology, p473 What internal text features show the reader that the author is using cause and effect? Cause and Effect Effects of smoking Deaths- more than car accidents, suicides, homicides and fires COMBINED! Nonsmokers develop lung cancer and other illnesses Nonsmoker’s rights movement (no smoking in planes, bars, jobs) What are some graphic organizers you can use to improve your notes? WRITING the ANALYSIS The next slides will provide you with prompts to begin the writing portion of the assignment. The prompts are only guides and you should be thoughtful when using them. Modify them to meet your needs. If you need help writing, see a FREE and FABULOUS tutor in the Writing Center. Writing the RATIONALE: What is your reason for sharing what you know about textbook reading? If you are enrolled in CPD 150 next semester, you most likely will purchase the textbook called Awesome CP Textbook, 3rd edition, published by Make your Pearson. Before the course begins, I highly recommendation recommend that you review the textbook closely and offer RATIONALE. to learn how the textbook is structured to help That is, say WHY you learn the material and meet with success in the it matters! course.You might find as I have . . . Also, we know that research shows that . . . I want to share what I have learned about external textbook features and give you some specific tips on how to use these Clearly state textbook structures in ways that will make you purpose to focus your more successful in CPD 150. Set CONTEXT for your paper reader. Write the first body paragraph, the 3 BEST EXTERNAL TEXT FEATURES : Main idea for the section and paragraph Narrow focus to front matter for this paragraph. Explain what each text feature is/does, Then follow each with a SPECIFIC EXAMPLE from your book. External features in textbooks can help you learn the material. The most important external text features used in this book are: blank1, blank2, and blank3. Blank1 tells the reader . . . This is helpful because . . . . . Blank 2 explains/shows/illustrates . . . . If you use blank 2 wisely, you will know . . . For example, ….. Blank 3 is/provides/shows . . . Let’s say you wanted to know/find/learn xyz. Blank 3 would help you . . . These are just a few of the strongest external text features that can help you learn . . . . End with a sentence that signals to the reader you are done with the 3 best external features. Write the first body paragraph, the 3 MISSING EXTERNAL TEXT FEATURES : Main idea for the section and paragraph External features in textbooks can help you learn the material. The most important external text features that are not used in this book are: blank1, blank2, and blank3. Blank1 tells the reader . . . This is helpful because . . . . . Blank 2 Explain what explains/shows/illustrates . . . . If you use blank 2 each text feature is/does, wisely, you will know . . . For example, ….. Blank 3 Then follow is/provides/shows . . . Let’s say you wanted to each with a know/find/learn xyz. Blank 3 would help you . . . SPECIFIC These are just a few of the missing external text EXAMPLE from your book. features that would improve a reader’s. . . . Narrow focus to front matter for this paragraph. End with a sentence that signals to the reader you are done with the 3 best external features. Write the first INTERNAL TEXT FEATURE paragraph: Main idea for the section and paragraph Internal textbook features can help you learn the material once you start Narrow focus to front matter reading. The internal text features most for this paragraph. often used in this textbook are: blank1, blank2, and blank3. Blank1 tells the reader. . Explain what each text feature is/does, . The author used Blank 1 in …... ( tell where Then follow each the internal text feature was found – in the with a SPECIFIC EXAMPLE from your book. heading, in the paragraph, both?) This is helpful because . . . . . For example, ….. End with a sentence that signals to the reader you are done with the first internal text feature. Repeat this for TWO more internal text features, giving each its own paragraph. Write the CONCLUSION paragraph: Main idea for the section and paragraph Briefly note the strengths and weaknesses of the textbook. Explain reading strategies that can be used to improve understanding of the information. In summation, reading a college textbook can be easy if you know…. In particular, this textbook facilitates a reader’s comprehension by….However, the text could be improved by including…Luckily, if you know reading strategies such as…these strategies will help improve your effectiveness and efficiency as a reader of any college textbook. End with a sentence that signals to the reader you are done with the analysis.