Description
Text features really grab our attention—just like the Barbie graphic that National Geographic magazine used to illustrate recent trends in cosmetic surgery. But have your students mastered the Common Core standard of interpreting and utilizing text features as part of their reading comprehension strategies?
This stand-alone lesson lets you put all those old magazines you’ve been saving (or your parents or your students’ parents) to good use by offering real-world opportunities to recognize, analyze, and utilize text features. This lesson provides for guided and independent exploration of titles, subtitles, subheadings, sidebars, graphs, charts, pictures, captions, and more, and asking students to critically think about the purpose and use of these items, and how they can be utilized to increase reading comprehension. This is an increasingly important—and tested—benchmark in which students must be competent in today’s world of graphics-heavy mass and popular media.
This lesson would also be great for social studies teachers. Kill two birds with a single stone: develop content knowledge and promote skillful reading. Win-Win!
This stand-alone lesson lets you put all those old magazines you’ve been saving (or your parents or your students’ parents) to good use by offering real-world opportunities to recognize, analyze, and utilize text features. This lesson provides for guided and independent exploration of titles, subtitles, subheadings, sidebars, graphs, charts, pictures, captions, and more, and asking students to critically think about the purpose and use of these items, and how they can be utilized to increase reading comprehension. This is an increasingly important—and tested—benchmark in which students must be competent in today’s world of graphics-heavy mass and popular media.
This lesson would also be great for social studies teachers. Kill two birds with a single stone: develop content knowledge and promote skillful reading. Win-Win!
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.
Highlights
Digital downloads
Grades
7th - 12th
Tags
Pages
6 pages
Teaching Duration
90 minutes
Description
Text features really grab our attention—just like the Barbie graphic that National Geographic magazine used to illustrate recent trends in cosmetic surgery. But have your students mastered the Common Core standard of interpreting and utilizing text features as part of their reading comprehension strategies?
This stand-alone lesson lets you put all those old magazines you’ve been saving (or your parents or your students’ parents) to good use by offering real-world opportunities to recognize, analyze, and utilize text features. This lesson provides for guided and independent exploration of titles, subtitles, subheadings, sidebars, graphs, charts, pictures, captions, and more, and asking students to critically think about the purpose and use of these items, and how they can be utilized to increase reading comprehension. This is an increasingly important—and tested—benchmark in which students must be competent in today’s world of graphics-heavy mass and popular media.
This lesson would also be great for social studies teachers. Kill two birds with a single stone: develop content knowledge and promote skillful reading. Win-Win!
This stand-alone lesson lets you put all those old magazines you’ve been saving (or your parents or your students’ parents) to good use by offering real-world opportunities to recognize, analyze, and utilize text features. This lesson provides for guided and independent exploration of titles, subtitles, subheadings, sidebars, graphs, charts, pictures, captions, and more, and asking students to critically think about the purpose and use of these items, and how they can be utilized to increase reading comprehension. This is an increasingly important—and tested—benchmark in which students must be competent in today’s world of graphics-heavy mass and popular media.
This lesson would also be great for social studies teachers. Kill two birds with a single stone: develop content knowledge and promote skillful reading. Win-Win!
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.
Reviews
All verified TPT purchases
My students were not mature enough to handle the naked barbie doll.
oh dear! Barbs is only on the cover, which wasn't really intended for students--she's just there to attract the attention of potential buyers.
Thanks for this!
My classes used Scholastic's Scope and Action magazines to complete these and they worked wonderfully to help my students better understand the connection between the text and text features. The only addition I would like to see is a copy or link to the article that has the Barbie picture. That was what drew me to explore this item further than others.
The graphic comes from the December 2012 National Geographic (p. 20). I cannot find a copy on line, but if you email me, maybe I can help you out: tom.felt@palmbeachschools.org
Great!
I used this as an introduction to the textbook the first week of school and it was very effective.
Questions & Answers
Loading
Loading




