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Active Reading Strategies

Have you used notebooks to help your students understand science texts? Activate students’ relevant prior knowledge, help students monitor and improve their own reading comprehension, or provide structures for students to organize their understanding after reading.

About This Guide

Below, you’ll find guidance related to using the science notebook for active reading, including:

Because we know teachers appreciate seeing the results of using these strategies, we've also created an example gallery containing student work.

Gallery of Active Reading Strategies

Before-Reading Strategies

Use these Reading in Science strategies from the SERP Institute before reading to activate students’ relevant prior knowledge.

During-Reading Strategies

Use these strategies to help students monitor and improve their comprehension. These strategies often involve re-reading and coding text.

After-Reading Strategies

Students will use these strategies from the SERP Institute after reading to organize and distill their understanding.

See more examples in our Gallery

How to Make it Happen

Notes from the Classroom

Emily was teaching a fourth grade unit on crayfish adaptations. She wanted her students to observe the live crayfish in their class and make predictions about their anatomy before reading about the species.

She had students create a 3-column chart in their notebooks. The first column was for Structures students noticed on the crayfish. In that column, students sketched and described things like antennae, tail, claws, etc. The second column was for Function. In this column, students made predictions about how the various structures helped the crayfish survive. They filled out these first two columns while observing the crayfish for about 25 minutes.

Then, students read a short text on crayfish anatomy. They added a final column to their chart, labeled “After reading, I think…” In this last column, they described the function of each structure, according to the text. 

Emily reported that her students were much more engaged in the reading because they had done so much observation and thinking beforehand. They were eager to find out if the text would confirm their predictions.

References

[i] These strategies are described by Reading to Learn in Science, a collaboration of the SERP Institute and faculty from Stanford University.

[ii] This strategy and others can be found in Project Zero's Thinking Routine Toolbox, a resource of Harvard University's Graduate School of Education.

Additional Resources

"Building Comprehension Through Pre-, During-, and Post-Reading Strategies." Secondary Literacy, PDF ed., Teach For America, 2011, pp. 59-76.

Snow, Catherine. (2010). "Academic Language and the Challenge of Reading for Learning about Science." Science 328(5977), 450-452.