The Reciprocal Teaching Strategy (Palinscar and Brown, 1984) was developed to help students improve their understanding as they read. It is an interactive strategy where students talk their way through a text in order to understand it better. Students practice the art of predicting, questioning, clarifiying, and summarizing, all of which contribute greatly to comprehension. Teachers should model this strategy for their students before expecting students to practice them on their own. As students become more proficient at using the strategy, teacher involvement decreases.
Websites on Reciprocal Teaching:
Reciprocal Teaching Prompt Cards
http://www.adrianbruce.com/reading/room4/recip/index.htm
Reading Quest.org: Reciprocal TeachingÂ
http://www.readingquest.org/strat/rt.html
Reciprocal Teaching Bookmark
http://pers.dadeschools.net/prodev/bookmark.htm
Reciprocal Teaching Video Clip
http://condor.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/~yq6048/
North Central Regional Education Laboratory: Reciprocal Teaching
http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/areas/issues/students/atrisk/at6lk38.htm
Adolescent Literacy: Reciprocal Teaching
http://www.learningpt.org/literacy/adolescent/strategies/reciprocal.php
Journey to Excellence: Reciprocal Teaching
http://www.journeytoexcellence.org/practice/instruction/theories/social/reciprocal.phtml
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