Overview for Interactive Notebooks
Notebooks have a “left-side, right-side” orientation to help you record, organize, and process new information. Much of the classwork and homework will be done in the interactive notebook.
Materials Needed–
- Colored pencils, markers, scissors, stapler or rulers, etc.
Left Side
Students Process New Ideas:
- Reorganize new information
- Express opinions and feelings
- Explore new ideas
- Stresses writing notes does not equal learning
- Do something actively to internalize information.
- Playful and experimental
- Various learning styles help to process English information.
Teacher Provides New Information
- Class notes
- Discussion notes
- Reading notes
- Handouts with new information
- Common set of information that all students must know.
- “Essentials” of the English content
- A model for students how to think graphically.
- “Testable” information
Components of Interactive Notebooks:
Cover Page–Take pride
- Thoughtful page which reflects the topic and theme of the unit
- Makes the notebookyour own creation
Table of Contents–
- Keep a running table of contents for your notebook
Author Page–
- A page about yourself at the front of your notebook
- Include a photograph and personal information: age, height, favorite foods, hobbies, sports, goals etc.
Works in Progress –
- Placeincompleteassignments inside a pocket of the notebook
- Place completedassignments in the appropriate place in the notebook
Grading–
- The notebooks will be graded every quarter
- Agrade check list will be stapled into the notebook
Lost and Found–
- In the event of an absence or loss, review themaster notebook to determine what needs to be redone
Why Interactive Notebooks engage students:
Students use both their visual and linguistic intelligences.
- Allows visual learners to explore and share ideas
- Encourages non-visual learners to become more proficient with graphic approaches in a non-threatening way.
Note taking becomes an active process.
- Left side of the notebook, which is reserved for your active exploration of new ideas.
- Invite students to become engaged in their learning.
- Put ideas into their own words, searching for implications or assumptions, transforming words into visuals, finding the main point of a story, etc.
- Synthesize English concepts and make coherence of what they learn.
Notebooks help students to systematically organize as they learn.
- Record ideas about every activity they engage in during a unit.
- Use a variety of organizational techniques: topic headings, colored highlights, and different writing styles
- Keeps assignments together in a regular place and in logical order.
Notebooks become a portfolio on individual learning.
- Arecord of each student’s growth
- Review a student’s progress in writing, illustrating, recording, thinking, and organization skills