Interpreting Texts, Making Meaning: Starting Small

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 13.02.09

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Content Objectives
  2. Background Research
  3. Teaching Strategies
  4. Classroom Activities
  5. Works Cited
  6. Resources for Teachers
  7. Appendix: Implementing Common Core Standards
  8. Notes

Epigraph-allacy: Using Epigraphs to Elicit Student Interpretations

Leilani Esguerra

Published September 2013

Tools for this Unit:

Guide Entry to 13.02.09

The skill of interpretation requires students to begin with the small details of a text, such as background information and vocabulary. Once the details are understood, students proceed to make meaning from those details. And in the course of making meaning, interpretation requires students to address varying perspectives in order to create their own interpretative conclusions.

This curriculum unit is designed to give students a road map or skill set to understanding texts that offer multiple or even questionable perspectives. This unit provides teachers with ideas for developing the skill of interpretation with particular attention to epigraphs from Jon Krakauer's Into the Wild. Through the epigraphs, students will dissect and analyze the small details in order to gauge the reliability of the author-narrator. The goal of this unit is for students to readily practice the skill of interpretation. In doing so, students will learn that a single perspective is not always adequate for arriving at conclusions.

(Developed for Expository Reading and Writing Course [ERWC], grade 12; recommended for ERWC/English [High School], grade 12)

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