I wanted to 2nd Paulines thought too, but someone beat me to it! QAR is 
question answer relationship. You teach your students to evaluate the type of 
question it is before you answer it. For example is it a Right There question 
(literal) Author and me question (inference), etc.... 

I first read about QAR off the tools and resources link from readinglady.com. 
However, there is alot of  research on it in many test strategy books. I have 
found it very effective and make games out of it for my students. Eventually 
they catch on and learn to identify what the question is asking before they 
even read the answer choices.

Donna NJ
Intervention 3/4

Sent from my HTC Status™ on AT&T

----- Reply message -----
From: "Terry" <[email protected]>
To: "Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group" 
<[email protected]>
Subject: [MOSAIC] readers workshop & test taking
Date: Sat, Feb 25, 2012 9:10 am


Linda,
What is the QAR strategy?

Terry

On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 5:32 AM, Linda DeGreen <[email protected]>wrote:

> I second Pauline's thoughts. I would also add that I teach the QAR
> strategy at the beginning of the year and then we use this and other test
> taking strategies to answer questions in a test format throughout the year.
> We teach test taking as a separate genre. Kids need to know how the
> elements or characteristics of tests work , the same way they understand
> the elements of reading a mystery or any other genre .
> Linda
>
> On Feb 24, 2012, at 8:19 PM, Pauline K Nagle wrote:
>
>  I would suggest teaching test taking as a genre, a type of reading that
>> has
>> a specific structure and way to comprehend it.  Lucy Calkins has a good
>> book about this, but I can't recall the name.  I will find the title and
>> send it to you.  I think students need to learn how to tackle the text and
>> how to handle the type of questions, and this must be taught as a skill
>> set
>> and practiced.  But it does not need to take over your reader's workshop
>> or
>> reading instruction.  You just need to teach how the comprehension skills
>> they use in their independent reading texts can be applied on an excerpt
>> and how the questions are asked.
>>
>> On Fri, Feb 24, 2012 at 6:58 PM, evelia cadet <[email protected]>**
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> As I have said before, this is the first year I am following the Reader's
>>> Workshop model.  My district does not follow/support reader's workshop.
>>>  I
>>> am lucky to have the freedom in my school to use any teaching structure I
>>> want.  Out of almost 70 teachers, only 2 teachers in my school are doing
>>> reader's workshop.  We are trying to convert the other teachers in our
>>> campus.  They are noticing how our students are engaged in reading and
>>> are
>>> forming a reading community that is extending outside the classroom.
>>> However, people in my school are data driven (specifically standardized
>>> testing data), and they will not consider any instructional method,
>>> unless
>>> there is tangible evidence they drive results (standardized state
>>> testing).
>>> Ok, this was just the introduction, here is my concern.  My students
>>> seemed to be enjoying reading and they are showing evidence of
>>> understanding/applying the comprehension strategies/skills we are working
>>> on in class.  Nevertheless, when they take one of those practice test we
>>> are required to give, everything seems to go downhills.  It is like they
>>> are unable to transfer what we are learning with authentic literature to
>>> the context of the test.  I honestly don't know what to do.  I know there
>>> are people in my school, including some in the administration, waiting to
>>> see what impact reader's workshop has on test results.  Any ideas or
>>> advices.  HELP!!!!!!  Thank you.
>>>
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>
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