Making Inferences

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Making Inferences

description

Make

Transcript of Making Inferences

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Making Inferences

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Does it make sense to you?

(warm-up task)

“He put down $10 at the window. The woman behind the window gave $4. The person next to him gave $3, but he gave it back to her. So, when they went inside, she bought him a large bag of popcorn.”

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Possible inferences…

• Man & woman: went on a date to the movie

• Ticket: $3 each man paid for both himself and the woman (total = $6).

• Man got the change back ($10-$3-$3=$4)• The woman wanted to give him $3 for the

ticket but he declined.• Therefore, she bought popcorn to call it

even.

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What if we don’t know how to make inferences?

• Tom: Are you free tonight?• Mary: yes.• Tom: I’ve two tickets for the concert.• Mary: I see.• Tom: So…• Mary: What?• Tom: Do you like to go with me?• Mary: Oh! Sounds good

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Decoding inferences• “Are you free tonight”= want to

ask her to do something.

• “I’ve two tickets”= want to take her out to the cinema.

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Definition

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Making inferences

“When a reader adds information that he or she already knows to what is stated, the reader is making an inference!” Beech (2005)

It is a kind of guess!

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In simple words, making inferences is…

Reading between the lines!

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Inside the classroom…

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How to begin with the students?• 1) use an everyday occurrence to

demonstrate the idea of making inferences.

• 2) use a short piece of text and ask the students to annotate as many inferences as they can.

• 3) can use bumper stickers to write the internal text that comes from the external text

• 4) use the think aloud approach!

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Non-fiction text

Text type: News report (Longman Express 2B)

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Activity 2Inferring the meaning of

unknown words

1st paragraph (example): A wealthy local businessman was fou

nd dead yesterday at his home on The Peak. Police believe that Albert Sung, a jewellery shopowner, was murdered.

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Activity 2Inferring the meaning of

unknown words 1st paragraph (example): A wealthy local businessman was found

dead yesterday at his home on The Peak. Police believe that Albert Sung, a jewellery shopowner, was murdered.

died because of money?

discovered later, rather strange!

involving police perhaps he didn’tdie naturally

passive voice!

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“Um…let me think…in this paragraph I can see that the dead man was wealthy, that means he had a lot of money…but he died suddenly, and that attracted the police to come…seems a bit strange, so I guess he didn’t die naturally. At the end I spot the use of passive voice, that means he didn’t cause the death himself, or die from an illness. Perhaps... he was killed by someone.”

Think Aloud Approach!

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Remember, when using the

think aloud approach…Don’t be shy

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Guess result Murdered = killed by someone!

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Useful text types for teaching inferences

• 1) editorials (e.g. by comparing the headlines of 2 newspapers reporting the same news)

• 2) documentary (e.g. 60 mins. plus) looking for the director’s point of view

any biases?

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Other means of learning to make inferences

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Using logic problems can help students develop their ability to make

inferences

New Shoes…One day, two mothers and two daughters went shopping for shoes. Their shopping spree was successful — each bought a pair of shoes, and all together, they had three pairs. How is this possible?

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Answer

Only three people went shopping: a grandmother, a mother, and a daughter — but remember that the mother was the grandmother's daughter!

Source: Little Brown, Zoom Zingers, p.49