Reading Topics

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions | Socratic seminar

Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions | Socratic seminar | BEAT AROUND THE BUSH

Purpose: This Socratic seminar is designed to help students find the most significant attributes of a mystery
topic, by drawing conclusions, or inferring new meaning. Students are paired and given the opportunity to dialogue and uncover a mystery. What starts out as an abstract or obtuse idea should turn into a more substantial concept? Students practice drawing conclusions and making inference, they are encouraged to change their conclusions as they share and uncover new information. Students must draw on their own background knowledge and work in a fun, collaborative environment with new information from a variety of peers to discover new meaning.

 Procedure
1. Find contextual pictures or realia ”artifacts” that have associated abstract or concrete concepts. Before students begin show them an unknown item, and give them opportunities to infer!  (E.g. Slide-rule) The goal is for students to infer what's happening in the image or what the realia is used for. Images can consist of tangible to abstract ideas or concepts. Think, THIS OLD HOUSE mystery segment, when someone brings out some obscure tool, everyone draws a conclusion what the item is used for.

2. Teacher and or Students discuses with peers the critical attributes and strategies of drawing conclusions and making inference!

3. Have student’s choose Lotus or Cornell Notes to record their inference about the topic.

4. Students are given a new picture or realia ”artifacts” item to look over.

5. Students share with their partner what they infer or conclude from the pictures or realia and record ideas, images, conclusions or inferences.

6. In 2-3 minute or less, students look over each other’s notes, and discuss and record an inference from their partners. If a brand new idea is shared the partners write it as a collaborative conclusion.

7. Students take a walkabout, finding their next partner or group they will be sharing with. When prompted, partners stop and start sharing with another group of partners.

8. All four students share their realia, artifacts, pictures and inferences, discussing further ideas to make a new inference. If students are stumped they can select a topic of research.

9. The teacher invites a few groups to share their notes and their conclusion, inferences about the topic to see if any student had uncovered the mystery.

8. After a few rotations of students sharing, the teacher reveals the “mystery” and the big idea questions.  


  1. Student Debriefing: Ask students to share an inference that is different from the reviled meaning of their conclusions or images. Ask students in what way do their conclusions relate genuinely to the bigger concept. Discuss how students’ inferences did or did not change with dialogue and sharing.
  2. Ask students who, what, why: What modification should be made to improve this Socratic seminar. Ask students to name their favorite methods for inferring, and what questions still linger about the seminar. Who likes discussing and uncovering the mystery? Why or why not is this engaging drawing conclusions and making inference lesson. Is drawing conclusions and making inference a fun and important academic skill? Consider a class debriefing that records the big ideas on an anchor chart. 
Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions is the process of reading, analyzing clues, and making supported predictions.

Deriving a logical or supported conclusion from premises known or assumed to be true is an academic skill that is learned over time and dependent on an in-depth knowledge of deductive cognitive skills and literary language exposure. Drawing Conclusions and Making Inferences can make up 25-40% of CCSS reading assessments, PARCC and Smarter Balanced reading Comprehension test questions. DOK 3 reading comprehension questions that are based on Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions are the hardest foundational skills-reading to teach and students to acquire.

The "Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions Cognitive Complexity Anchor Chart:" is a reference for students and teachers on DOK complexity levels, reading comprehension strategies, cognitive and literary elements concepts connections, signal words and different skills and strategies to answering Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions reading questions.

[PDF]Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions Guidebookbe able to infer from a text in order to identify evidence and draw conclusions. CCRS Anchor #1 requires that students read closely to determine what the text ...

[PDF]Graphic Organizers - ScholasticDrawing Conclusions. Graphic Organizer. 4. Identifying Author's Purpose ... 6. Making Inferences. Graphic Organizer. 7. Summarizing. Graphic Organizer. 8 ...

[PDF]Unit of Study: Making InferencesConference Points • Did you make any inferences in your .... Anchor Chart- Two Column Chart for Making ...... Anchor Lesson 18: Inferring to draw conclusions.

[PDF]Lesson on Drawing Conclusions and Making Inferences
Lesson on Drawing Conclusions and Making Inferences. Pat Holliday, National Board Certified Teacher, Third Grade. North Topsail Elementary School, ...

[PDF]Read:OutLoud Reading Strategies - Inference
drawing conclusions in response to what they are reading. When readers infer ... After completing the Inference lesson set, learners will be able to: ....

[PDF]Strategies for Inferencing: 5th Grade PDF
Inference "read between the lines”. A good strategy for making inferences is It Says. ... Directions: inferences involve drawing conclusions and making judgments based on facts.

[PDF]Inferencing Mini Lesson .pdf
Robeson County, North CarolinaMaking inferences involves using personal experience or background knowledge ... provided in the text to form an idea. Drawing conclusions. Plot, theme,.

[PDF]FOCUS on Drawing Conclusions and Making Inferences
In FOCUS on Drawing Conclusions and Making Inferences,. Book B, you will ... questions, and sample answer choices on the Lesson Preview pages. Then you ...

[PDF]Drawing Conclusions - Scholastic
Scholastic Corporationis a reader's facility at making inferences and drawing conclusions, ... to help students review what they have learned about making inferences. ... Mini-Lesson.

[PDF]CHAPTER 10 Inference - Pearson
Pearson EducationInferences are implied through clues that lead the reader to make assumptions anddraw conclusions. For example, instead of making a direct statement, “These ...

[PDF]Instructional Focus Lesson Plan
Polk County School DistrictMaking inferences involves using personal experience/background ... Thus, the student will have to use reasoning skills to predict outcomes and draw some logical ... What information from the text supports the conclusion that ______?

[PDF]Lesson Plan Match It Up! Lesson Plan Making Inferences ...
This lesson uses poetry as the text to teach cause and effect. Day 3-6. Lesson Plan. Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions.

[PDF]Unit of Study: Making Inferences
Anchor Lesson: 11 Inferring with poems. Pre-assessment .... Anchor Lesson: 12Inferring about characters ...... Begin reading the article and draw conclusions as\

Support Materials for Core Content for Assessment

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