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Reciprocal teaching has four steps.
Summarizing: After struggling readers read a section of the text, the teacher asks them to summarize the material. A good method for summarizing in a class setting is the Think, Pair, Share method. Each student reads, thinks about the summary, turns to a neighbor, and shares her ideas. If you are working in a remedial reading classroom, the student can share his summary with you.
Question generating: In this step, students create their own questions to go with the text. Then they check if they can answer their own questions. Teachers encourage students to ask all levels of questions from simple fact-finding questions to ones where students would need to infer information or draw conclusions to answer them.
Clarifying: Students need to understand that comprehension DOES NOT mean they can repeat the words without understanding. Can they paraphrase and use their own words to retell what the text is saying? Can they define new terms and concepts? Ask your struggling readers why they may be having trouble understanding this text, such as difficult vocabulary. You can help them recognize these problems and give them strategies when they encounter these difficulties in reading.
Predicting: Students hypothesize what will happen next or what the following section of text discusses in the last step of reciprocal teaching. They may use clues from their previous reading or text clues such as titles and subheadings. Then students start reading the next section to see if their hypotheses are correct.