Annotation Station

Annotation Station

Activity Overview

Students use a consistent system of symbols and notes to actively engage with and analyze a text.

Grade Levels

4th Grade5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

EnglishHistoryScience

Activity Types

AnalyticalIndividualWriting

Detailed Example

Analyzing Primary Sources: Gettysburg Address (History/ELA - 7th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • Copies of the Gettysburg Address (with wide margins and double-spacing)
  • Annotation guide with symbols and their meanings
  • Colored highlighters and pens (3-4 colors per student)
  • Sticky notes (small and regular size)
  • Annotation example from a different text
  • Anchor chart of annotation strategies
  • Reflection questions worksheet

Preparation

Create an annotation guide with consistent symbols (e.g., ? for questions, ! for surprising info, * for key points, ~ for confusing passages). Prepare copies of the Gettysburg Address with ample space for marking. Develop an anchor chart showing effective annotation techniques. Create a sample annotation of a different historical document to model the process.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Introduction to annotation (5-7 minutes):

Explain annotation as a 'conversation with the text'

Display sample annotated text and discuss how annotations show active reading

Review annotation symbols and their purposes

Emphasize that annotation is personal but should follow some consistent practices

2.

Pre-reading context (5 minutes):

Provide brief background on the Civil War and the Battle of Gettysburg

Explain when and why Lincoln delivered this speech

Have students predict what themes might appear in the address

3.

First read and basic annotation (8-10 minutes):

Students read the Gettysburg Address independently

During this read, they circle unfamiliar words and use ? for confusing sections

After reading, discuss difficult vocabulary and clarify basic meaning

4.

Focused annotation rounds (20-25 minutes):

Round 1 (blue): Mark and annotate references to the past

Round 2 (green): Mark and annotate references to the present moment

Round 3 (orange): Mark and annotate references to the future

Round 4: Use sticky notes to make connections between these time references

5.

Partner discussion (5-7 minutes):

Students compare annotations with a partner

Discuss what Lincoln is trying to accomplish by connecting past, present, and future

Add any new insights to their annotations in a different color

6.

Whole-class annotation analysis:

Create a class master annotation on displayed text

Discuss Lincoln's rhetorical strategies and use of parallelism

Analyze how the brevity of the speech contributes to its power

7.

Reflection: Students complete a reflection on how annotation enhanced their understanding of the Gettysburg Address.

Differentiation Strategies

For struggling readers, provide a simplified version alongside the original or pre-annotate some sections as a model. For English learners, include translations of challenging phrases. For advanced students, add historical context documents to annotate for connections to the main text.

Assessment Guidelines

Review student annotations for depth of analysis and engagement with the text. Use reflection responses to gauge metacognitive awareness of how annotation affected comprehension. During discussions, note which students can articulate insights gained through the annotation process.

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