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Kinds of Graphic Organizers

The document describes 7 types of graphic organizers: chain of events, clustering, fishbone mapping, interaction outline, problem/solution, spider map, and storyboard. Each type is used for a different purpose such as describing stages of an event, generating ideas around a stimulus word, showing causal interactions of complex events, showing the nature of interactions between groups, identifying problems and solutions, organizing or brainstorming ideas, and sequentially depicting narratives through illustrations.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views3 pages

Kinds of Graphic Organizers

The document describes 7 types of graphic organizers: chain of events, clustering, fishbone mapping, interaction outline, problem/solution, spider map, and storyboard. Each type is used for a different purpose such as describing stages of an event, generating ideas around a stimulus word, showing causal interactions of complex events, showing the nature of interactions between groups, identifying problems and solutions, organizing or brainstorming ideas, and sequentially depicting narratives through illustrations.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Kinds of graphic organizers

1. Chain of Events

-Used to describe the stages of an event, the actions of a character or the steps in a
procedure.

Beginning

2. Clustering

- A nonlinear activity that generates ideas, images and feelings around a stimulus
word. As students cluster, their thoughts tumble out, enlarging their word bank for writing
and enabling them to see patterns in their ideas.

3. Fishbone Mapping

- Used to show causal interaction of a complex event (an election, a nuclear


explosion) or complex phenomenon (juvenile delinquency, learning disabilities).

4. Interaction Outline
- Used to show the nature of an interaction between persons or groups, such as the
interaction between European settlers and American Indians.

5. Problem/Solution

- Requires students to identify a problem and consider multiple solutions and possible
results

6. Spider Map

- Used to describe a central idea; a thing, a process, a concept, a proposition. The


map may be used to organize ideas or brainstorm ideas for a writing project.

7. Storyboard

- A graphic and sequential depiction of a narrative. Students recall major events of


the story then illustrate the events in the squares provided.

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