Title: Module 8: Comprehension Evidence and Strategies
1Module 8ComprehensionEvidence and Strategies
2PPLSP Training Modules
- 1. Introduction to the Five Components of
Reading - 2. Introduction to the PPLSP and CBLA
- 3. Instructional Strategies
- 4. Phonemic Awareness Evidence and
Strategies - 5. Phonics Evidence and Strategies
- 6. Fluency Evidence and Strategies
- 7. Vocabulary Evidence and Strategies
- 8. Comprehension Evidence and Strategies
- 9. Reading Strategies for Secondary Teachers
in other Content Areas - 10. Bodies of Evidence and a Process for
Building the ILP
3Goals for this Module
- To increase background knowledge about
comprehension - To identify what you might look for and listen to
when administering an assessment - To provide best practices in comprehension
instruction - To provide effective skills to improve text
comprehension
4A Scientific Experiment
- In the 1960s, an experiment was done using a
spectrometer. This consists of a huge
electromagnet about the size of a bus and some
detectors. When electrons crash into a target
nucleus, a spectrometer measures their angles and
energies as they bounce away. The electrons do
not strike solid protons. They are actually
striking vibrating clusters of quarks. Each
proton is a cluster of three quarks each neutron
is too.
5Now answer the following
- When did the experiment take place?
- What device did the scientists use to conduct
their experiment? Why was it useful? - What could this device do?
- Why was the discovery so important to the field
of science?
6Causes of Reading Comprehension Problems
- Unfamiliarity with text features task demands
- Undeveloped attention strategies
- Inadequate cognitive development reading
experiences - (Kameenui Simmons, 1990)
7 Causes of Reading Difficulties
- Inadequate instruction
- Insufficient exposure and practice
- Deficient word recognition skills
- Deficient memory capacity functioning
- Significant language deficiencies
- Inadequate monitoring self-evaluation
- (Kameenui Simmons, 1990)
8 What Is Comprehension?
- Intentional thinking during which meaning is
constructed through interactions between text and
reader. - (National Reading Panel, 2000)
- Comprehension is the reason for reading.
- (Put Reading First, 2000)
9Good Readers
- Read actively with a purpose
- Think about what they are reading
- Make connections to what they already know
- Connect events to their own lives
- Apply their knowledge of vocabulary language to
make sense of what they read
10Best Practices in Comprehension Instruction
- Model the strategy of think out loud frequently
- Instruct and encourage independent reading in a
wide variety of genres - Encourage rereading to clarify
- Model how to identify key words and concepts
- Demonstrate how to create visual images
- Show how to separate narrative reading strategies
from expository techniques - Set a purpose for reading to encourage
engagement, schema activation, focus and recall - Teach student how to create mental images, make
connections - Clarify concepts and difficult portions to avoid
misconceptions - Pose questions that encourage higher level
thinking skills - Model for students how to generate questions
before, during and after reading text to increase
metacognition as well as comprehension - Scaffold inference instruction through explicit
modeling, usage, practice and application
11 Importance of Strategies
12Skill Areas Related to Comprehension
- Background Knowledge/Schema Activation
- Knowledge of Text Structure
- Cognitive Monitoring/Metacognition
- Retelling/Recalling
- Literal Comprehension
- Summarizing
- Inferential Comprehension
- Evaluative Comprehension
- (Pikes Peak Literacy Strategies
Project, 2005)
13Difficulties with Background Knowledge / Schema
Activation
- Does not personalize connections to text
- Questions the possibility of connection
- Does not apply prior knowledge
- Lacks vocab/ideas/concepts to speak or explain
extemporaneously given subject regarding text - Makes faulty connections between what is thought
read - Offers literal, short retelling with little
attention to detail, purpose, structure
14When administering an assessment, you might see
and hear
- Background Knowledge/Schema Activation
- Is the student
- --applying prior knowledge?
- --making predictions?
- --previewing the text?
- --making connections?
- --setting a purpose?
15Background Knowledge / Schema Activation
Strategies
- Making Predictions Using Background Knowledge
- Connections
- Text to Text
- Text to Self
- Text to World
16Difficulties With Knowledge of Text Structure
- Unable to set purpose for or understand the
relevance of reading - Relies on teacher to set purpose
- Unable to distinguish text types (narrative,
expository) - Lacks strategies to find info in text
- Locate main idea, supporting details, conclusion,
skim scan, predicting
17Difficulties of Knowledge of Text Structure
- Unable to use text to unlock literal/inferential
questions - May not be able to identify cause effect
- May not utilize captions, interpret graphs,
pictures to derive meaning - Not able to identify parts of the text (story
structurecharacters, setting, plot) - Difficulty understanding story elements
- Difficulty understanding expository form
18Knowledge of Text Structure Strategies
- Understanding the structure of print
- Narrative form vs. Exposition form
- Graphic organizers
- - Focus on story structure and
- relationships
- - Aide students to learn how to read
- informational text
19Difficulties With Retelling/Recalling
- Cant recall what has been read or..
- May get the big picture even make inferences
but cant remember..specifics even with literal
questions - Gives limited details with understanding of
context - Inability to connect significant details to
meaning or outcome of reading - Has difficulty or cannot utilize graphic
organizers effectively
20When administering an assessment, you might see
and hear
- Retelling/Recalling
- Is the student
- --visualizing?
- --retelling what is read?
21Retelling/Recalling Strategies
- Imagery
- Mnemonic
- Drama
- SQ3R
- Survey, Question, Read, Recite and
- Review
22Difficulties with Summarizing /Literal
Comprehension
- Cannot differentiate between main idea/details
- May not identify key information in retelling
and/or writing - Unable to list or outline key ideas in topic
- Repeats or recall of info is scant
- Gaps of knowledge indicate lack of understanding
- Offers superfluous information
- Put information into their own words
23When administering an assessment, you might see
or hear
- Summarizing/Literal Comprehension
- Is the student
- --summarizing?
- --identifying main ideas and details?
24Summarizing/Literal Comprehension Strategies
- Main idea/details
- Collaborative strategic rereading
- Focus on getting the gist of the passage
- by working together to identify the most
- important ideas in a paragraph or section
- Summarize
- Hierarchical summary
- Includes headings and subheadings with 2-3
supporting details from the text
25What is Metacognition?
- Thinking about thinking
- Utilized by good readers to think about and
control over their reading - Before reading, clarify purpose preview the
text - Monitor understanding adjust reading speed
during reading of material - Elliott-Faust Pressley (1986) as cited in
NRP (2000)
26Difficulties With Cognitive Monitoring /
Metacognition
- Does not check own comprehension
- Lacking in outward signs of interacting with
textconfusion, amusement, intensive study while
reading - Appears distracted no persistence in reading
- Does not ask questions about the text
- Rereading and/or self-correct is not present
- Cannot make connections
- Does not visualize what is being read
27When administering an assessment, you might see
and hear
- Cognitive Monitoring/Metacognition
- Is the student
- --actively engaged with the text?
- --self-correcting?
- --rereading?
- --generating answering questions?
28Cognitive Monitoring / Metacognition Strategies
- Question/Answer Relationship (QAR)
- Right there
- Think and Search
- Author and You
- On My Own
- Click Clunk
- Quick check of students comprehension
- --Thumbs up for clickcomprehension
- --Thumbs down for clunk
- misunderstanding
29Asking/Answering Questions
- Teacher questioning strongly supports advances
students learning from reading - Provides a purpose for reading
- Focuses on what they need to learn
- Encourages students to monitor their own
comprehension through modeling - (Put Reading First, 2000)
30Effective questions improve learning by
- Providing a purpose for reading
- Focusing attention on what they need to learn
- Helping students actively think as they read
- Encouraging students to monitor their
comprehension - Reviewing content relating what they have
learned to what they already know
31Questioning
- Predicting
- - What might happen now?
- - What do you think might happen next?
What are the clues? - - What is the result going to be and how do
you know? - Inferring
- - What leads you to believe that ____?
- - How does the author let you know that
____? - - What in the information gives you the
impression that ____? - Self questioning
- - What do I know about the topic?
- - What do I wonder about?
- - Is this making sense to me?
- - Do I need to stop and reread?
32- Author questioning
- - Why did the author write this?
- - Do I need to ask questions about this?
- - What does the author mean by this?
- Monitoring
- - How should I read this?
- - What do I already know about this topic?
- - Can I use context clues to figure out this
word? - Summarizing and Synthesizing
- - What did the author say?
- - What is the major thing I need to
remember? - - Can I put what I read into my own words?
33- Evaluating
- - What did I learn?
- - What do I still wonder about?
- - What did I agree/disagree with?
- - Did this piece end the way I thought it
would? - - What did I do well in my reading?
34Difficulties when Drawing Inferences From Text
- Offers only literal interpretation of text
- Unable to predict or draw conclusions
- Unable to select passages to support an inference
- Difficulty asking / answering questions before /
during / after reading
35When administering an assessment, you might see
and hear
- Drawing Inferences from Text
- Is the student
- --predicting?
- --reading between the lines?
- --figuring out what the author hasnt said?
- --using clues from the text?
- --making judgments?
36Draw Inferences from Text Strategies
- Cognitive Modeling (Thinking Out Loud)
- Ask a question out loud
- Answer the question for them
- Take them back into the text and have them reread
it - Show them the line of reasoning
- Proof Statement
- ClOZE Procedure
37Research suggests that
- Involves more than thirty cognitive processes
- Strategies should be taught directly
- Students must self-monitor their understanding of
material - Instruction repeated practice is necessary
- Strong, rich, varied vocabulary is key component
for strong comprehension across a variety of
texts - Students must assimilate vocabulary, concepts,
- information with their prior experience
38Does a Child Come to Mind?
- Think of a student who needs help with a specific
area of comprehension - Describe the types of needs the student
demonstrates - Share with a partner or small group what
strategies you might try in order to help this
student
39Final thoughts
- Instructional Delivery should
- Model strategies through explicit frequent
think alouds - Weave strategy instruction into everyday teaching
- Utilize book clubs/literature circles
- Teach students to create mental images
- Encourage higher levels of thinking problem
solving through analysis, synthesis, evaluation,
application of judgments