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Comprehension: The Essence of Reading

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Title: Comprehension: The Essence of Reading


1
Comprehension The Essence of Reading
  • SBRR and Standards-Based Instruction

2
What is Comprehension?
  • Comprehension is the reason for reading!
  • Allows children to glean meaning from text
  • Is purposeful and active

3
Reading Researchers Have FoundThat
  • Comprehension is critical for academic learning
    for all subject areas.
  • Three major themes
  • Vocabulary development and instruction play an
    important role in comprehension.
  • The reader needs to be actively engaged in an
    intentional and thoughtful interaction with the
    text.
  • The more teachers know about strategy instruction
    the better the student comprehends and
    demonstrate higher reading achievement.

4
Effective comprehension strategy instruction is
explicit/direct!
  • Direct explanation
  • Modeling
  • Guided practice
  • Application
  • Should be done before, during and after reading

5
Effective Comprehension Instruction Can Be
Achieved Through Cooperative Learning and
by helping readers use strategies flexibly and in
combination.
6
What is SBRR?
  • SBRRScientifically Based Reading Research
  • Can be found in
  • National Reading Panel Report
  • Put Reading First
  • Current books/articles

7
6 SBRR Identified by the NRP!
  • Comprehension monitoring
  • Graphic and Semantic Organizers
  • Question Answering
  • Question Generation
  • Story Structure
  • Summarization

8
Think Alouds by Roger Farr
  • Includes the following strategies
  • Comprehension monitoring
  • Question generation
  • Summarization
  • ?

9
How to Think Aloud
  • Read a selection aloud to your students,
  • stopping as you go to think aloud.
  • Share your predicting and reading strategies
  • by telling them to your students
  • guessing at the meaning of words
  • using background information
  • making predictions
  • putting yourself in the text
  • summarizing as you read
  • re-reading and fix-up strategies
  • changing your mind, etc

10
  • 2. After Reading, ask your students what you
    were telling them about as you read.
  • 3. Make a list on the chalkboard as the children
    describe how you read.
  • 4. Have the students use the checklist to keep
    track of your reading strategies as you read a
    second story.
  • 5. Have a student model the think-aloud process
    for the class
  • 6. Use shared reading, paired reading, and
    dramatic reading to practice and develop the
    thinking strategies.

11
Reciprocal Teaching a method that embraces
several of the SBRR strategies (by Palinscar
Brown)
  • Strategies include
  • Predicting and clarifying for meaning and phonics
    (both elements of comprehension monitoring)
  • Summarizing
  • Question generating
  • (Soar to Success)

12
QARQuestion and Answer Relationships
  • Strategies include
  • Question Answering
  • Question Generation
  • Monitoring
  • Graphic Organizers

13
  • Directions
  • 1. Choose a text. fiction or non-fiction.
  • 2. Write questions based on the text. Your
    questions should fall into one of the following
    three categories
  • CATEGORY 1RIGHT THERE The information that
    students will need to answer the question is
    right there in the text. 
  • CATEGORY 2THINK AND SEARCH The information
    that students will need to answer the question is
    implied in the text, but students will have to
    combine ideas in the text with prior knowledge to
    form inferences. 

14
  • CATEGORY 3IN MY HEAD The information that
    students will need to answer the question is
    entirely in the readers mind.
  • 3.  Go over the questions with student before
    they begin reading the text. Thinking about the
    questions while they are reading will provide
    students with a concrete purpose for reading.
  • 4. After students have read the text, provide
    explicit instruction about each of the three
    categories above.

15
  • 5. Have students answer the questions and
    indicate which category of information they
    needed to answer each. Students can use the
    following codes for each category instead of
    writing out the category name   
  • RT (Right There)
  • TS (Think and Search)
  • IH (In my Head)
  • 6. After students have answered all questions
    and indicated category codes for each, discuss
    responses and categories as a group.

16
Example
  • Jeff had lived in Martinsville his entire life.
    But tomorrow, Jeff and his family would be moving
    200 miles away to Petersburg. Jeff hated the idea
    of having to move. He would be leaving behind his
    best friend, Rick, the baseball team he had
    played on for the last two years, and the big oak
    tree in his backyard, where he liked to sit and
    think. And to make matters worse, he was moving
    on his birthday! Jeff would be thirteen tomorrow.
    He was going to be a teenager! He wanted to
    spend the day with his friends, not watching his
    house being packed up and put on a truck. Jeff
    thought that moving was a horrible way to spend
    his birthday. What about a party? What about
    spending the day with his friends? What about
    what he wanted? But that was just the problem. No
    one ever asked Jeff what he wanted.    

17
Read the questions and decide whether the answer
is RT, TS, or IH
  • How long had Jeff lived in Martinsville?
  • What is the name of the town where Jeff and his
    family are moving?
  • Where is a place at your house where you like to
    sit and think?
  • Does Jeff like playing on the baseball team he
    has played on for the last two years?
  • Have you ever moved from one city to another?
  • What is Jeffs best friends name?

18
Check your answers!
  • How long had Jeff lived in Martinsville? (Think
    and Search)
  • What is the name of the town where Jeff and his
    family are moving? (Right There)
  • Where is a place at your house where you like to
    sit and think? (In my Head)
  • Does Jeff like playing on the baseball team he
    has played on for the last two years? (Think and
    Search)
  • Have you ever moved from one city to another? (In
    my Head)
  • What is Jeffs best friends name? (Right There)

19
Keep in mind
  • Sometimes the category for a response is not
    clear-cut
  • Single correct category not needed
  • Students should be able to support their choice
  • More is learned from the discussion

20
Anticipation Guides
  • Strategies include
  • Comprehension monitoring
  • Question Generation
  • ?

21
Using Anticipation Guides
  • Before Children use prior knowledge to answer
    true/false questions prior to reading a passage
  • During Read the passage/monitoring reading by
    looking for answers to T/F questions
  • After Review answers after reading, generate new
    questions

22
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23
Sum It UpSummarizingRaymond C. Jones,
rjones_at_readingquest.org
  • Choose an article and Sum It Up sheet.
  • Read the entire article and, as you read, list
    the main idea words on the Sum It Up sheet.
  • Imagine that each word is worth ten cents. Write
    a summary of the article using as many of the
    main idea words as possible. Put your complete
    sentence answers under the circled amount, using
    one word in each blank.

24
(No Transcript)
25
Semantic Feature AnalysisGraphic and Semantic
Organizers
  • Strategies include
  • Graphic and semantic organizers
  • Question answering
  • Question generation
  • Summarization
  • SFA is a chart or grid to examine related
    concepts
  • Concepts are listed down the left side and
    criteria or features are listed across the top
  • If the concept is associated with the feature it
    gets a where the column and row intersect. If
    it is not associated with the feature it receives
    a

26
Government SFA
27
Government SFA
  • What do all of these presidents have in common?
  • Which president served in congress?
  • Which two presidents were democrats?
  • Which two presidents served more than one term?
  • Which president was a movie star?

28
Story Structure (Non-Fiction)
  • Seven basic structures of expository text
    (Heller, 1995)
  • Definition
  • Description/list structure
  • Order/sequence (collection, time order, or
    listing)
  • Classification
  • Compare/Contrast
  • Analysis
  • Persuasion
  • http//www.nea.org/reading/usingtextstructure.
  • Html
  • http//www.middleweb.com/ReadWrkshp/RWdownld/retel
    lnonfictrubric.pdf

29
Ryder and Graves (1998) designed questions that
can be used for each type of text structure.
  • For example
  • A question for the definition structure could be
    What is being defined?
  • A question for description structure could be
    What is being described? What did we learn about
    the person, animal, or object?
  • A question for classification could be What
    categories will you use to classify these items
    into categories? Or How can these items be put
    into categories?

30
Final words!
  • Any comprehension strategy that includes any of
    the big 7 will be successful.
  • Make sure all comprehension lessons follow the
    BDA format.
  • Scaffold students until they internalize the
    strategies. Explain, model, guide and provide
    practice, let them fly on their own!
  • Provide materials that motivate them and that
    they can navigate successfully.

31
Two Award Winning Favorites!
  • Effective Reading Strategies Teaching Children
    Who Find Reading Difficult (Rasinski Padak)
  • Strategies That Work (Harvey Goudvis)
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