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COMPREHENSION Understanding it Teaching it Assessing it

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Title: COMPREHENSION Understanding it Teaching it Assessing it


1
COMPREHENSIONUnderstanding itTeaching
itAssessing it
  • Scott Paris
  • P. David Pearson

Slides at www.scienceandliteracy.org
2
Goal
  • Convince you that you can make a big difference
    for childrens comprehension of text if you
  • Understand the nature of comprehension
  • And the implications models have for pedagogy
  • Teach it well
  • Develop a sophisticated and nuanced understanding
    of strategies, both comprehension and
    metacognitive
  • Worry about how you orchestrate talk about text
  • Understand the role of assessment in
    comprehension
  • And then
  • bathe it in lots of other good curriculum and
    teaching

3
Journey Part 1
  • A little history how we got to where we are
    today
  • The current research base on how readers
    understand what they read
  • The Mental Models Tradition, as illustrated by
    Walter Kintschs C-I model
  • David Pearson will be the tour guide
  • with Scott Paris picking up the pieces and
    filling in the gaps
  • About 1.5 hours

4
The Journey Part 2
  • Comprehension Strategies and Skills
  • Why we teach them
  • How we teach them
  • Talk about Text
  • Scott Paris as tour guide
  • with David Pearson picking up the pieces and
    filling in the gaps
  • About 1.5 hours

5
The Journey Part 3
  • Issues in the assessment of comprehension and
    related reading tasks
  • Scott Paris as tour guide
  • A simulation activity
  • David Pearson as tour guide
  • QA
  • About 1.5 hours

6
Levels of teaching
  • Primary Teachers Love
  • Their students
  • Secondary Teachers Love
  • Their subject matter
  • College Teachers Love
  • Themselves!

7
Building blocks for the work I describe today in
part 1
  • NAS Report How Children Learn
  • Walter Kintsch Comprehension A Paradigm for
    Cognition
  • A number of reviews of comprehension instruction
  • New IRA/New Standards Report Reading and Writing
    with Understanding Comprehension in 4th and 5th
    Grade

8
How we got to where we are todaya little history
lesson
9
A really short history of RC
  • Until 1914, reading meant oral reading not
    comprehension
  • Accurate, fluent, expressive (declamatory)
    reading was the test
  • Comprehension enters with silent reading and
    testing
  • Comprehension is the result of instruction, not
    the object of instruction
  • Simple view RC LCDec
  • Implicit in our instructional models until the
    early 1970s

10
1970s/1980s
  • Cognitive revolution
  • Schema theory (Knowledge matters!)
  • Comprehension matters (connect new to known)
  • Reading, like writing, is all about making
    meaning
  • So what does this mean for instruction
  • If it doesnt just happen, how do you teach it?
  • Durkin, 1978 we test it but we dont teach it

11
1980s Attempts to achieve a research-based
approach to comprehension instruction
  • Determine the skills that are associated with
    skilled reading
  • In small scale experiments, teach the skills to
    kids who do not excel at them and determine
    whether learning them leads to improved
    comprehension for that passage, that skill, and
    for comprehension more generally construed.
  • Build a streamlined comprehension curriculum of
    mainline skills/strategies

Comprehension Revolution, cont.
12
Research-based approach to comprehension
instruction
  • By late 1980s, we, as a field, had documented the
    efficacy of a whole set of instructional routines
    and strategies
  • Paris and friends
  • Pressley and friends
  • Pearson and friends
  • Friends and more friends
  • Assessment developments
  • ala Australia (several sites)
  • Michigan
  • Illinois
  • Calif CLAS,
  • Maryland MSPAP
  • New Standards

13
Parallel Developments in the 70s/80s
  • Ascendancy of constructivist pedagogies
  • Whole Language
  • Literature based reading
  • Process writing
  • Integrated curriculum

14
  • But... Then something happened!
  • About 1990
  • Comprehension instruction took a back seat for
    more than a decade
  • Andour reading tests reverted to mc, objectives
    based (now called standards based)

15
Why did comprehension take a back seat for a
decade and a half?
  • Did not really fit either of the big movements of
    the late 80s/early 90s.
  • Whole Language
  • The New Phonics

16
Resistance from Whole Language
  • Whole language found the tradition of explicit
    instruction in comprehension strategies a little
    too skillsy, too controlling, in feel.
  • Preferred to have comprehension emerge from
    genuine encounters with authentic, engaging
    texts.
  • Provide good texts and good assignments and it
    will happen (maybe a mini-lesson or two along the
    way...)

17
Resistance from pockets in the Big Phonics
  • Does not really fit the zeitgeist of the new
    phonics renaissance either
  • Some question the efficacy of skill and strategy
    instruction
  • If you want to build oral language, fine.
  • If you want to engage kids in comprehension
    activities, fine,
  • But comprehension strategies probably dont
    matter that much.

18
We (well at least some of us) seem to be ready
for a comprehension renaissance
  • WHY?
  • Realization that no matter how important the code
    is, it is not the point of reading

19
More on why a renaissance
  • The 4th grade slump
  • The 7th grade cliff
  • Enabling skills wont get you to where you need
    to be
  • Phonics and phonemic awareness may take you
    through the first couple of levels of tests, but
  • They wont take you to
  • The big ideas and rich content of later
    curriculum
  • Even assessments
  • Mounting evidence that comprehension instruction
    really does matter.

20
The evidence
  • National Reading Panel implicates comprehension
    and vocabulary along with phonics, phonemic
    awareness and phluency (no fluency!).
  • More Recent Summaries of Comprehension Instruction

21
From our own work
  • Taylor and Pearson
  • In low income schools, the amount of high level
    talk about text, challenging assignments,
    student-centered instruction, and high levels of
    student engagement predicts growth in student
    achievement on a variety of measures.
  • Teaching for cognitive engagement
  • Conversely, phonics instruction predicted growth
    only in Grade 1.

22
Recent Meta-analysis on discussion by Wilkinson,
Murphy, Soter
  • Review studies on discussion
  • Three types of emphasis
  • Efferent (unpacking the facts of the text)
  • Aesthetic-gt expressive (say what you
    think--affective response)
  • Critical-analytic
  • Debate ideas
  • Interrogate the text, the author, the issue
  • Bottom line Pretty much get what you pay for
    (more later)

23
My current stance
  • Present a vision of comprehension reflecting 30
    years of cognitive and instructional research
  • Mine the text
  • Mine ones store of knowledge
  • Build a model of meaning that fits the current
    data available
  • Move from comprehension to the acquisition of new
    knowledge
  • Start all over again
  • Knowledge begets comprehension begets knowledge
    begets comprehension

24
So whats new and different in this approach?
  • Beyond Schema Theory and Reader Response
  • Based on the evolving Construction-Integration
    model of Walter Kintsch, a prominent cognitive
    psychologist
  • Focuses on how readers
  • Build a text base for a text they read
  • And filter it through their knowledge base to
    build
  • A mental model (situation model) that balances
    the facts of the text base in relation to the
    facts of their knowledge base

25
Reader
Text
Reading Comprehension
Context
Most models of reading have tried to explain how
reader factors, text factors and context factors
interact when readers make meaning.
26
Bottom up and New Criticism Text-centric
Reader
Text
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Context
The bottom up cognitive models of the 60s were
very text centric, as was the new criticism
model of literature from the 40s and 50s (I.A.
Richards)
27
Pedagogy for Bottom up and New Criticism
Text-centric
  • Since the meaning is in the text, we need to go
    dig it out
  • Leads to Questions that
  • Interrogate the facts of the text
  • Get to the right interpretation
  • Writerly readings or textual readings

28
Reader
Schema and Reader Response Reader-centric
Text
Reading Comprehension
Context
The schema based cognitive models of the 70s and
the reader response models (Rosenblatt) of the
80s focused more on reader factors--knowledge or
interpretation mattered most
29
Pedagogy for Reader-centric
  • Since the meaning is largely in the reader, we
    need to go dig it out
  • Spend a lot of time on
  • Building background knowledge
  • Inferences needed to build a coherent model of
    meaning
  • Readers impressions, expressions, unbridled
    response
  • Readerly readings

30
Critical literacy models Context-centric
Reader
Text
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Context
The sociocultural models of the 90s focused on
the central role of context (purpose, situation,
discourse community)
31
Pedagogy for Critical literacy models
  • Since the meaning is largely in the context, we
    need to go dig it out
  • Questions that get at the social, political and
    economic underbelly of the text (no neutral or
    autonomous texts)
  • Whose interests are served by this text?
  • Whos not there?
  • What is the author trying to get us to believe?
  • What features of the text contribute to the
    interpretation that money is evil?

32
Those from Australia will see another way to name
these movements
33
Bottom up and New Criticism Text-centric
Reader
Text
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Reader as Decoder
Context
The bottom up cognitive models of the 60s were
very text centric, as was the new criticism
model of literature from the 40s and 50s (I.A.
Richards)
34
Reader
Schema and Reader Response Reader-centric
Text
Reading Comprehension
Reader as Meaning Maker
Context
The schema based cognitive models of the 70s and
the reader response models (Rosenblatt) of the
80s focused more on reader factors--knowledge or
interpretation mattered most
35
Critical literacy models Context-centric
Reader
Text
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Reader as Text User and Text Critic
Context
The sociocultural models of the 90s focused on
the central role of context (purpose, situation,
discourse community)
36
CI Balance Reader and Text little c for
context
Reader
Text
Reading Comprehension
Context
In Kintschs model, Reader and Text factors are
balanced, and context plays a background
role--in purpose and motivation.
37
Pedagogical implications for CI
  • Since the meaning is in this reader text
    interface, we need to go dig it out
  • Query the accuracy of the text base to build up
    the microsructure and the macrostructure.
  • What is going on in this part here where it says
  • What does it mean when it says
  • I was confused by this part
  • Ascertain the situation model.
  • So what is going on here?
  • What do you know that we didnt know before?

38
New and different
  • Most important A new model of the comprehension
    process
  • Text (what the author left on the page)
  • Text base (the version a reader creates on a
    veridical reading)
  • Knowledge (what the reader brings from prior
    experience)
  • Model of meaning for a text
  • Dubbed the Situation Model (mental model)
  • A model that accounts for all the facts and
    resources available in the current situation

39
Whats inside the Knowledge box?
  • World knowledge (everyday stuff, including social
    and cultural norms)
  • Topical knowledge (dogs and canines)
  • Disciplinary knowledge (how history works)
  • Linguistic knowledge
  • Phonology
  • Lexical and morphological
  • Syntax
  • Genre
  • Pragmatics (how language works in the world)
    Discourse, register, academic language, intention
  • Orthography (how print relates to speech

40
Kintchian Model
Context
Text
3 Knowledge Base
1 Text Base
2 Mental Model
Experience
Out in the world
Inside the head
41
How does a reader build a text base?
Excerpt from Chapter 8 of Hatchet
42
  • Some of the quills were driven in deeper than
    others and they tore when they came out. He
    breathed deeply twice, let half of the breath
    out, and went back to work. Jerk, pause, jerk
    and three more times before he lay back in the
    darkness, done. The pain filled his leg now, and
    with it came new waves of self-pity. Sitting
    alone in the dark, his leg aching, some
    mosquitoes finding him again, he started crying.
    It was all too much, just too much, and he
    couldnt take it. Not the way it was.

43
  • The pain filled his leg now, and with it came new
    waves of self-pity. Sitting alone in the dark,
    his leg aching, some mosquitoes finding him
    again, he started crying. It was all too much,
    just too much, and he couldnt take it. Not the
    way it was.

44
  • I cant take it this way, alone with no fire and
    in the dark, and next time it might be something
    worse, maybe a bear, and it wouldnt be just
    quills in the leg, it would be worse. I cant do
    this, he thought, again and again. I cant. Brian
    pulled himself up until he was sitting upright
    back in the corner of the cave. He put his head
    down on his arms across his knees, with stiffness
    taking his left leg, and cried until he was cried
    out.

45
Building a Text Base
  • Some of the quills were driven in (into what?
    His leg) deeper than others (other what? Quills)
    and they (the quills that were driven in deeper)
    tore when they (the deeper-in quills) came out
    (of his leg). He (Brian) breathed deeply twice,
    let half the breath out, and went back to work
    (work on what? Dont know yet. Suspense. Expect
    to find out in next sentence). Jerk, pause, jerk
    (the work is jerking quills out) and three more
    times (jerking quills out) he (Brian) lay back in
    the darkness, done (all the quills jerked out).

46
  • The pain filled his (Brians) leg now, and with
    it (the pain) came new waves (what were the old
    waves?) of self-pity. (Brian) Sitting alone in
    the dark, his (Brians) leg aching, some
    mosquitoes finding him (Brian) again, he (Brian)
    started crying. It (the whole situation Brian was
    in) was all too much, just too much, and he
    (Brian) couldnt take it (the situation). Not the
    way it (the situation) was. (What way was the
    situation? Dont know yet. Suspense. Expect to
    find out in the next paragraph.)

47
  • I (Brian) cant take it (the situation) this way
    (what way? Still dont know. Suspense), alone
    with no fire and in the dark (now we know this
    way means alone with no fire and in the dark),
    and next time it (the next situation) might be
    something worse (than this situation), maybe a
    bear, and it (the problem that will define the
    situation) wouldnt be just quills in the leg, it
    (the problem) would be worse (than quills in the
    leg). I (Brian) cant do this (deal with the
    problem situation), he (Brian) thought, again and
    again. I (Brian) cant do this (deal with the
    problem situation). Brian pulled himself (Brian)
    up until he (Brian) was sitting upright back in
    the corner of the cave. He (Brian) put his
    (Brians) head down on his (Brians) arms across
    his (Brians) knees, with stiffness taking his
    (Brians) left leg, and cried until he (Brian)
    was cried out.

48
Some key moves in building a text base
  • Processing words and attaching meaning to them
  • Using syntax to solidify key relations among
    ideas
  • Microstructure
  • Macrostructure
  • Resolving reference--things that stand for other
    things (mainly pronouns and nouns)
  • Using logical connectives (before, after,
    because, so, then, when, while, but) to figure
    out the relations among ideas
  • Inferring omitted connectives (e.g., figuring out
    that A is the cause of B) based on PK about the
    world
  • Posing questions for short term resolution
  • Identifying ambiguities for later resolution
    (wait and see)

49
So how about building a situation model?
  • The knowledge-comprehension relationship
  • We use our knowledge to build a situation model
    for a text
  • The information in the situation model is now
    available to become part of our long term memory
    and store of knowledge
  • To assist in processing the next bit.

50
Situation Model for Hatchet Passage
51
The blurb from the jacket of Hatchet gives a
preview of the book
  • Thirteen-year old Brian Robeson is on his way to
    visit his father when the single engine plane in
    which he is flying crashes. Suddenly, Brian finds
    himself alone in the Canadian wilderness with
    nothing but his clothing, a tattered windbreaker
    and the hatchet his mother has given him as a
    present and the dreadful secret that has been
    tearing him apart since his parents divorce. But
    now Brian has no time for anger, self-pity or
    despair it will take all his know-how and
    determination, and more courage than he knew he
    possessed, to survive.

52
What a reader knows by Chapter 8
  • Brian is stranded in the Canadian wilderness
    with a hatchet and his wits as his only tools for
    survival. He already has overcome several
    obstacles, including surviving the plane crash,
    building a small shelter and finding food.
  • In chapter eight, Brian awakens in the night to
    realize that there is an animal in his shelter.
    He throws his hatchet at the animal but misses.
    The hatchet makes sparks when it hits the wall of
    the cave. Brian then feels a pain in his leg. He
    sees the creature scuttle out of his shelter.
    Brian figures out that the animal was a porcupine
    because there are quills in his leg.

53
Some prior knowledge that a 5th grader might bring
  • What sparks look like
  • How it feels to be scared by an animal
  • How big porcupines are
  • To survive you have to have food, water and
    shelter
  • To survive you have to be strong

54
An actual retelling of key parts of chapter 8
from Sam, a 5th grade reader
  • The same text for which we just examined the text
    base

55
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56
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57
Why is this model of iteratively constructing and
integrating so important?
  • The mental (situation) model is central to
    knowledge construction
  • Building a mental model transforms new ideas and
    information into a form that can be added to
    memory, where they endure as knowledge that can
    be retrieved in the future. Unless readers build
    a mental model, the information they derive from
    the text is not likely to connect to their stored
    knowledge. The new information will be forgotten
    or lost.
  • Key role of knowledge
  • Knowledge involved in even the most literal of
    processing
  • Knowledge begets comprehension begets knowledge
  • Knowledge is available immediately dynamic
    store

58
How can we help students build solid text bases
and rich and accurate situation models?
  • Do a good job of teaching subject matter in
    social studies, science, mathematics, and
    literature
  • Dont let reading remain our curricular bully!

59
How can we help students build rich and accurate
mental models?
  • Assist students in selecting appropriate
    knowledge frameworks to guide their construction
    process
  • Do everything possible to build as many
    connections as possible with other texts,
    experiences, knowledge domains
  • Do lots of what does this remind you of?
  • What is this like? How is it different from what
    its like?

60
How can we help students build rich and accurate
mental models?
  • A different model of guided reading
  • Stop every once in a while and give the kids a
    chance to construct/revise their current mental
    model
  • Research study
  • interview protocol proved to be very
    instructive

61
Begin with very general probes before getting
specific
  • So whats going on in this part?
  • What do we know now that we didnt know before?
  • Whats new?
  • What was the author trying to get us to
    understand here?
  • Well!say something!

62
Invite and support clarifications of tricky parts
  • Anyone want to share something that was tricky or
    confusing?
  • How about this part herewhere it says?
  • I got confused by What do you think about this
    part? What was the author trying to get us to
    think.

63
Follow up general probes and invitations for
clarification with specific probes.
  • So which of these things happened first? Why is
    that important?
  • In this paragraph, they use a lot of pronouns.
    Lets check out our understanding of who or what
    they refer to..
  • Typical discussion questions are OK too--just to
    make sure are the tricky parts get clarified.
  • View questions as a scaffold for understanding
    the big picture not as a quiz.

64
The general model for guided reading
  • A set for stock-taking
  • More specific probes to scaffold the construction
    of the text base and situation model
  • Results in a pretty good summary of the
    selection--story, article, etc.

65
Developing Text Bases and Mental Models
  • Ensure that students have a full tool box (set
    of strategies) to haul out when things dont just
    happen automaticallyfor
  • Connecting the known to the new
  • Connecting texts and parts of texts
  • Working toward coherence among potentially
    unconnected ideas
  • Recognizing and resolving ambiguities.

66
The Vulnerabilities
  • Clumsiness with motivation
  • A nod to interest and an assumption that readers
    are motivated
  • Gloss over critical reading
  • Assumes a liberal humanist critical thinking
    perspective, not a post-modern critical
    theoretical stance

67
One more time
Context
Text
3 Knowledge Base
1 Text Base
2 Situation Model
Experience
Out in the world
Inside the head
68
Key References
  • Duke, N. Pearson, P.D. (2002). Effective
    practices for developing reading comprehension.
    In A. Farstrup J. Samuels (Eds.), What research
    has to say about reading instruction (3rd ed.)
    (pp. 205-242). Newark DE International Reading
    Association.
  • Chapter 6 in Hampton, S., Resnick. L. Reading
    and Writing with Understanding. New IRA
    Publication
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