Title: COMPREHENSION
1COMPREHENSION
NELIP Key Elements Training
Workshop created by NELIP Coordinators Mary
Dunton and Tamara Baren Power Point created by
Yvonne Dunn
2Goals for Today- Skim and scan page i
Reference Book--designed to give scientific base
of knowledge, current vocabulary, and resources
to help in planning instruction for
comprehension Scavenger Hunt- Preview and
browse the manual so you have an idea of what
resources there are for you to use
3The Big Picture
- Page 1 Teacher Performance Standards
- -Where do the Key Elements fit into evaluations?
- -Where does comprehension fit into planning?
4NAEP Findings
- National Assessment of Educational Progress
identifies 4 levels of readers - Below basic
- Basic
- Proficient
- Advanced
- Page 3
5Activity- Jigsaw
- 1. Pack and stack so you can move
- 2. Take a numbered card from your table
- 3. Find the group which has the same colored
number as you, .i.e. red/blue/green - 4. Turn to page 4
- 1 take overall reading results
- 2 take student age
- 3 performance of NAEP
- 4 average score gaps
- 5. Read and discuss the material you read with
your group - 6. Identify what this means for us as a school
6National Reading Panel
- Reading is defined as
- -A complex system of deriving meaning from print
that requires all - of the following
- The skills and knowledge to understand how
phonemes, or speech - sounds, are connected to print
- -The ability to decode unfamiliar words
- -The ability to read fluently
- Sufficient background information and vocabulary
to foster reading - comprehension
- -The development of appropriate active strategies
to construct - meaning from print
- -The development and maintenance of a motivation
to read.
So where does comprehension fit? Page 9
7(No Transcript)
8Students in K-3 learn to read Students in 4-6
read to learn
9Nevada Performance Standards
- -pages 15 19
- -by grade level as they relate to comprehension
- -recording sheet to assess where your students are
- Students can recognize and use reading skills
that they are not ready to apply in writing and
spelling. - literacy synchrony-reading is slightly in advance
of writing and spelling
10Activity Comprehension Table Task and Prize
Drawing Form
- With a partner
- 1. Skim and scan pgs. 21-31
- 2. Find the definition and components of
comprehension - 3. Complete the comprehension table task and
prize drawing form - 4. Table share what you came up with
- 5 Come up with a table definition of
comprehension put it on chart paper and share
with the class.
11Reading is an event of thinking cued by text.
Vaughn
12How do we get our students to think?
- Think about the importance of getting children to
think - Blooms Taxonomy - Set up instruction to get beyond the levels of
recall and literal understanding. - Children need to know What does an effective
reader do? - Before we teach, we need to know where we are
going, and plan on how to get there so that we
support all children to become effective/proficien
t readers/writers/thinkers
13Centerpiece Brainstorm
- 1. Each person needs a piece of paper
- 2. Put one extra piece in the middle of the
table - 3. Your topic to brainstorm is
- WHAT IS AN EFFECTIVE/PROFICIENT READER?
- 4. Generate answers by saying it, writing it on
your paper, and then trading your paper with the
one in the center of the table - 5. Continue brainstorming, each time trading
your paper with the one in the center. - 6. Share ideas at the end of the activity.
14Skim and Scan
- 1. Page 32 2. Page 33 3. Page 34 4. Page 35
- When you are finished, discuss with your group
- 1. How many of these strategies,actions do we do
as effective adult readers? - 2. Are we modeling and teaching
comprehension(thinking) strategies that help
students understand what a proficient reader
does? - 3. What are at least 4 things that impact a
childs ability to comprehend text?
15Silent Chalk Talk
- 1. Think about WHAT DO PROFICIENT -EFFECTIVE
READERS DO? - 2. Using only 1 pen , take turns listing your
ideas on the chart - 3. Remember there is no talking
16Activities
- One size fits all, adapt to your grade/student
ability level - K-1st grades can do group charts
- 5th-6th grades can do in pairs/use for content
area study guides - 2nd, 3rd, 4th grades can go either way, depending
on goals or student abilities
17Reading is an event of thinking cued by text
- The events of thinking that proficient readers do
while they read are - Activate prior knowledge and set purpose
- Self monitor comprehension
- Visualize and use graphic organizers
- Determine importance
- Synthesize and organize
- Make inferences
- Questioning
- Page 32
18We can explicitly teach these critical
comprehension/thinking strategies by using
routines and activities such as
- Ones I teach
- Ones I have heard about
- Ones I would like to teach
- Ones I need to know more about
- --Think about the first and second ones, look for
the 3rd and 4th ones as we go along
19We make teaching choices based on 4 influences
- 1. Standards and outcomes
- 2. Our developmental lens
- 3. Text structures
- 4. Mental structures of the reader
20Standards and Outcomes
- Pages 15 19 the Nevada Performance Standards
- Page 51 Primary Outcomes
- Page 52 Silver and Strong Research
21Our Developmental Lens
- Jigsaw pages 78 and 79
- 1s emergent
- 2s early
- 3s transitional
- 4s self-extending
- -You have 3 minutes to read/ 4 minutes to share
at your table - What are the characteristics of the reader at
each developmental level ?
22Think about your class
- Turn to page 47 and tab it
- Using this chart to identify your student levels,
take a few minutes to place a few of your
students that come to mind - Come back to this page at the end and think about
how you can teach these students at their
developmental level
23Text Structures
- Turn to page 40
- Would you approach reading these texts the same
way (as a proficient reader?) - How do you know which approach to use?
24TWO KINDS OF READINGWe need to teach All Readers
- Efferent Reading- is when the reader is concerned
with the information he/she can bring away from
the text. Kids are reading to find out stuff
or to answer the questions at the end of the
story. - Aesthetic Reading is for the purposes of
living through the experience provided while
reading. Aesthetic reading is enjoyable,
emotional, visual and engaging. - Rosenblatt page 48
25Barry Lane calls these outside/inside questions
- Outside questions are facts- what is in the
picture and words - Inside questions are what I think/feel about the
text
26Strategies Are the tools proficient readers use
to create meaning in text.
Comprehension Routines Are the tools we teach to
students to develop a variety of approaches to
the strategies they need
Comprehension Artifacts The experiences, tasks,
and products we design for students to deepen
and extend their understanding of and
relationship to text.
27Goals for comprehensionpg. 54 and 55
- When a child leaves the primary grades, she/he
should leave having experienced several
comprehension routines, and internalized at
least one comprehension routine that he can
habitually use to effectively unpack the meaning
of text.
28As teachers we must make public those secret
things that expert readers do. Meek, 1983
29If we refer to the chart What good readers do
- How do we teach these secret things to make
them public? - We need to model and practice
30Think aloud/Think along
- Pages 56 and 57
- Roger Farr website rogerfarr.com
- Provides descriptions for each activity
- Page 58
- Discusses and compares a traditional and
interactive read aloud - Page 59
- s 3 7 differentiate between your reading
and thinking processes - Why would you use picture books in the upper
grades?
31Thank you, Mr. Falker
32QARS
- Question
- Answer
- Relationships Page 60
33QARsQuestion and Answer Relationships
- RIGHT THERE
- The answer is right there in the text. The words
used to make up the question are the same words
that are in the answer (Literal) - THINK AND SEARCH
- The answer is not right there. The answer is in
the story but you need to put together different
story parts to find it (Interpretive) - ON MY OWN
- The answer is not in the story. You need to use
your own experiences (Applied)
34Skinny and Fat Questions
- Skinny Questions
- Remember these are questions that can be found
right there in the text. You can touch it with
your hand. - Page 60
- Fat Questions
- These interesting questions make you have to read
between the lines. You have to think and search
for clues. Sometimes you have to have
information On Your Own
35REVIEW
- 1. A routine is a set of procedures that
integrate the strategies students use to be
proficient readers - 2. Pgs. 54-55 identify the different routines
- 3. Many are familiar
- 4. Recommended- no more than 1-3 routines be
taught in a year - -students need to practice and have time to
internalize routines - -can be adapted at any grade level. (pages
142/143)
36Sketch to Stretch
- 3 minutes to read and draw a picture
- 3 minutes to share with 2 people not at your
table. - Directions on Page 152
- 1s page 63, 2s page 64
- 3s page 6566, 4s page 67
37Summary/Response Report
- 1. 2 minutes to read passage/synthesize
(internal) - 2. 1 minute to share with your table, no one
can talk/ask questions - 3. 1 minute to ask questions/clarify
- 1-pg. 68 2-pg. 69-70 3-pg.71 4-pg72
- Directions are on pg. 147
38Museum Tour
- 1. You and a partner preview pgs. 132-176
- 2. Pick out 1 activity you think is
interesting/would like to try - 3. Identify page , and study so you can explain
it - Docent tour guide
- 4. Partners split up- 1 tours displays, the
other is the docent who stays and explains your
activity - 5. Switch
39Questions/Comments
- Please complete your evaluations
- Preview the articles laid out, sign up if you
would like a copy - Included are some task identification pages that
guide you to specific pages for activities that
deal with targeted audiences