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Title: Domains of Reading


1
Domains of Reading


2
Course Objectives
Course Objectives
Examine Research Review Five Domains
Teaching Strategies Active Engagements
3
Domains of Reading Workshop
Domains of Reading Workshop
Introductions Ground Rules
Agenda Review
4
  • Reading Research
  • Current Research
  • Five Domains of
  • Reading

5
Reading Research
6
Reading Research NICHD
  • 5 - enters school already reading
  • 20 - 35 - find learning to read relatively
    easy (regardless of what instructional method is
    used)
  • 60 - find reading a difficult task
  • 20 - 30 of the 60 - find reading as one of
    the most difficult tasks that they will have to
    master throughout regular schooling

7
Reading Research
  • 38 of fourth graders 26 of eighth graders
    read at a below basic level of achievement
    (National Center for Education Statistics 1999)
  • 16 of eighth graders reading below basic are
    children of college educated parents

8
Reading Research
  • Students who are not reading at grade level by
    the end of first grade have a 1 in 8 chance of
    ever catching up to grade level without
    extraordinary and costly intervention
  • Studies find that these students fall further and
    further behind in the development of literacy
    skills, and subsequently become more at risk for
    school failure


9
Reading Research
  • Estimates of at least 20 million school-age
    children suffer from reading failure
  • Of those 20 million children, only 2.3 million
    are in special education
  • Remaining 17.7 million poor readers are provided
    some compensatory education or are overlooked
    altogether

10
Reading Research
  • Jots Thoughts
  • What are the ways that illiteracy or weak reading
    skills could impact a persons life?

11
Reading Research
  • The Reading gap is a term used to describe the
    difference between the target level of reading
    proficiency and the actual level of reading
    proficiency.

12
Reading Research
  • Rally Robin
  • Think about the students reading below grade
    level in your classroom and what are some of the
    indicators that a student is having difficulty
    with reading?

13
Reading Research
  • Reads textbooks with difficulty
  • Struggles with many individual words
  • Reads slow and laboriously
  • Cant figure out unfamiliar words
  • Cant attack multi-syllabic words
  • Cant remember what was read
  • Tries to sound out irregular words
  • Does not know meanings of decoded words

14
Reading Research
  • Doesnt think deeply or strategically about what
    is read
  • Fails to make appropriate interpretations about
    what is read
  • Avoids reading
  • Spells poorly
  • Is afraid or embarrassed to read
  • Has difficulty with complex concepts

15
Good News From Research
16
Reading Research

  • Research shows that reading failure can be
    reduced by approximately two-thirds
  • Never before has there been so much converging
    research and such an abundant professional
    knowledge base that shows so clearly how to
    foster and nourish reading proficiency.
  • Enough is now known to prevent most reading
    difficulties from starting, as well as to help
    those who are already experiencing reading
    problems

17
Reading ResearchFactors That Influence Reading
Development
  • Development of phonemic awareness and of the
    alphabetic principle
  • Ability to decode words
  • Automaticity with enough words
  • Acquisition of vocabulary
  • Application of reading comprehension strategies
  • Extensive reading of both narrative and
    nonfiction texts
  • Adequate teacher preparation and materials

18
Reading Research
  • Researches Pressley, Rankin, and Yokoi studies a
    sample of the very best Kindergarten, first, and
    second grade teachers who had exceptional success
    promoting literacy achievement in students.

19
Reading Research
  • What did they find?
  • All these teachers used a balanced and
    comprehensive approach that included direct
    teaching of phonemic awareness and phonics as
    well as an abundance of rich and varied
    literature.

20
Reading Research
  • The research is clearly showing that the solution
    is for all schools to implement a balanced and
    comprehensive literacy program for all students
  • What are the components of a balanced,
    comprehensive literacy program?
  • The National Reading Panel issued a report
    identifying the key skills and methods central to
    reading achievement

21
The National Reading Panel
  • The five areas that a comprehensive program
    should be focused on are the five domains of
    reading
  • Phonemic Awareness
  • Phonics
  • Fluency
  • Vocabulary
  • Comprehension


22
Reading Research
  • Teachers are the most powerful tool in the
    classroom
  • Effective teachers need two things
  • Knowledge
  • Resources

23
Five Domains Of Reading
24
What are the top two indicators of a
Kindergarten students success in learning to
read in first grade?
25
  • Amount read to at home
  • Score on oral vocabulary
  • Test (Peabody Picture
  • Vocabulary)
  • c. Phonemic segmentation
  • ability
  • d. Whether or not the
  • student attended preschool
  • e. Ability to recognize
  • letters of alphabet
  • f. Amount of time spent
  • watching television

26
A childs level of phonemic awareness and the
ability to recognize the letters of the
alphabet are widely held to be the strongest
determinants of the success that he or she will
experience in learning to read- or, conversely,
the likelihood that he or she will fail.
27
Phonemic Awareness
28
A phoneme is a speech sound. It is the smallest
unit of sound that makes a difference in
meaning.
29
Phonemic Awareness is the conscious
understanding that spoken language is composed
of phonemes, or speech sounds
30
Phonemic Awareness
  • It involves the ability to blend, segment, and
    manipulate phonemes in spoken sound
  • The difference between phonemic awareness and
    phonics is that phonemic awareness involves
    sounds in spoken words and phonics involves the
    relationship between these sounds and written
    symbols

31
Phonemic Awareness

How many sounds, or phonemes, do you hear in the
following words? What are they?
32
Phonemic Awareness
  • Phonemic Awareness is important
  • To understand the Alphabetic Principle the
    principle that the letters of the alphabet stand
    for the sounds in oral language
  • To notice the regular ways that letters in
    written language stands for sounds
  • To blend sounds in order to read words
  • To segment words in order to spell them


33
Phonemic Awareness
  • The ultimate goal of phonemic awareness is for
    students to
  • Blend phonemes for reading
  • Segment phonemes for spelling


34
Phonics
35
Phonics
  • Phonics is the study and use of sound/spelling
    correspondences to help students identify written
    words

Phonics instruction should be systematic and
explicit especially for those students who are
at risk for reading failure

36
Phonics
  • Systematic, explicit phonics can be described as
    an instructional program in which sound/spellings
    are
  • Introduced systematically and
  • sequentially
  • Taught in isolation
  • Blended into words
  • Practiced in decodable
  • text

37
Decoding vs. Context Clues The Call of the Wild
by Jack London
38
Phonics
  • Studies have shown that students who read well in
    high school learned early to sound words out and
    read new words with ease
  • Good readers rely primarily on
  • the letters in a word rather
  • than context or pictures
  • to identify familiar and
  • unfamiliar words

39
Spelling Instruction Overview Grades K - 5
40
Spelling
  • Spelling is the basic ability to write words with
    the proper letters in correct sequence
  • Spelling is complex, but it is also orderly and
    patterned
  • There are three layers in spelling
  • The alphabetic layer
  • The pattern layer
  • The meaning layer

41
Spelling

Impacts Reading Accuracy, Fluency, Comprehension,
And Articulation
Reinforces Word-analysis strategies
42
Spelling Instruction
  • In the past spelling instruction moved from the
    traditional drill-and-skill approach to an
    approach where spelling would be caught during
    the reading and proofreading process
  • Research shows in places where teachers stopped
    providing formal spelling instruction, test
    scores dropped and schools began to experience
    failure with literacy instruction

43
Spelling is not Caught It is Taught
44
 
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
Syllable
Consonants
Blends
Trust
Vowels
Welded Sounds
Consonant Digraph
Vowel Pairs
45
A Common Language For Teaching Spelling
Vowels
46
A Common Language For Teaching Spelling
Consonants
47
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
Consonant Digraph
Two consonants that come together and make
one sound
48
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
Blends
Two and three consonants that come together at
the beginning or end of a word or syllable

49
A Common Language For Teaching Spelling
Welded Sounds
50
A Common Language for Spelling Instruction
Syllable
51
Spelling Instruction
52
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
VC One Vowel Ends with Consonant(s) Examples
at, bath, scratch
Closed Syllable
53
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
Silent-e Syllable
VCe The silent e jumps Over the consonant and
makes the preceding vowel say its name Example
bake, shake, scrape
54
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
V The syllable or word ends in one vowel The
vowel usually says its real name Y says i at the
end of a one-syllable word Y says e at the end of
a two-syllable word Example a, no, my, try, go
Open Syllable
55
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
Cle Consonant le is a stable syllable in
itself Teach consonant le Count back
three Example ble, fle, gle, ple, tle,
zle, ap.ple rid.dle no.ble pur.ple
Consonant le Syllable
56
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
Vr The vowel is not long The vowel is not
short The vowel is controlled by the bossy
R! Example ar, or, er, ir, ur, ear
R- Controlled Syllable
57
A Common Language For Spelling Instruction
VV Two vowels that come together and make one
sound Example ai, ay, oa, and ee
Vowel Pair
58
Syllabication Rules
  • In a word that contains vowel consonant
    consonant vowel divide between the consonants
    VC CV
  • Example con.test vam.pire

59
Syllabication Rules
  • In a word that contains two vowels that are not a
    pair, divide between the two vowels

Example li.on ru.in vi.o.lin mu.se.um
60
Spelling Instruction
61
Spelling Generalizations
When to use c, k, or ck?
62
Suffix Sort
63
Vowel Suffixes Consonant Suffixes
-er -ly
-est -ness
-ed -some
-ing -sion
-ee -tion
-y -ment
-able -ful
-ive -s
64
Spelling Generalizations
The Three Great Spelling Rules
65
Best Practices in Spelling

Instruction/Homework
Coding Words Reading Words to
Automaticity Dictation Fingertapping Spelling
Sorts
Flip Folders Homophone Organizer Spelling
Notebook
66
Fan-N-Pick

67
Fluency
68
Fluency

Rate (words per Minute)
Prosody (rhythms and tones of spoken
language)
69
Fluency Activity
70
Sequence of Fluency Instruction
Letter Naming Sound/Symbol Relationship Words
Sentences Paragraphs Stories
71
Fluency
  • A fluent reader decodes text automatically, and
    therefore can devote his/her attention to
    comprehending what is read
  • If we provide diverse learners with the tools and
    the strategies for achieving automatic and fluent
    word recognition, we can increase their chances
    for successful reading experiences

72
Fluency
  • Achieving fluency is recognized as an important
    aspect of proficient reading, but it remains a
    neglected goal of reading instruction
  • Students should receive explicit instruction with
    fluency to improve their overall reading ability

73
Fluency
  • Strategies for developing fluency are
  • Provide extensive reading opportunities with
    decodable texts and beneath- frustration level,
    authentic text
  • Choral reading
  • Echo Reading

74
Fluency
  • Strategies for developing fluency are
  • Rereading of text
  • Partner reading
  • Goal Setting For Students- Charting Fluency Rates

75
Fluency
  • Repeated Reading
  • Alpha beta Alphabet

76
Tea Party

77
Fluency Assessment
Refer to Fluency Norms

78
Vocabulary
79
Vocabulary
Vocabulary is the term associated with the body
of words students must understand in order to
read a text with fluency and comprehension

80
  • People have four types of vocabulary
  • Listening
  • Speaking
  • Reading
  • Writing
  • Irvin (1998)

81
  • Receptive Vocabulary
  • Listening
  • Reading
  • Expressive Vocabulary
  • Speaking
  • Writing

82
  • Vocabulary knowledge is fundamental to reading
    comprehension. Research has shown that the
    proportion of difficult words in text is the
    single most powerful predictor of text
    difficulty, and a readers vocabulary knowledge
    is the single best predictor of how well that
    reader can understand text.
  • (Anderson and Freebody 1981)

83
 
Effective Vocabulary Instruction
Read Alouds
Wide Reading
Word Consciousness
Trust
Vocabulary
Instruction On Specific Words
Word Learning Strategies
Multiple Exposures
84
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Read Aloud
Older students can acquire new vocabulary from
listening to stories and books read aloud when
the teacher stops to quickly define the
unfamiliar word and then proceeds with the
reading. Research has found that students are
able to learn almost as many word meanings form
listening to a story once as they learned from
reading a story once.
Stahl, Richek, and Vandeview(1991)
85
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Multiple Exposure
Research shows that students need to encounter a
word about 12 times before they know it well
enough to improve their comprehension
(McKeown, Beck, Omanson, and Pople 1985)
86
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Multiple Exposure
  • Teachers must introduce students to key
    vocabulary words and provide constant
    reinforcement of the meanings of those words.

87
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Multiple Exposure
  • Have students use words in their own writings
  • Encourage students to record words in vocabulary
    notebooks
  • Encourage students to reference their vocabulary
    notebooks as they read and write

88
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Word Consciousness
  • Word consciousness is extensive knowledge of and
    interest in words. Students who are word
    conscious know many words, use them well, are
    aware of the various meanings of words and the
    power of words.

89
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Word Consciousness
  • Create a word rich environment
  • Variety in levels of materials and topics
  • Literacy materials should be chosen based on
    motivational as well as instructional value
  • Books, newspapers, magazines, reference
    materials, technological references

90
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Word Consciousness
  • Create a word rich environment
  • Classroom sets of books, novels, anthologies,
    short stories, and magazines for small group and
    large group reading
  • Create sets of related books centering around a
    topic and they should be on different levels

91
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Word Consciousness
  • Manipulation of Words and Word Parts
  • Word Riddles
  • Name Riddles
  • Hink Pink (game where students are asked to come
    up with a pair of rhyming words to match a
    defining phrase)

92
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Word Consciousness
  • Collections of words
  • Word walls
  • All the Words About books
  • Personal vocabulary notebook

93
Effective Vocabulary Teachers
Effective Vocabulary Instruction

Word Consciousness
  • Word games and word play are valuable ways to put
    the fun back in one of the most fundamental
    aspect of learning vocabulary development

94
Effective Vocabulary Instruction
Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Wide Reading
  • There is a strong relationship between reading
    ability and vocabulary acquisition in that the
    amount of reading students do, both in and out of
    school, is an indicator of students vocabulary
    size.
  • (Fielding, Wilson, and Anderson 1986)

95
Effective Vocabulary Instruction
Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Wide Reading
  • Research shows that after second grade reading
    and writing vocabulary growth increases
    steadily, with typical students learning an
    average of 3,000 to 4,000 words per year.
  • (Nagy and Anderson1984)
  • (Nagy and Herman 1987)

96
Effective Vocabulary Instruction
Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Wide Reading
  • Directly teaching 3,000 to 4,000 words a year
    would mean teaching approximately 20 or more
    words every school day. Yet research shows that
    at best 8 to 10 words a week can be directly
    taught effectively, for a total of 300 to 400
    words a year.

97
  • Wide Reading
  • Example of vocabulary growth through wide
    reading
  • Fifth grade student reads for an hour per day at
    a rate of 150 words per minute will encounter
    2,250,000 words
  • If 2 to 5 percent are unknown the student will
    have encountered from 45,000 to 112,500 unknown
    words.

98
  • Wide Reading
  • Research shows that a student will learn between
    5 to 10 percent of unknown words in a single
    reading(Nagy and Herman1987)
  • This would account for that fifth grader learning
    2,250 words form context

99
  • Wide Reading
  • This research suggests that one of the most
    powerful things teachers can do to increase
    students vocabulary is to encourage them to read
    as widely as possible.

100
Word Learning Strategies
Word Learning Strategies


Because students derive the meanings of many
words incidentally, without instruction, another
possible role of instruction is to enhance the
strategies readers use when they do in fact
learn words incidentally.
-Kameenui
1987
Research
101
Word Learning Strategies
Word Learning Strategies
  • Reading Volume and Vocabulary Growth
  • Word Structure and Meaning
  • Compound Words
  • Word Parts Affixes (Prefixes and Suffixes)
  • Roots ( Greek and Latin)
  • 3. External Context Clues and Meaning

102
Word Learning Strategies
Word Learning Strategies
There is no doubt that skilled word learners
use context and their knowledge of prefixes,
roots, and suffixes to deal effectively with new
words. - Nagy, 19988

Research
103
Word Learning Strategies
Word Learning Strategies
About half of the new words students meet
in their reading are related to familiar words
and can be understood if students see the
relationships. -Anglin, 1993

Research
104
Word Learning Strategies
Word Learning Strategies
Throughout the year word learning strategies
should be part of vocabulary instruction.
Students should be exposed to broad and diverse
vocabulary through listening to reading narrative
and nonfiction text.
Research
105
Word Learning Strategies
Word Learning Strategies
Refer to Most Frequent Prefixes , Suffixes, and
Roots
Twenty common prefixes account for 97 percent
of the prefixed words in printed school English.
The four most common prefixes (un-, re-, in-, and
dis-) account for about 58 percent of all the
prefixed words. (White, Sowell, and
Yanagihara 1989)
106
  • Some words are not likely to become part of ones
    vocabulary without direct instruction. In
    addition, effective vocabulary instruction helps
    students understand what they must do and know
    in order to learn new words on their own.
  • (Stahl Kapinus, 2001)

107
Beck, McKeown, and Kucan (2002) considers words
based on utility
The most basic words (examples car, water, man,
candy) Words that are used often and help
readers understand a passage (examples
considerate, altitude, mobilize, concentrate,
industry) Words that are used infrequently and
may be associated with specific fields, or
domains (isosceles, exacerbate, corpus)
Tier 1
Tier 2
Tier 3
108
Explicit instruction should focus on Tier 2
words. Tier 2 words are
  • Words that allow students to express
    themselves in a more interesting and mature way
  • Words that are highly useful to students
  • Words that students know related words that
    are simpler so they can relate to this word and
    use it when appropriate
  • Words that help students understand text

109
Vocabulary
  • Word Web

110
Numbered Heads Together

111
Comprehension
112
Comprehension
Reading Comprehension is the process of
constructing meaning from written
text Comprehension is both interactive and
strategic readers making decision by selecting
strategies that fit the kind of text and their
purpose

113
Learning to read is like building stairs you
must use the proper tools and complete one step
at a time By Evelyn Peter
114
Students gain the most benefit from an
instructional program that focuses on their
current operational stage and guides them
through the necessary skill development to move
them into the next stage.
115

Reading is conceptualized not as a process that
is the same from beginning stages through mature,
skilled reading, but as one that changes as the
reader becomes more able and proficient.
116
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117
Reading Readiness/Pre-Reading (Birth to 6)
This stage is characterized by learning to
recognize the alphabet, imitation reading,
experimentation with letters, and learning the
sounds associated with letters.
118
Initial Reading or Decoding
Children in this stage are beginning to utilize
their knowledge of consonants and vowels to
blend together simpler words such as c-a-t,
b-a-t, f-a-t, h-i-t, etc.
119
Confirmation, Fluency, Ungluing from Print
Children consider this the real reading stage.
They are now fairly adept in their decoding
(reading) and encoding (spelling) skills and are
ready to read without sounding everything out.
120
Stage 3 (Age 9 - 13)
Stage 3 (Age 9 - 13)
Reading to Learn
Readers in this stage have mastered the code
and find it easy to sound out unfamiliar words
and read with fluency. They are now ready to
begin the study of subject matter and use of
informational text.
121
Stage 4 (Age 14 - 18)
Stage 4 (Age 14 - 18)
Multiple Viewpoints
As opposed to the previous stage of reading for
specific information, students are now exposed to
multiple viewpoints about subjects (i.e., not
everything they read will have a right or a wrong
answer and not everyone will agree on
information).
122
Stage 5 (College)
Stage 5 (College)
Construction Reconstruction
Faced with an abundance of information and
required reading, students in this stage will
progress if they understand the purpose of what
and why they are reading.
123
Generally, stages 1 and 2 can be characterized as
the time of learning to readthe time when
simpler, familiar text can be read and the
alphabetic principle is acquired. Stages 3 5
can be characterized roughly as the reading to
learn stages--when texts begin to contain new
words and ideas beyond their own language and
their knowledge of the world
124
The understanding of the Stages of Reading
Development The use of the appropriate instructio
n techniques for each individual learner based on
the stages in which they are functioning
125
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126
The average reader moves through the levels
at the age-grade specified. Those readers who
experience difficulty learning the process of
reading, writing, and spelling often find it
difficult to move from one stage to the
next. Many remain at stage 1 or 2 through
adulthood if specialized help is not sought. The
more gaps remaining in any stage, the less likely
that a reader will continue to progress.
127
Teaching comprehension strategies to a
learner functioning in the decoding stages will
prove mostly futile, despite the
potential comprehension ability of the student.
128
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129
Comprehension
130
Comprehension
131
Comprehension
  • Researchers have examined what proficient
    readers do to comprehend and they found that the
    comprehension process for proficient readers is
    both
  • interactive
  • strategic

132
Comprehension
  • Readers make decisions by selecting strategies
    that fit the kind of text they are reading and
    their purposes for reading.

133
Strategic Reading
Strategies
Strategies are conscious plans that readers apply
and adapt to make sense of text and to get the
most out of what they read.
134
Strategic Reading
Strategies
Teaching specific strategies equips students with
the tools to control their reading comprehension.
135
Strategic Reading
  • Explicit comprehension strategies instruction
    teaches
  • what the strategy is
  • why it is important
  • how to apply it
  • when to apply it
  • where to apply it

136
Comprehension
Certain key strategies which students use before,
during, and after reading a selection need to be
taught directly to students in the context of
their reading

137
Strategic Reading
Teachers need to teach their students a number
of strategies, as well as supply them with the
metacognitive knowledge necessary to understand
when and how to use these strategies.
138
Strategic Reading
Metacognitive Knowledge
Metacognition can be defined as thinking about
thinking. Proficient readers are aware of their
own thought processes and are able to
successfully direct and adapt them as needed.
139
Strategic Reading
Goals of Strategy Instruction
140
Strategic Reading
Comprehension Strategies Instruction
  • New strategies are first taught with familiar
    narrative text and nonfiction text and then
    practiced with texts students can easily read

141
Strategic Reading
Explicit Teaching Techniques
Direct Explanations
Modeling
Guided Practice
Feedback
Application
142
Strategic Reading
Comprehension Strategies Instruction
  • Comprehension strategies should be aligned with
    carefully selected text

143
Strategic Reading
  • Teachers can improve the reading of less
    proficient readers by helping them internalize
    effective strategies through explicit
    comprehension instruction.
  • (Kern 1989)

144
Strategic Reading
  • Researchers have found that
  • students are able to transfer their
    comprehension-strategies knowledge to their
    independent reading if they have been carefully
    instructed.
  • (Griffin, Malone, and Kameenui1995
  • Pressley, Symons, Snyder, and
  • Cariglia-Bull 1989)

145
Strategic Reading
  • In fact, less able readers who have been taught a
    particular strategy are often indistinguishable
    from good readers who use the strategy
    spontaneously.
  • (Hansen and Pearson 1983)

146
Strategic Reading
  • If teachers are going to teach students how to
    interact with the text using strategies, then
    they must first match the strategies to the type
    of text, carefully read the text ahead of time,
    and plan out the instruction for the before,
    during and after reading of the text.

147
Comprehension
Text Organization
148
Narrative Text What?
  • Narrative text tells a story
  • Most narrative texts are organized around a set
    of elements story grammar (setting, characters,
    plot, and theme)
  • Instruction in story grammar
  • benefits reading comprehension

149
Narrative Text - Why?
  • Making students aware of the story grammar
    provides them a framework for constructing
    meaning
  • The structure of story grammar acts as a model
    which can be used as a strategy to improve both
    story comprehension and writing.
  • Olson Gee, 1988

150
Nonfiction Text - What?
  • Nonfiction text provides an explanation of facts
    and concepts
  • Its main purpose is to inform, persuade, or
    explain
  • Reading and understanding nonfiction text
    involves more abstract thinking

151
Nonfiction Text
  • Students awareness of and understanding of text
    organization plays a key role in reading
    comprehension. Text organization includes
  • Physical presentation of the text
  • Underlying text structure


152
Nonfiction Text - What?
  • Text Organization
  • Physical presentation- how the text looks on the
    page how it is divided into segments or
    chapters and visual textual clues such as
    headings and subheadings, typeface and fonts,
    signal words, and the location of main-idea
    sentences
  • Text structure- internal organization pattern
    (cause-effect, compare/contrast, description,
    problem/solution, and time order)

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Nonfiction Text - What?
  • What Do You Know About Nonfiction?

154
Nonfiction Text - What?
  • Quiz-Quiz-Trade

155
Nonfiction Text - Why?
  • As students learn about the physical presentation
    and underlying structure of nonfiction text, they
    become strategic in their reading.
  • When students are made aware of structural
    patterns, they are better able to determine main
    ideas and to recall text information

156
Nonfiction Text Research Findings
  • Explicit instruction in the physical presentation
    of text and/or text structures facilitates
    reading comprehension.
  • -Dickson, Simmons, Kameenui, 1998

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Nonfiction Text - Why?
  • Nonfiction text becomes the primary source of
    knowledge for acquiring new information
  • Students success or failure in school is closely
    tied to their ability to comprehend nonfiction
    text

158
Nonfiction Text Research Findings
  • Students are simply not garnering much meaning
    from most of the expository texts they read.
  • -Beck, McKeown, Hamilton Kucan, 1997

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160
Five Domains
As students who are learning to read become
students who are reading to learn, the goal is to
make them increasingly responsible for their
own reading comprehension

161
Five Domains
Research has found that the teachers who are most
successful in teaching all students how to read
were the teachers who used a comprehensive
approach that included direct teaching of the
five domains of reading and an abundance of rich
and varied literature with which to practice
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