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Comprehension Essentials for Gifted Readers

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Title: Comprehension Essentials for Gifted Readers


1
Comprehension Essentials for Gifted Readers
  • http//aea11gt.pbworks.com

2
Is he comprehending?
3
How advanced is his comprehension?
Moby Dick
4
Intellectual Needs of Gifted
  1. Pace of learning
  2. Complexity of material
  3. Being with other bright learners
  4. Higher levels of thinking

5
NOVEL TO ROUTINE
  • From infancy on, high IQ individuals
  • are attracted to novelty
  • habituate rapidly
  • return to novelty seeking
  • Results in large foundation of factual knowledge

6
NOVEL TO ROUTINE
Sousa, 2003
7
THINKING SKILLS
  • Gifted kids have same range of strategies as
    others.
  • Choose more sophisticated strategy or more
    complex version of strategy only in the face of
    significant challenge.
  • Skill develops only when the challenge is
    present.

8
PROBLEM SOLVING
  • Gifted kids are
  • more aware of problem solving strategies
  • more likely to switch strategies
  • likely to invent a strategy when the going gets
    tough

9
Reading Is
  • a process (tool) to help kids comprehend
    content. (content literacy)
  • an amalgam of thinking skills.
  • a portal to new knowledge and deeper
    understanding.
  • a brain-changing experience!

10
What does a gifted reader look like?
11
An Advanced Reader
  • Understands the nuances of language
  • Uses multiple strategies to create meaning
  • May focus on a single strategy
  • Reads beyond their chronological age
  • Enjoys reading a wide variety of material
  • Is voracious
  • Looks at books to solve problems
  • Wants to choose books
  • Has a wonderful vocabulary
  • Reads quickly
  • Relates literature to their own lives
  • May be an insightful reader

Richards, 2007
12
Language Related Abilities
  • The ability to retain a large quantity of
    information.
  • Advanced comprehension.
  • Varied interest and curiosity.
  • High levels of language development.
  • High levels of verbal ability.
  • Unusual capacity to process information.
  • Process thoughts at an accelerated pace.
  • The ability to synthesize ideas in a
    comprehensive way.
  • Ability to see unusual relationships and
    integrate ideas (p. 57)

Clark, 2002
13
Gifted Kids Struggle With
  • sameness
  • repetitive content and practice
  • boredom
  • --RtI for the Gifted Student by Celia Boswell
    and Vowery Carlile
  • H.O.T.S. not M.O.T.S!

14
The Trouble with Basals
Baskin, 1998
15
Explicit Instruction
16
General Instructional Principle
  • Instruction needs to be at the students
    knowledge/skill level

Higher Prior Knowledge
Lower Prior Knowledge
Needs Complete, Explicit, Systematic
Can Profit from Implicit, Less Structured
Reschly, 2008
17
Phases of Learning
Explicit
Facilitated
Acquisition Fluency Generalization Adaptatio
n
Rahn-Blakeslee 2010
18
Intensity is
  • of an extreme kind (dictionary.com)

19
Intensifying Instruction

  • The Big Five
  • More Explicit
  • More Modeling
  • More Systematic
  • More Opportunities to Respond
  • More Review

20
Intensifying Instruction for Gifted
  • The Big Five
  • More challenging complex text
  • More homogeneous grouping
  • More choice control
  • More higher-order questions/tasks
  • More non-fiction informational
  • text


21
Ascending Levels of Intellectual Demand
  • Provide more/fewer examples
  • Be more/less explicit/inductive
  • Provide simpler/more complex problems and
    applications
  • Vary the sophistication level
  • Provide lengthier/briefer texts
  • Provide more/less text support
  • Require more/less independence or collaboration
  • Require more/less evidence
  • Ask for/provide analogies
  • Teach to concepts before/after examples
  • Teach principles before/after examples or
    concepts
  • Vary the depth
  • Adjust the abstraction
  • Change the complexity
  • Make contexts and examples more or less novel or
    familiar
  • Adjust the pace
  • Use more/less advanced materials and text
  • Provide more/less scaffolding
  • Provide frequent/intermittent feedback
  • Provide/let students infer related strategies
  • Infer concepts from applications and problem
    solving

From The Parallel Curriculum. Tomlinson, et. al.
2002. Corwin Press
22
Ask Yourself
  • For the content
  • To teach a specific reading skill
  • To illuminate a larger concept

23
Questions About Content
  • What is worth thinking about for an extended
    period of time?
  • Is there personal meaningfulness for readers in
    the text?
  • Is the subject robust and does it have societal
    significance?
  • Is the language of the selection rich, varied,
    accurate, precise, complex, and exciting?
  • Is the content complex, ambiguous, provocative,
    and/or personally or emotionally challenging?

24
Grouping
  • ability grouping has minimal effects, either
    positive or negative, on the achievement of
    average or below-average students. Substantial
    evidence shows, however, that ability grouping
    has a positive effect on the achievement of
    gifted students.
  • --Kerr, 1991

25
Comprehension
Successful Readers Struggling Readers
Continuously monitor reading for understanding. Fail to use meta-cognitive strategies as they read. May not be aware when understanding breaks down.
Link content with their prior knowledge. May lack subject-specific prior knowledge. Do not readily make connections between what they are learning and what they already know.
Use a variety of effective reading strategies before, during, and after reading. Have limited knowledge and use of strategies for gaining information from text.
Set a purpose for reading and adjust their rate and strategy use depending on the text and content. Often do not enjoy reading and lack understanding of the utility of reading.
(Boardman et al., 2008. Adapted from Denton et
al., 2007 Pressley, 2006.)
26
Comprehension
Gifted Readers Successful Readers
Use metacognitive strategies when text is sufficiently challenging to require them to slow down their thinking. Continuously monitor reading for understanding.
Link content with their prior knowledge and make connections across disciplines. Link content with their prior knowledge.
Apply effective strategies unconsciously on unchallenging text. Adjust strategies or invent new ones when challenge is present. Use a variety of effective reading strategies before, during, and after reading.
Purpose goals for reading are more sophisticated when content ideas are challenging. Set a purpose for reading and adjust their rate and strategy use depending on the text and content.
27
Research SaysFehrenbach, 1991
  • Effective Strategies G/T Ave.
  • Rereading 118 61
  • Inferring 92 37
  • Analyzing Structure 42 10
  • Predicting 37 10
  • Evaluating 28 8
  • Connecting to Content 27 1

28
Metacognition
  • Gifted kids arent consistently better at
    metacognition
  • Simple content doesnt require planning,
    monitoring, or evaluating thought processes
    (fix-up strategies)
  • Challenging content necessitates practicing
    metacognitive skills
  • Metacognition predicts school success better than
    IQ

29
Instructional Practice 4 Increase
Collaboration During Reading
Collaboration increases the number of
opportunities struggling readers have to respond.
(Guthrie Humenick, 2004)
30
Instructional Practice 4 Increase
Collaboration During Reading
Collaboration with those of like ability
stimulates gifted readers to create more
sophisticated connections and engage in more
complex processes and higher-order thinking.
31
The Strategic Spirit
  • The tendency to invent and use thinking
    strategies in response to challenging situations.

32
So what should we do?
  • Determine instructional level
  • Be clear on reasons for reading
  • Adjust groupings
  • Provide alternative texts at higher levels of
    challenge and sophistication
  • Let student interests guide choices
  • Consider characteristics and needs

33
  • Mary Schmidt
  • Gifted Education Consultant
  • Heartland Area Education Agency
  • mschmidt_at_aea11.k12.ia.us
  • 515.270.0405 ext. 14375
  • 800.255.0405 ext. 14375
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