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Content Area Reading Instruction

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Title: Content Area Reading Instruction


1
Content Area Reading Instruction
2
What is the content area teachers role in
teaching reading?
  • Who is the content area teacher?
  • Any teacher who uses reading as an instructional
    tool.
  • What are the three levels of reading?
  • Mastery level - above 95 comprehension
  • Instructional level - around 95 or slightly
    below - needs help to read
  • Frustration level reading is to difficult
    learning is blocked

3
Direct and Functional Reading Instruction
  • Direct teaching someone to read
  • Phonemes
  • Graphemes
  • Skills
  • Functional teaching reading strategies to gain
    access to more written materials.
  • Comprehension
  • Construction of Knowledge

4
Content Area Teachers Need to Do Both
  • A shift takes place toward functional
    instruction. (hopefully)
  • Knowing why leads to knowing how
  • We will study both theory and practice.

5
A group of English, science, social studies,
mathematics, physical education, art, and home
economics teachers were asked a series of
questions about their actions in relation to
reading. On two of the questions asked, here is
how they responded
  • 1. Do you require reading in your course? 97
    yes, 3 no.
  • 2. Do most of your students read their
    assignments? 58 yes,42 no.

6
Approximately three hundred students of the
teachers who responded no to the second
question were then asked these questions
  • 1. Do you like to read? 52 yes, 38 no, 10 no
    response.
  • 2. Do you read your assignments in this class?
    15 yes, 81 no, 4 no response.
  • 3. Do your tests cover mainly lecture and
    discussion or reading assignments? 98 lecture
    and discussion, 2 reading.
  • 4. Are you required to discuss your reading
    assignments? 23 yes, 70 no, 7 no response.

7
  • 5. Does your teacher give you purpose for reading
    or are you only given the number of pages to
    read? 95 pages, 5 purpose.
  • 6. Does your teacher bring in outside material
    for you to read and recommend books of interest
    for you to read? 5 yes, 95 no. 
  • 7. Does your teacher like to read? 20 yes, 33
    no, 47 dont know.

8
The Timeframe of Content Area Reading Activities
  • Pre-reading Strategies
  • Reading/Text Interaction Strategies
  • Post-reading Strategies

9
Overall Strategies and Activities
  • K-W-L Know-Want to Know-Learn
  • Dr-TA Directed Reading-Thinking Activity
  • GRP Guided Reading Procedure
  • Intra Act
  • Discussion Web

10
K-W-L
  • Introduce the Strategy
  • Model the Strategy Through Brainstorming
  • Have students use KWL sheets
  • Read text to answer Questions

11
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12
DR-TA
  • Prediction
  • Verification
  • Judgement

13
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14
GRP
  • Prepare Students for Reading
  • Assign a Reading Selection
  • Turn Books Face Down Tell what you remember
  • Help students recognize that there is Much they
    have not remembered.
  • Redirect students to the passage for corrections
  • Create an outline based on remembrances
  • Extend Questioning for analysis and synthesis
  • Provide immediate feedback and or assessment

15
Intra Act
  • A game that lays the groundwork for reflective
    discussion
  • Steps
  • 1.Prediction - pre-reading strategies
  • 2.Relating personal reactions to the topic
  • 3.Valuation game sheet
  • 4. Reflection How did your ideas stand up

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Discussion Web
  • Activate Prior Knowledge
  • Assign selection and introduce discussion web
    Students work in pairs
  • Combine into groups of four to compare responses
  • Give three minutes for groups to prepare a
    defense for their answers. Spokesperson
  • Whole Class discussion
  • Students write final responses display them

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20
Prereading Strategies
21
Curiosity Arousal
  • Creating Story Impressions
  • Story Chain

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23
Establishing Problematic Perspectives
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Anticipation Guides
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29
Student Generated Questions
  • ReQuest
  • Designed for one-on one
  • Teacher and student (s) read a section at a time
    pose questions to each other
  • Shift to predictions before reading
  • Expectation Outlines
  • Students read the beginning of a selection
  • Five to ten questions they think will be answered
  • Discuss questions
  • Read and discuss whether they were answered

30
Reading Guides
  • Three Level Guides
  • Pattern Guides
  • Selective Guides
  • Outlining
  • Jot Chart
  • Network Trees
  • Chains
  • Semantic Maps

31
Selective Reading Guides
  • How to think with print.
  • Eliminate all sections irrelevant to the lesson
    purpose.
  • Teacher must know how to process info. from our
    own subject area and according to the curriculum.

32
Three Level Guides
  • Based on Levels of Comprehension
  • Literal
  • Interpretive
  • Applied
  • Create a set of questions as a study guide in
    these three areas.
  • Remember that these levels are not completely
    discreet,

33
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35
Text Pattern Guides
  • Examine a reading selection
  • Make students aware of the pattern
  • Provide Guidance
  • Provide Assistance

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38
Text Patterns
  • Description
  • Sequence
  • Comparison and Contrast
  • Cause and Effect
  • Problem and Solution

39
Pattern Signals
40
Graphic Representations
  • Graphic or visual representations help learners
    comprehend and retain textually important
    information. When students learn how to use and
    construct graphic representations, they are in
    control of a study strategy that allows them to
    identify what parts of a text are important, how
    the ideas and concepts encountered in the text
    are related, and where they can find specific
    information to support more important ideas.

41
Outlining The Classic Approach
42
Venn Diagram
43
Semantic Maps
44
Comparison and Contrast Matrices
45
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47
Problem and Solution Chart
48
Network Trees
49
Events Chains
50
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52
Writing Summaries
  • GRASP
  • Guided Reading and Summarizing Procedure
  • Based on GRP Read Turn Book Down - Summarize
  • Summary Polishing
  • Note Taking
  • SQ3R
  • Other Study Strategies
  • e.g. graphic representations
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