chapter 14 narrative reading

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7 Chapter 14 Narrative Reading By Anna Durfee

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Chapter 14 Narrative Reading. By Anna Durfee. Comprehension. 3 key elements of comprehension The reader The text The activity All of these are put together in context. “Comprehension instruction requires showing students how these elements affect their understanding when reading.”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

7Chapter 14

Narrative Reading

By Anna Durfee

Page 2: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Comprehension

3 key elements of comprehension The reader The text The activityAll of these are put together in context.“Comprehension instruction requires

showing students how these elements affect their understanding when reading.”

Page 3: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

3 Elements of Comprehension:The Reader

Each reader brings a set of competencies that affect comprehension.

Reader competencies include: Speed and accuracy of decoding Reading fluency Vocabulary Word knowledge Comprehension strategies

Page 4: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

3 Elements of Comprehension:The Text

Two broad categories of text used in classrooms: Narrative InformationalNarrative texts include fiction, narrative

nonfiction, and some poetry.All narrative texts express ideas and tell a

story, either fictional or not.Motivate students by finding appropriate

texts for them to read.

Page 5: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

3 Elements of Comprehension:The Activity

Components: Purposes for reading

Identify the reading task (i.e learning for a test, understanding rules to a game)

Processes for reading Apply a range of processes to achieve

the purpose of reading (i.e decoding, higher-level thinking skills)

Consequences of reading Reach an outcome (i.e increased

knowledge, improve comprehension, etc)

Page 6: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

3 Elements of Comprehension inContext

The context in which the reading occurs (socially and culturally) shapes and is shaped by the 3 elements of comprehension: the reader, the text, and the activity.

Page 7: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Good Readers Before reading:

Set goals for the text

Skim the text for general ideas or themes

Predict

During reading: Skim, concentrate,

reread, make notes.

Monitor comprehension

Note problems with unknown words or confusing text

Use repair strategies

Make inferences Evaluate and ask

questions

Page 8: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Good Readers After reading:

Sometimes reread selectively Summarize Think about ways to use the information gained

Conscious plans to make sense of the text and get the most out of what is read.

Students use these strategies to become active readers in control of their own comprehension

See table on pg. 614

Comprehension Strategies

Page 9: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Narrative Reading:Story Structure Knowledge

Story structure: Setting: when and

where a story takes place

Characters: people, animals, or creatures in the story

Plot: what happens in the story, is centered around a conflict

Theme: the big idea of the story

“When reading a narrative text, good readers use their knowledge of story elements to ask and answer questions, monitor story comprehension, predict and preview, connect to world knowledge, construct mental images, and summarize or retell”

Page 10: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Story Structure Knowledge:Asking and Answering Questions Example questions:

Setting: where and when does the story take place? Characters: who is the main character? Plot: what is the problem the character faces? How

does the story turn out? Theme: what lesson does the main character learn? *Bloom’s Taxonomy gives a lot of possible text-based

questions a teacher could ask. See pg. 638

Answering questions: Students should not only answer their own questions

about a story, but should also be guided through teacher questions following Bloom’s Taxonomy

Page 11: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Story Structure Knowledge:Monitoring Comprehension

Monitoring Comprehension: Questions:

Do I have a sense of when and where the story takes place? Have I identified the main character? Do I understand the problem? Am I following the plot? Did I figure out how the problem was resolved? Do I understand the lesson of the story?

Think-alouds: students say what they are thinking as they read the story

Page 12: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Story Structure Knowledge:Connecting to World Knowledge

“ Integrating story information with previous life experiences enables students to understand, feel, value, and retain the depth of an author’s meaning.”

Page 13: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Story Structure Knowledge:Predicting and Constructing Mental Images

Predicting: For developing readers,

stories with predictable plots or repetitive phrases are best

Good readers make informed predictions before and during reading

Teachers can guide students by applying what students know about story structure

Constructing Mental Images: Students learn to

picture the author’s descriptions in their minds

Sometimes readers must adapt their mental images as they encounter new information

Page 14: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Story Structure Knowledge:Summarizing

Developmental levels of summarizing/retelling: Emergent level: focus on event listing and

sequencing, introduce basic story elements Early fluent level: helps student apply basic

story elements, introduce identifying main events, model and guide retelling

Fluent level: introduce plot summary, practice to refine sequencing and story elements retelling.

Page 15: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Multiple-Strategy Instruction Program: TSI

Emphasizes: Collaborative

discussion among learners

Metacognition Motivation Reader response

Embodies full range of transactions: Between reader

and text Between readers Between reader

and teacher

Page 16: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Reader Response Discussion-oriented

instruction Discussion supports

students in the process of developing meaning

Both teacher-directed and student-directed discussions are encouraged

Writing in response to literature Encouraging written

responses increase comprehension

3 categories of written responses: Personal Creative Critical

Page 17: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Narrative Reading:

When to Teach Strategies for narrative reading should be taught at

the first introduction to text and continue through high school

Traditional assessments should be combined with a teacher’s ongoing informal assessment (i.e retellings, think-alouds, etc)

When to Assess and Intervene

Page 18: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Narrative Reading:How? Dialogic Reading: Picture Book Read-Aloud Method

C: Completion R: Recall O: Open-ended W: Who, what, when, where, or why D: Distancing

See pg. 649

Page 19: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Peer Sequence P – Prompt E – Evaluate E – Expand R - Repeat

See pg. 650

“The PEER sequence encourages students to say more about their understanding of the story”

Page 20: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Book Club: Writing in Response to Literature

Students need instruction and support to develop their skills in using writing as a tool for reflecting on reading.

Response options: Personal Creative Critical

Lesson model pg. 677

Page 21: Chapter 14 Narrative Reading

Conclusion Chapter 14 covers the ways in which comprehension can be

increased while reading narrative texts; one of the two main categories students encounter in school

Through explicit and extensive instruction in story structure knowledge and reading strategies, complete comprehension can be achieved from the moment students enter the world of text.

Several models and heavily researched strategies are available to help monitor and maintain student comprehension when reading narrative texts.