improving understanding: reading strategy instruction

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IMPROVING UNDERSTANDING: READING STRATEGY INSTRUCTION Jenna Zwiebel Towson University Fall 2011

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Improving Understanding: Reading Strategy Instruction. Jenna Zwiebel Towson University. Fall 2011. Objectives. Participants will… gain knowledge of important research that demonstrates the effectiveness of teaching comprehension strategies. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

IMPROVING UNDERSTANDING: READING STRATEGY INSTRUCTION

Jenna ZwiebelTowson University

Fall 2011

Page 2: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Objectives

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Participants will… gain knowledge of important research

that demonstrates the effectiveness of teaching comprehension strategies.

identify strategies that can be used to improve reading comprehension.

reflect on their comprehension instruction and identify ways to refine their practice.

Page 3: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Why Do We Read?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Turn and Talk: Why do you read? What do our student’s think?

“because you tell me to” “to become better readers” “to get good grades” “because we have to” “to learn more words”

Page 4: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Why Do We Read?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Comprehension is the ultimate goal of reading.

(Ness, 2011) How does this compare with what our

students said? What can we do to align our students

thinking with what the research indicates?

Page 5: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Your Experiences

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

How were you taught comprehension? Let’s play Four Corners!

Corner A: What was the teacher doing? Corner B: What were the students doing? Corner C: What materials were being used? Corner D: What did the classroom look

like/sound like?

Page 6: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Minute Reflection

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Take a minute to reflect on how you teach comprehension…

Page 7: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

A Startling Statistic

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

“Nearly 9 million of today’s 4th through 12th graders struggle to read their textbooks.”

(Ness, 2011)

“Many students progress to college without learning the reading comprehension strategies employed by proficient readers.”

(Ness, 2011)

Page 8: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Why Teach Comprehension Strategies?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Readers who actively engage in strategy use while reading are more likely to understand what they have read. (Stahl, 2004)

A reader’s understanding of text can be improved by teaching them to use specific cognitive strategies to overcome barriers with their comprehension of text.

(Afflerbach, Pearson, & Paris, 2008)

Page 9: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Why Teach Strategies? (continued)

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

70% of students who were provided explicit instruction in comprehension strategies made growth with their reading comprehension. (Prado & Plourde, 2011)

Students who were taught using metacognitive strategy instruction scored higher on reading comprehension assessments than student receiving traditional comprehension even a year after instruction was provided. (Houtveen & van de Grift, 2007)

Students who received direct instruction of comprehension strategies performed better on standardized assessments that peers who received no such instruction. (Ness, 2011)

Page 10: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

As An Expert Reader…

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

What strategies do you use while you read?

Do you teach your student’s to use any of these strategies?

Page 11: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Comprehension Strategies

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

• Current research identifies the following seven comprehension strategies utilized by readers to gain meaning from text.– Monitor understanding/Metacognition– Make connections using prior knowledge/Schema– Determine Importance– Synthesizing– Ask questions– Visualize/construct mental images– Make inferences

(Prado & Plourde, 2011)

Page 12: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Metacognition

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Thinking about your thinking Metacognition helps a reader identify

tasks, monitor performance, choose appropriate strategies, and solve problems. (Wilson, 2011)

Thinking while we read, is REAL reading!

lancastercfa.wikispaces.com

Page 13: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Schema

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Children rely heavily on their background knowledgeto interact with text. Instruction must help themutilize this knowledge to makeconnections to the text.

(Stahl, 2004)www.readinglady.com

Page 14: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Determine Importance

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

www.lifein4b.blogspot.com

“Thoughtful readers sift out relevant and useful information.” (McGregor, 2007)

Page 15: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Synthesize

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

www.readinglady.com

“Thoughtful readers continually change their thinking in response to text.”

(McGregor, 2007)

Page 16: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Ask Questions

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Learning to generate questions about a text will help to improve the readers general understanding of the text. (Duke & Pearson, 2008/2009)

www.blogs.scholastic.com

Page 17: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Visualize

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

debbiediller.wordpress.com

Using visual imagery willhelp students with poor comprehension store and retrieve what they have read.

(Stahl, 2004)

Page 18: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Make Inferences

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

www.readinglady.com

“Thoughtful readers draw conclusions, make predictions, and form interpretations.”

(McGregor, 2007)

Page 19: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Which strategies do we use?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Let’s take a deeper look at the strategies you use while reading.

Select a dot to place on each of the seven strategies listed Blue: all the time Green: most of the time Yellow: some of the time Red: never

Page 20: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Which strategies do we use?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Which strategies are used most often?

Least often?

How does this reflect in the classroom? Is there a correlation between your use of a

strategy and your comfort level for teaching it?

Page 21: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Let’s Give it a Try

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

As you read this short piece of text, identify which strategies you are using, by drawing the corresponding symbol in the place of the text that strategy was used.

? Question! Clarify& Connection^ Infer$ Visualize# Synthesize% Determine Importance

Page 22: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

What do you teach?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Are you currently incorporating any of these strategies in your instruction?

Take a moment to rank these strategies according to your comfort level with teaching them…

Nice and Calm I Have Some Questions Feeling Anxious

Page 23: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Strategy versus Skills

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Harcourt Storytown identifies both reading strategies and skills for each lesson. How do we know what to teach? What should we focus on? What’s the difference?

Strategies are the techniques a reader uses to process the text. (Pressley & Beard-Dinary, 1992)

Page 24: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Condensing What we Teach

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Skills should be able to fit into the processes required for several different strategies.

Take the list of skills Harcourt suggests we teach our students throughout the school year.

Work with your team, determine which strategy each of these skills could be taught with and record in your chart.

Page 25: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

How do We Teach it?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Match Up In your envelope are researched based

steps to be utilized during strategy instruction, there is also a description of each step.

Work in groups of 2-3 Match the step to its description Place the steps in the order you feel would

be most appropriate for instruction

Page 26: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Steps for Strategy Instruction

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Explicit Instruction Modeling Shared Practice Guided Practice Independent Practice

(Houtveen & van de Grift, 2007), (Duke & Pearson, 2008/2009)

Page 27: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Research about Instructional Practices

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

A key to success in comprehension strategy instruction is the use of the gradual release of responsibility. (Ness, 2011)

Instruction should follow a cycle of the gradual release model Teacher explanation and modeling Shared and guided practice Independent practice & application

(Afflerbach, Pearson, & Paris, 2008), (Prado & Plourde, 2011)

Page 28: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Transactional Strategy Instruction

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Transactional Strategy Instruction Students work in groups to construct an

understanding of the text while the teacher proves prompts and reminders regarding which strategies can be used while reading Lesson beings with the teacher or a student sharing their a question about the text, several students response and provide feedback

(Pressley & Beard-Dinary, 1992)

Page 29: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Reciprocal Teaching

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Reciprocal Teaching Students work in small groups with guidance

from the teacher to utilize four strategies (predicting, questioning, clarfying, and summarizing) to develop an understanding of the text. The lesson begins with the discaloge leader modelsthe use of strategies explaining how, when, and why the strategy was used, then the dialouge leaders will ask a question about the text and group members work together to clarify this and other questions they may have. After discsuion the dialogue leader summarizes the selection and makes a prediction about what will happen next.

(Stahl, 2004) (Sporer, Brunstein, & Kieschke, 2009)

Page 30: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

What Resources Can We Use?

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Comprehension Connections: Bridges to Strategic Reading by Tanny McGregor (Heinemann, 2007)

Strategies that Work: Teaching Comprehension for Understanding and Engagement by Stephanie Harvey & Anne Goudvis (Stenhouse Publishers, 2007)

Reading with Meaning: Teaching Comprehension in the Primary Grades by Debbie Miller (Stenhouse Publishers, 2002)

Page 31: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Next Steps

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Book Study Classroom Demonstration Lessons Small Group Planning Lesson Study Observations and Feedback Individual or Group Planning Sessions

Page 32: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Begin with the End in Mind

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

What goals do we have for our students? What will our strategic readers…

look like? sound like? be able to do?

Complete the picture of a strategicreader to show what your student’s will do at the end of the school year.

Page 33: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Reflect

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Minute Reflection: What would you like to see modeled in your classroom? This can be a specific strategy or a

component of a lesson you are unsure how to implement!

Page 34: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

Evaluate

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Please take a few minutes to complete the workshop evaluation

Please be honest with your feedback as it will be used to help plan future professional development sessions/activities!

Page 35: Improving Understanding:  Reading Strategy Instruction

References

Jenna Zwiebel Fall 2011

Afflerbach, P., Pearson, P.D., & Paris, S.G. (2008). Clarifying differences between reading skills and reading strategies. Reading Teacher, 61(5), 364-373.

Dewitz, P., Jones, J., Leahy, S. (2009) Comprehension strategy instruction in core reading programs. Reading Research Quarterly, 44(2), 102-126.

Duke, N.K., and Pearson, P.D. (2008/2009). Effective practices for developing reading comprehension. Journal of Education, 182 (1/2), 107-122.

Houtveen, A. A. M., & van de Grift, W. J. C. M. (2007). Effects of metacognitive strategy instruction and instruction time on reading comprehension. School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 18(2), 173-190.

McGregor, T. (2007). Comprehension connections: Bridges to strategic reading. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

Ness, M. (2011). Explicit reading comprehension instruction in elementary classrooms: Teacher use of reading comprehension strategies. Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 25(1), 98-117.

Prado, L., & Plourde, L. A. (2011). Increasing reading comprehension through explicit teaching of reading strategies: Is there a difference among the genders? Reading Improvement, 48(1), 32-43.

Pressley, M., & Beard-Dinary, P. (1992). Beyond direct explanation: Transactional instruction of reading comprehension. The Elementary School Journal, 92 (5), 513-546.

Sporer, N., Brunstein, J.C., & Kieschke, U. (2009). Improving students’ reading comprehension skills: Effects of strategy instruction and reciprocal teaching. Learning and Instruction, 19(3), 272-286.

Stahl, K.A.D. (2004). Proof, practice, and promise: Comprehension strategy instruction in the primary grades. The Reading Teacher, 57(7), 598-609.

Wilson, N. (2011). The heart of reading instruction: Metagcognition. California Reader, 44(3), 32-37.