Reading
Module 2: Pre-reading Strategies
Objective:
You will learn the purpose of a pre-reading strategy
You will learn the most common and effective pre-reading strategies
You will learn apply one of the strategies (in the Culmintating
Assessment)
Reading:
Prereading and
Prior Knowledge Strategies
Text Comprehension Instruction
Comprehension is the reason
for reading. If readers can read the words but do not understand
what they are reading, they are not really reading.
As they read, good
readers are both purposeful and active.
Good readers
are purposeful. Good readers have a purpose for reading.
They may read to find out how to use a food processor, read a guidebook
to gather information about national parks, read a textbook to satisfy
the requirements of a course, read a magazine for entertainment,
or read a classic novel to experience the pleasures of great literature.
Good readers
are active. Good readers think actively as they read. To
make sense of what they read, good readers engage in a complicated
process. Using their experiences and knowledge of the world, their
knowledge of vocabulary and language structure, and their knowledge
of reading strategies (or plans), good readers make sense of the
text and know how to get the most out of it. They know when they
have problems with understanding and how to resolve these problems
as they occur.
Research over 30 years has shown
that instruction in comprehension can help students understand what
they read, remember what they read, and communicate with others
about what they read.
What does scientifically-based
research tell us about effective text comprehension instruction?
The scientific research on text
comprehension instruction reveals important information about what
students should be taught about text comprehension and how it should
be taught. The following key findings are of particular interest
and value to classroom teachers.
Text comprehension
can be improved by instruction that helps readers use specific comprehension
strategies.
Comprehension strategies are
conscious plans--sets of steps that good readers use to make sense
of text. Comprehension strategy instruction helps students become
purposeful, active readers who are in control of their own reading
comprehension.
The following six
strategies appear to have a firm scientific basis for improving
text comprehension.
Monitoring
comprehension. Students who are good at monitoring their
comprehension know when they understand what they read and when
they do not. They have strategies to "fix up" problems in their
understanding as the problems arise. Research shows that instruction,
even in the early grades, can help students become better at monitoring
their comprehension.
Comprehension monitoring
instruction teaches students to
- be aware of what they do
understand,
- identify what they do
not understand, and
- use appropriate "fix-up"
strategies to resolve problems in comprehension.
Metacognition
Metacognition can be defined
as "thinking about thinking." Good readers use metacognitive strategies
to think about and have control over their reading. Before reading,
they might clarify their purpose for reading and preview the text.
During reading, they might monitor their understanding, adjusting
their reading speed to fit the difficulty of the text and "fixing
up" any comprehension problems they have. After reading, they check
their understanding of what they read.
Comprehension monitoring,
a critical part of metacognition, has received a great deal of attention
in the reading research.
Students may use
several comprehension monitoring strategies.
- Identify where the difficulty
occurs ("I don't understand the second paragraph on page 76.").
- Identify what the difficulty
is ("I don't get what the author means when she says, 'Arriving
in America was a milestone in my grandmother's life.'").
- Restate the difficult sentence
or passage in their own words ("Oh, so the author means that coming
to America was a very important event in her grandmother's life.").
- Look back through the text
("The author talked about Mr. McBride in Chapter 2, but I don't
remember much about him. Maybe if I reread that chapter, I can
figure out why he's acting this way now.").
- Look forward in the text
for information that might help them to resolve the difficulty.
("The text says, 'The groundwater may form a stream or pond or
create a wetland. People can also bring groundwater to the surface.'
Hmm, I don't understand how people can do that . . . Oh, the next
section is called 'Wells.' I'll read this section to see if it
tells how they do it.").
Using graphic and semantic
organizers. Graphic organizers illustrate concepts and interrelationships
among concepts in a text, using diagrams or other pictorial devices.
Graphic organizers are known by different names, such as maps, webs,
graphs, charts, frames, or clusters. Semantic organizers (also called
semantic maps or semantic webs) are graphic organizers that look
somewhat like a spider web. In a semantic organizer, lines connect
a central concept to a variety of related ideas and events.
Regardless of the
label, graphic organizers can help readers focus on concepts and
how they are related to other concepts. Graphic organizers help
students read to learn from informational text in the content areas,
such as science and social studies textbooks and trade books. Used
with informational text, graphic organizers can help students see
how concepts fit common text structures. Graphic organizers are
also used with narrative text, or stories, as story maps.
Graphic organizers can:
- help students focus on text
structure as they read;
- provide students with tools
they can use to examine and visually represent relationships in
a text; and
- help students write well-organized
summaries of a text.
Answering questions.
Teachers have long used questions to guide and monitor students'
learning. Research shows that teacher questioning strongly supports
and advances students' learning from reading. Questions appear to
be effective for improving learning from reading because they:
- give students a purpose for
reading;
- focus students' attention
on what they are to learn;
- help students to think actively
as they read;
- encourage students to monitor
their comprehension; and
- help students to review content
and relate what they have learned to what they already know.
Question-answering
instruction encourages students to learn to answer questions better
and, therefore, to learn more as they read. One type of question-answering
instruction simply teaches students to look back in the text to
find answers to questions that they cannot answer after the initial
reading. Another type helps students understand question-answer
relationships--the relationships between questions and where the
answers to those questions are found. In this instruction, readers
learn to answer questions that require an understanding of information
that is
- text explicit (stated explicitly
in a single sentence);
- text implicit (implied by
information presented in two or more sentences); or
- scriptal (not found in the
text at all, but part of the reader's prior knowledge or experience).
Generating questions.
Teaching students to ask their own questions improves their active
processing of text and their comprehension. By generating questions,
students become aware of whether they can answer the questions and
if they understand what they are reading. Students learn to ask
themselves questions that require them to integrate information
from different segments of text. For example, students can be taught
to ask main idea questions that relate to important information
in a text.
Examples of question-answer
relationships
Text: (from
The Skirt, by Gary Soto)
After stepping
off the bus, Miata Ramirez turned around and gasped, "Ay!" The
school bus lurched, coughed a puff of stinky exhaust, and made
a wide turn at the corner. The driver strained as he worked the
steering wheel like the horns of a bull.
Miata yelled
for the driver to stop. She started running after the bus. Her
hair whipped against her shoulders. A large book bag tugged at
her arm with each running step, and bead earrings jingled as they
banged against her neck.
"My skirt!" she
cried loudly. "Stop!"
Question: Did
Miata try to get the driver to stop?
Answer: Yes.
Question-Answer Relationship
(Text explicit, because the information is given in one
sentence):
"Miata yelled
for the driver to stop."
Question: Why
did Miata want the driver to stop?
Answer: She
suddenly remembered that she had left a skirt on the bus.
Question-Answer Relationship
(Text implicit, because the information must be inferred
from different parts of the text):
Miata is crying
"My skirt!" as she is trying to get the driver to stop.
Question: Was
the skirt important to Miata?
Answer: Yes.
Question-Answer Relationship
(Scriptal, because the information is not contained in the text,
but must be drawn from the reader's prior knowledge): She probably
would not have tried so hard to get the driver to stop if the
skirt were not important to her.
Recognizing story structure.
Story structure refers to the way the content and events of a story
are organized into a plot. Students who can recognize story structure
have greater appreciation, understanding, and memory for stories.
In story structure instruction, students learn to identify the categories
of content (setting, initiating events, internal reactions, goals,
attempts, and outcomes) and how this content is organized into a
plot. Often, students learn to recognize story structure through
the use of story maps. Story maps, a type of graphic organizer,
show the sequence of events in simple stories. Instruction in the
content and organization of stories improves students' comprehension
and memory of stories.
Summarizing. A
summary is a synthesis of the important ideas in a text. Summarizing
requires students to determine what is important in what they are
reading, to condense this information, and to put it into their
own words. Instruction in summarizing helps students:
- identify or generate main
ideas;
- connect the main or central
ideas;
- eliminate redundant and unnecessary
information; and
- remember what they read.
Students can be
taught to use comprehension strategies.
In addition to identifying which
comprehension strategies are effective, scientific research provides
guidelines for how to teach comprehension strategies.
Effective comprehension
strategy instruction is explicit, or direct. Research shows
that explicit teaching techniques are particularly effective for
comprehension strategy instruction. In explicit instruction, teachers
tell readers why and when they should use strategies, what strategies
to use, and how to apply them. The steps of explicit instruction
typically include direct explanation, teacher modeling ("thinking
aloud"), guided practice, and application.
- Direct explanation.
The teacher explains to students why the strategy helps comprehension
and when to apply the strategy.
- Modeling. The
teacher models, or demonstrates, how to apply the strategy, usually
by "thinking aloud" while reading the text that the students are
using.
- Guided practice.
The teacher guides and assists students as they learn how and
when to apply the strategy.
- Application.
The teacher helps students practice the strategy until they can
apply it independently.
Effective comprehension
strategy instruction can be accomplished through cooperative learning.
Cooperative learning (and the closely related concept, collaborative
learning) involves students working together as partners or in small
groups on clearly defined tasks. Cooperative learning instruction
has been used successfully to teach comprehension strategies in
content-area subjects. Students work together to understand content-area
texts, helping each other learn and apply comprehension strategies.
Teachers help students learn to work in groups. Teachers also provide
demonstrations of the comprehension strategies and monitor the progress
of students.
Effective instruction
helps readers use comprehension strategies flexibly and in combination.
Although it can be helpful to provide students with instruction
in individual comprehension strategies, good readers must be able
to coordinate and adjust several strategies to assist comprehension.
Multiple-strategy instruction
teaches students how to use strategies flexibly as they are needed
to assist their comprehension. In a well-known example of multiple-strategy
instruction called "reciprocal teaching," the teacher and students
work together so that the students learn four comprehension strategies:
- asking questions about the
text they are reading;
- summarizing parts of the
text;
- clarifying words and sentences
they don't understand; and
- predicting what might occur
next in the text.
Teachers and students use these
four strategies flexibly as they are needed in reading literature
and informational texts.
Questions you may have about
text comprehension instruction
Is enough known about comprehension
strategy instruction for me to implement it in my classroom?
Yes. Scientific study of text
comprehension instruction over the past 30 years has suggested instructional
approaches that are ready to be implemented in classrooms.
When should text comprehension
instruction begin?
Even teachers in the primary
grades can begin to build the foundation for reading comprehension.
Reading is a complex process that develops over time. Although the
basics of reading--word recognition and fluency--can be learned
in a few years, reading to learn subject matter does not occur automatically
once students have "learned to read." Teachers should emphasize
text comprehension from the beginning, rather than waiting until
students have mastered "the basics" of reading. Instruction at all
grade levels can benefit from showing students how reading is a
process of making sense out of text, or constructing meaning. Beginning
readers, as well as more advanced readers, must understand that
the ultimate goal of reading is comprehension.
You can highlight meaning in
all interactions with text. Talk about the content, whether reading
aloud to students or guiding them in reading on their own. Model,
or "think aloud," about your own thinking and understanding as you
read. Lead students in a discussion about the meaning of what they
are reading. Help students relate the content to their experience
and to other texts they have read. Encourage students to ask questions
about the text.
Has research identified comprehension
strategies other than the six described here?
The six strategies described
have received the strongest scientific support. The following strategies,
however, have received some support from research. You may want
to consider them for use in your classroom.
Making use of prior
knowledge. Good readers draw on prior knowledge and experience
to help them understand what they are reading. You can help your
students make use of their prior knowledge to improve their comprehension.
Before your students read, preview the text with them. As part
of previewing, ask the students what they already know about the
content of the selection (for example, the topic, the concept,
or the time period). Ask them what they know about the author
and what text structure he or she is likely to use. Discuss the
important vocabulary used in the text. Show students some pictures
or diagrams to prepare them for what they are about to read.
Using mental imagery.
Good readers often form mental pictures, or images, as they read.
Readers (especially younger readers) who visualize during reading
understand and remember what they read better than readers who
do not visualize. Help your students learn to form visual images
of what they are reading. For example, urge them to picture a
setting, character, or event described in the text.
Which comprehension strategies
should be taught? When should they be taught?
Comprehension strategies are
not ends in themselves; they are means of helping your students
understand what they are reading. Help your students learn to use
comprehension strategies in natural learning situations--for example,
as they read in the content areas. If your students are struggling
to identify and remember the main points in a chapter they are reading
in their social studies textbook, teach them how to write summaries.
Or, if students have read a chapter in their science textbook but
are unable to answer questions about the chapter, teach them question-answering
strategies. When your students find that using comprehension strategies
can help them to learn, they are more likely to be motivated and
involved actively in learning.
Keep in mind that
not all comprehension strategies work for all types of text. Obviously,
you can only teach story structure when students are reading stories,
not informational text or poetry.
Summing up
Text comprehension
is important because
- comprehension is the reason
for reading.
Text comprehension
is
Text comprehension
can be developed
- by teaching comprehension
strategies.
Text comprehension
strategies can be taught
- through explicit instruction.
- through cooperative learning.
- by helping readers use strategies
flexibly and in combination.
(material above is in the public
domain; original source, http://www.nifl.gov/partnershipforreading/publications/reading_first1.html)
PRE-READING
STRATEGIES
1. Free recall-In
a free recall task, the teacher says, “Imagine that there is a story
written which includes everything there is to know about the Civil
War. What do you think it would say?”
2. PreP (Pre-Reading
Plan)-Begins as a free recall, but includes a second step in
which the
teacher asks students to explain why they gave their specific
responses. In a third step, the teacher asks if they wish
to change or refine any responses.
3. Structured questions-Structured
probe questions are developed from the subtopics. For
example, a teacher might ask, “What was one cause of the Civil War?”
4. Recognition-Similar
to the structured questions, but answers are supplied in a multiple
choice format, a recognition rather than a productive task as in
the structured question format.
5. Group Webs-Students
are given chart paper and markers and asked to first brainstorm
everything they know about a subject, then try to categorize their
answers using a graphic organizer. Groups share their results with
the class.
6. Visual
Imagery-A strategy using relaxation with verbal cues to
help students remember details or ideas related to the new concept
but elicited from their prior knowledge.
7. Prediction/Anticipation
Guide-This is a series of factual statements which the students
are asked to predict as true or false before reading. After
reading the text, the students return to their answers and change
as needed.
8. Semantic mapping
(p.130)-Write a concept on the board and have the class brainstorm
related words. Categorize the words into related groups and illustrate
their relationship to the concept with a graphic organizer.
9. Houdini predictions-Have
the students survey titles, bold face type and pictures and make
predictions about what they are going to read. Have them record
their predictions and review them after they’ve read to see how
many they predicted correctly.
10. KWL
Chart-What the students know, what they want to know and
after reading, what they learned.
11. Predict-o-gram
-Give a list of words used in the text and have the students
predict how they will be used in the text or story Asimov
Strategies
12. Conceptual
Conflicts-Present
students with a problem which results in the students being puzzled
or perplexed. It should call on them to use what they already
know about a subject to solve the dilemma. This will hopefully
arouse curiosity and generate student questions that will be answered
as they read.
13.
Alphabet Prediction Chart-Students are given a table with
the letters of the alphabet and instructed to predict words they
will encounter as they read about a topic.
14. Graphic
Organizers-Many of these can be used for prereading and
post reading.
15. Probable
Passages-Very similar to the predict-o-gram, but offers
students sentences to complete using the word bank.
(material above was created
by Deborah Sherrill; used by permission of the author)
Self-Test
Choose one of the strategies and make a list of five ways that it
can be used in your classroom (self-test is not turned in).
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