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Monitoring Reading Comprehension

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Read the passage The Great Barrier Reef (Handout 2) ... How could this be used with The Great Barrier Reef? ( Handout 2) Story Maps. KWL Charts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Monitoring Reading Comprehension


1
Monitoring Reading Comprehension
2
Reading Comprehension
  • Intentional thinking during which meaning is
    constructed through interactions between text and
    reader. Harris and Hodges, 1995, p. 207

3
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4
Instruction in Monitoring Comprehension
  • Requires multiple approaches
  • Multiple Strategies
  • Metacognition
  • higher order thinking which involves active
    control over the cognitive processes engaged in
    learning
  • Students as active learners
  • Systematic and Explicit Instruction

5
Questions?
  • What types of problems do your students have with
    reading comprehension?
  • What do you think interferes with reading
    comprehension?
  • What is the difference between reading
    comprehension and listening comprehension?

6
Reading comprehensionOne Model
Fundamental Skills (phonological awareness,
Alphabetic Principal)
Word Reading
Reading Comprehension
Verbal Language Skills (Receptive Expressive)
Fluency
Listening Comprehension
7
Comprehension Requires
  • An awareness and understanding of one's own
    cognitive processes
  • Recognition of when one doesn't understand
  • Coordination and shifting the use of strategies
    as needed

8
Comprehension as a Discrete Unit
  • When teaching, and assessing reading
    comprehension to struggling readers
  • Consider reading comprehension as a discrete unit
  • Avoid teaching and assessing multiple essential
    components (e.g. fluency, decoding)
  • Example
  • Look at the script from Handout 1
  • What is going on?
  • What are some issues?

9
Critical Issues in Reading Comprehension
  • Answering explicit and implicit questions
  • Strategy use
  • Understanding main ideas
  • Generating main ideas
  • Summarizing
  • Assessing student comprehension / student use of
    strategies

10
Teach these Types of Questions
  • Right there
  • Explicit question answer in the text
  • Think and search
  • Explicit question need to piece together
    information from text
  • Author and you
  • Inferential use text and prior knowledge
  • On your own
  • Prior knowledge alone

11
Activity
  • Read the passage The Great Barrier Reef (Handout
    2)
  • With a partner, develop one question of each type
  • Briefly discuss strategies for teaching how to
    teach the different types of questions.

12
4 Steps
  • Teach the four types of questions in isolation
    and in this sequence
  • Model how to analyze and answer questions
    (Think-Aloud)
  • Students Practice
  • Assess how students apply skills

13
Model
  • Model how to analyze and answer questions
  • Refer Again to Handout 2
  • Lets Try!!!

14
Practice
  • Give students opportunities to practice
  • Encourage students to use the think-aloud
    strategies
  • This allows you to monitor their understanding of
    the process
  • This allows you to identify and remediate errors

15
Assess
  • Assess how well students apply skills
  • Assessment should be ongoing through informal
    measures (Teacher checklist, anecdotal notes)
  • Assessments should include some hard data
    collected at regular intervals
  • Look at the questions in Handout 2

16
Prepare Students
  • Preview texts and teach students to identify
    critical components
  • Make predictions (teach why we might do this)
  • Use KWL charts / Graphic organizers / semantic
    maps to build understanding
  • Explicitly teach students difference between
    expository and narrative texts

17
Texts
  • Expository
  • See Handout 3
  • Narrative
  • See Handout 4

18
Understanding During ReadingMonitoring
Comprehension
  • Helping students to become strategic,
    metacognitive readers
  • The goal of comprehension-monitoring instruction
    is to
  • develop students awareness of their own
    understanding of what they read
  • know if they are understanding what they read
  • know what they can do to correct comprehension
    difficulties

19
Multiple Strategies
  • Graphic Organizers
  • Take out Handout 5
  • Take 5 minutes to look at the organizer. How
    could this be used with The Great Barrier Reef?
    (Handout 2)
  • Story Maps
  • KWL Charts
  • Retell

20
Multiple Strategies cont.
  • Narrative Comprehension Cards
  • Take out Handout 6 and Handout 7
  • Review the Story (Handout 7)
  • Expository Comprehension Cards
  • Take out Handout 7 and Handout 2

21
Main Idea
  • Teach students strategies to identify key
    components of stories / expository text and
    monitor comprehension
  • Teach students to condense stories and narrative
    text into succinct main idea statements
  • Get the Gist
  • Cooperative Learning
  • Think-alouds
  • Teach students to recognize the main idea when
    presented by peers, teacher, or in text-based
    questions

22
Main Idea Strategy
  • Get The Gist
  • Take out Handout 8
  • Lets try making a Gist Statement
  • Who or what is the paragraph about?
  • Tell the most important thing about the who or
    what
  • Tell the main idea in 10 words or less

23
Summaries
  • Summaries are brief, concise statements of the
    main ideas and most important information
  • First, identify the main ideas of individual
    paragraphs or sections of a text
  • Then, link the main ideas together into a summary
    of what was read
  • NOT RETELL!!

24
Steps for Assessment
  • Administer early reading inventories
  • Provide opportunities for discussions that
    include open-ended, complex questions about texts
  • Ask students to retell stories
  • Record anecdotal data
  • Use samples of student work
  • Monitor Progress
  • Summative Evaluations

25
Approaches to Assessment
  • Teacher Checklist
  • Strategy assessment
  • Are students using strategies appropriately?
  • Teacher observation
  • Informal paper assessments (See Handout 9)
  • Formal Assessments

26
Formal Assessments
  • Standardized assessments
  • State assessments
  • Formal Progress Monitoring Tools

27
Informal Assessments
  • CBM
  • Establish Baseline
  • Set Goals
  • Weekly Measures
  • Classroom assessments

28
Using Data Effectively
  • Data collected should be used to drive
    instruction
  • Gaps in student understanding should be retaught
    and reinforced
  • Student skills should be reinforced and used to
    promote additional acquisition of skills and
    strategy use

29
Matching Monitoring to Teaching
  • Monitoring student progress is directly related
    to instructional practices
  • Informal measures should be linked to effective
    practices
  • Formal and informal measures should be combined
    to make summative evaluations

30
OK135S067
31
Steps for PM - Students
  • Initial Assessments
  • Establish Performance Goal
  • Develop a Goal Line
  • Monitor Progress
  • Evaluate Performance
  • Adjust Goal Line
  • Modify or Replace Instruction
  • Monitor Progress..

32
Establish Goal and Trend line
33
Monitor Student Performance
34
Interpreting Data
  • What do these data indicate about student
    performance?
  • What do they indicate about the effectiveness of
    the instruction?
  • What is the next step?

35
Adjust Performance Goal Line and Goal
36
Another Example of Student Performance
37
Interpreting Data
  • What do these data indicate about student
    performance?
  • What do they indicate about the effectiveness of
    the instruction?
  • What is the appropriate response?
  • What may be required? How will you know?

38
Adjusting to Performance
39
Samples
  • Take out Handout 10 Look at the samples of these
    three students.
  • How would instruction differ across these
    students? Why?
  • What would you target?
  • What would be useful assessment measures for
    each?
  • When might you consider changing practices?

40
Remember
  • Comprehension is the reason for reading. . . .
    Research from 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.
  • National Institute for Literacy, 2001, p. 48

41
Youll find a teacher to help You comprehend that
in any room ..and they never fail.
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