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Model Reading Strategies to Improve Comprehension for All Students
by Laura Robb
"But I'm not a reading teacher. I teach literature." I hear this comment repeated
again and again as I coach teachers in Virginia, New York, and Michigan and conduct
workshops for middle and high school teachers around the country. I'm sympathetic
to their words because these teachers have had little to no formal training in teaching
reading. However, reading is a part of daily learning, not only in the primary grades,
but in grades 4 and up; and studies by the U.S. Department of Education (2003) indicate
that more than 8 million students in grades 4 to 12 are struggling readers. In addition,
high school students in the lowest 25 percent of their class are 20 times more likely
to drop out of school than are excellent and proficient learners (Carnevale, 2001).
For me, the choice of whether or not to teach reading― even if you're not a reading
teacher― is obvious: Middle and high school students need reading instruction, especially
students who struggle because they read three or more years below grade level. Annually,
struggling readers slide further behind; they can't and don't read in English and
content subjects, and they don't choose reading as an independent activity.
Some schools have added a special reading intervention class to support striving
adolescent learners, but that's not enough. In an area high school, I worked with
ninth graders reading on a third to fifth grade level. Success was high as long
as students learned at their instructional levels. However, their self-confidence
and motivation to read roller-coastered each day because in their English class
they were expected to read Animal Farm (1993) by George
Orwell as well as ninth grade-level textbooks in science and social studies. In
my class, students rode the crest of the roller coaster and earned A's and B's;
in other classes, their ride plummeted to the valleys as they earned D's and F's.
We can repair this disconnect between an intervention class and the regular ninth
grade curriculum by taking an interrelated two-pronged approach: supplying middle
and high school teachers with multiple texts at diverse reading levels for instruction
and providing ongoing professional study that shows teachers how to use multiple
texts and teach reading strategies to reach every student in classes with mixed
reading levels (Robb, 2007; Tomlinson, 1999, 2002).
As an example of how this works, let's look at the experience of Katie, a teacher
that I coach. Katie teaches a ninth grade heterogeneous English class at Lee High
School in Staunton, Virginia. In a study of life in the South prior to civil rights
legislation, she was teaching To Kill a Mockingbird
(1982) by Harper Lee, a book that only 30 percent of the students could read. So
she expanded the possibilities by adding Mildred Taylor's Roll
of Thunder, Hear My Cry (1976), The Friendship
(1987), and The Gold Cadillac (1987). This way, every
student was able to read and contribute to discussions and projects. Katie explained
that the benefits went beyond engaging students in texts they could read to bringing
multiple perspectives to this pre-civil rights study (Robb, 2002; Zarnowski, 1998,
2006). Katie also included teaching reading and vocabulary strategies within the
research-tested three-part reading framework of applying strategies before, during,
and after reading (Gillet & Temple, 1990; Robb, 2000, 2007; Tierney & Readence,
2000).
The Read-Aloud: A Multipurpose Teaching
Strategy
To accomplish the shift from teaching one book to all students to using multiple
texts, I use the read-aloud as a common teaching text. Not only am I reading aloud
to model how strategies work, but I'm also developing students' listening skills.
The common texts I choose are short― I teach with poetry; passages from picture books,
short stories, and articles; and sections from longer texts. If the selection is
complex, I make an overhead transparency so students can follow my modeling.
This thinking aloud is important for all middle and high school learners, for it
shows them what happens in your mind and emotional center as you read. When I ask
struggling readers what goes on inside their minds when they read, the response
is unanimous: "Nothing!" Their reaction helps me understand why they don't read,
for reading texts without imagining, questioning, connecting, thinking, and feeling
is simply saying words. Each time you model how reading strategies work becomes
an opportunity to show students what happens inside your mind when reading is enjoyable.
One of the most powerful strategies for supporting the development of mental pictures
and connections is visualizing. And when you include as many of the five senses
as you can― seeing, hearing, tasting, touching, smelling― you enrich visualizations
by building connections with past experiences and the emotions surrounding them.
Let me walk you through a lesson that I facilitated for ninth graders on visualizing.
I used the following four-line poem by Emily Dickinson:
One purpose of describing the lesson here is to demonstrate that creating mental
pictures with sensory images and memories can increase comprehension and build strong
personal connections. The "walk-through" below provides suggestions along with my
think-alouds that can guide your planning for building reading instruction around
the three-part framework.
Paint Mental Images Using Your Senses― Before-,
During-, and After-Reading Strategies
In addition to showing students how using the senses can increase understanding
by building strong mental pictures, I wanted them to discover and come to understand
what an extended metaphor was through their experience and my think-aloud.
Before Students Read: Reading starts before opening
a text, and getting students ready to read is as important for them as it is for
you and me. When students share with a partner and then with the entire class, preparation
can enlarge background knowledge and introduce vocabulary. At this point, students'
responses let you know whether they have enough background information to proceed
with the reading. If not, take some time to build students' prior knowledge by using
picture books, photographs, and video clips. The more students know about a topic,
the better their recall and understanding. Moreover, increased comprehension enables
students to use the facts and details in a text to analyze information and build
new understandings.
First, I prepare ninth graders to read and visualize using their senses. I ask them
to pair-share about sunsets for about three minutes. What did the sky look like?
What did you hear? Smell? Any connections you made or emotions felt? Here are some
ideas that partners shared and I wrote on large chart paper:
- The sky changes color. I see bars of pinks and purples and grays.
- I feel the soft wind and think of the ocean and the smell of salt.
- I hear insects humming. I see bats.
- I can taste evening― the dew, the dark that's coming.
- I remember watching the sun, like a red ball of fire, descend below
the mountain me and my family climbed.
Next I read the poem aloud three times. Poems should be heard and enjoyed before
students analyze them. With a short selection from a text, it's helpful to read
it twice and let students know that they need to listen carefully to observe how
you are applying the strategy. I also like to give students something to think about― something
they will do after I model.
During Reading: This is the time to pause and
think aloud and show how you use your senses to visualize and build comprehension.
Too often, we teachers wait to build students' understanding after reading. I want
this process to start during reading. Here's my think-aloud for the poem:
Robb's Think-Aloud:The words ships, toss, and seas make me compare the sunset to the
ocean. The word toss makes me feel a wind that moves purple
strips across the sky. Seas connects me to the blueness
of the sky and helps me feel and see how vast the sky and sea are.
Daffodil helps me imagine the bits of yellow sun that still light
up the sky. The name of the flower with a golden trumpet raises memories of the
sounds of evening that approaches and the sound of the wind gently tossing ribbons
of clouds.
The last two lines also use ocean words. Fantastic sailors creates a picture of purples and yellows in different shapes.
Mingle helps me see the colors mixing as evening approaches.
Wharf in the last line means a dock, and I hear the waves lapping,
I taste the salty evening, I see darkness settling in just like a ship docks at
a wharf. I think Dickinson is using the sea to help me picture the sunset as she
saw it. The sea images narrow the kinds of pictures and connections I can make.
At this point I invite students to pair-share about my think-aloud and offer their
observations. Here are some points ninth graders made:
- I think you reading it a few times helped me see the sea words.
- I never thought that the sea and sunset had that much in common.
- It's like she [Dickinson] used one big comparison.
At this point, I compliment students on their thinking and listening and introduce
the phrase "extended metaphor." I explain that it is the same comparison used throughout
the poem and that Dickinson helped us visualize and use our senses to see the sunset
she saw by comparing it to the sea and using words we associate with the sea.
After Reading: This is a time for reflection,
which aids recall and the skill of making connections, and can include discussion,
writing, drawing, etc. It's also the appropriate time for students to apply what
they have learned to other texts.
I divide these ninth graders into groups of four, give each one a poem with an extended
metaphor, and invite them to explore and discover the comparison and use this along
with their senses to visualize, build comprehension, and make connections. Each
group has its own copy of the poem and one copy on an overhead transparency so the
group can present its learning to the class.
Closing Thoughts
When you show with think-alouds how a strategy works, students can step inside your
head and better understand how visualizing (or another strategy) supports reading.
Moreover, using the read-aloud as your common teaching text will enable you to offer
groups reading materials they can apply the strategy to because they
can read them.
References
Carnavale, A. P. (2001). Help wanted...college required.
Washington, DC: Educational Testing Service, Office of Public Leadership. Available
online at http://www.ets.org/
research/publeadpubs.html.
Gillet , J. W., & Temple, C. (1990). Understanding reading
problems: Assessments and instruction (3rd ed.). New York: HarperCollins.
Lee, H. (1982, orig. publ. 1960). To kill a mockingbird.
New York: Warner Books.
Orwell, G. (1993, orig. publ. 1945). Animal farm. New
York: Everyman's Library.
Robb, L. (2000). Teaching reading in middle school: A strategic
approach to reading that improves comprehension and thinking. New York:
Scholastic.
Robb, L. (2002). Multiple texts: Multiple opportunities for teaching and learning.
Voices from the Middle, 9(4), 28-32.
Robb, L. (2003). Teaching reading in social studies, science, and
math: Practical ways to weave comprehension strategies into your content area teaching.
New York: Scholastic.
Robb, L. (2007). Differentiating reading instruction.
New York: Scholastic.
Taylor, M. (1976). Roll of thunder, hear my cry. New
York: Viking.
Taylor, M. (1987). The friendship. New York: Puffin.
Taylor M. (1987). The gold cadillac.New York: Puffin.
Tierney, R. J., & Readence, J. E. (2000). Reading strategies
and practices: A compendium. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
Tomlinson, C. A. (1999). The differentiated classroom: Responding
to the needs of all learners. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
Tomlinson, C. A. (2002, September). Different learners, different lessons. Instructor Magazine.
U.S. Department of Education. (2003). Nation's report card: Reading
2002. Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics. Available
online at
http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfro.asp?pubid=2003521.
Zarnowski, M. (1998). It's more than dates and places: How nonfiction contributes
to understanding social studies. In R. A. Bamford & J. Kristo (Eds.),
Making facts come alive: Choosing quality nonfiction literature K-12.
Norwood, MA: Christopher-Gordon.
Zarnowski, M. (2006). Making sense of history: Using high-quality
literature and hands-on experiences to build content knowledge. New York:
Scholastic.
Author, consultant, speaker, and literacy coach, Laura Robb has completed 43 years
of teaching in grades 4 through 8. Her most recent book is a 476-page binder titled
Teaching Reading: A Complete Resource for Grades 4 and Up (published by Scholastic).
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