Specific Strategy for Teaching Reading Vital
Teaching
reading is at times difficult even when everything seems to make sense. For
children, especially learning to read, at first is a big challenge. Much of
the problem seems to be in helping children understand what they have read.
Learning Comprehension about what is being read by the student is an
important step.
One of the
first steps to that end is learning to draw an inference.
Author
Kylene Beers talks about this situation in her book "When Kids Can't
Read". She believed at first that if a child could make an inference, if
they were able to make an inference of any kind, then much of her problems
teaching would be gone.
Much of
the problem with achieving comprehension and understanding seems to be that
children could not seem to form a basic inference. "It took many years
for me to figure out how get around that concept" said Author Beers.
We have to
keep in mind that students need to be able to answer the question:
What is it
that we are talking about?
Much of
the solution seems to be that while some children seem can't make inferences,
we make inferences each and every day, and we draw conclusions and infer
information based on a lot of different factors. What people appear like, the
expression on someone's face, how articles are set up in a room, there are a
lot of different things that we can comment on that we infer every day.
So how do
we set out to transfer that skill to interacting with written words on a
page? Ahh.. There is the challenge that confronts us.
What does
it appear like or look like?
Ms. Beers
talks about how to use resources to help both teachers and students. She
speaks about resources that will assist in teaching these vital skills.
Some of
the Inference types that skillful readers utilize:
-Use clues
from context to figure out meanings of words unknown to them.
-Be able
to identify and recognize pronouns, and their antecedents.
-Use clues
to identify personalities, beliefs, motivations and beliefs of characters.
-Use the
reading to provide clues and information about the setting or venue.
-Work to
try to understand the relationships about one character to another
-Work to
try to understand how the author views the word
-Figure
out the bias if any that the author has.
-Offer
alternate conclusions, and explore the conclusions made in the text.
How Can I
adapt, Use, or set this fact apart?
As you
demonstrate and model "inferential reading" to your students, try
and illustrate things that they see each day. Use events and common things to
help explain and achieve comprehension for your student. Try to show
similarities to the inferences that students draw each day in their daily
activity.
Find an
event that happens in your student's lives, and help them to draw conclusions
and inferences from it. Then try to help them see how they can do the same to
an event or item that they have read.
Perhaps
the first time you can do this as a whole class activity, using the computer
or a classroom chart. Work through the steps for drawing an inference one by
one, as a class as a group. Then, assign some sample events and ask the
students to draw inferences individually,
As
students accomplish this, then help them transfer this to their reading. Yes,
this can be a challenge, but when modeled in a clear concise way it does not
need to be necessarily mind-bending. As you work the process with your
students, make each step clear and as real to them, using examples as you go.
Make a
chart and list the steps as you go, with lots of class participation. Post
the Chart when you are done in the classroom as a ready reference.
-Read
Aloud Short Passage as a class
Have your
students read, and read out loud yourself often. Separate students into small
groups, or partners. Encourage students to "Think out loud" and to
share what they see in the text as they read.
As you do
this, try to zero in on what inferences are present in the text. Ask students
to identify the inferences, using their reference list. -
What is
the meaning of what the author wrote?
Show and
model for students that making inferences is a step-by-step process. Authors
do not think their readers will create inferences or have understanding out
of the blue.
Demonstrate
and model that authors use both implied information, and literal information.
Show students that as a reader we will be the ones inferring. And that as
authors, either information is actual and literal, or it is implied by what
they write.
-Comments
and Encouragement For students
As you
move forward you can help students by helping encourage and comment on your
student's progress. Some of the things that you can share with students to
help them are:
"After
reading what can you tell me about the character and how they act?"
"What
are the pronouns in what you are reading, and what to they mean?"
"When
your done reading, tell me why the character acted the way they did?"
"What
is the setting, and how would you change it?"
"Why
did the series of events happen the way that it did?"
"How
did the characters act when (reference a specific area in the reading) and
why did they act that way?"
"Write
down words you don't know and see if you want figure out the meaning by the
words around them?"
"What
do you think the Author thought or felt about (Insert the name of a character
or a topic in the reading"?
Memory
Have
students sit and write down answers to specific questions after they read.
Use the following as a guide: When? Where? How? Who? What? And perhaps the
hardest for some students. Why?
As
students progress, gradually make the questions harder.
Using
these types of questions will assist your students to THINKING about their
reading, and hopefully they will be able to grow to identify and come to
their own conclusions, including drawing direct and implied inferences from
the reading.
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Friday, November 9, 2012
How To Improve Reading Comprehension
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