PAUL NEUFELD
Comprehension
instruction in content area classes (2005)
Our group all agreed this
article had some very valuable information. Teaching comprehension skills can be difficult. We all think that reading and
comprehension overlap all academic subjects areas. It will be important even more so now with CCSS.
Neufeld makes a strong point
throughout his article,
Comprehension strategy
instruction is most effective if it is delivered within a context where
students use the strategies to read and learn from the actual texts they are
expected to read. This is accomplished by using actual content area
materials during each phase of the explicit instruction process.
Our
group also discussed the fact that a reader’s perspective is key in their reading comprehension. Comprehension is active intentional
thinking and students’ understandings will vary as a result of their
backgrounds. This is something
that is often overlooked by many educators.
We
also considered the Neufeld’s statements on question asking and answering being the strategy that drives other strategies. The types of questions one asks of
oneself before, during, and after
reading are important for comprehension.
We found the following
strategies along with the questions very helpful and plan to use these with our
future students.
Neufeld’s “Getting ready to read strategies”
1. Read with purpose
• Why am I reading this
text? (e.g., to prepare for a class discussion, to write a
report about this topic,
to review before a test, for enjoyment)
• How should my purpose
affect the way I read the text?
2. Overview the text
• What does this text
appear to be about?
• What are some of the major
topics covered in the text?
• How is the text
organized?
(e.g., enumeration, time
order, compare and contrast, cause and effect, problem/solution)
4. Activate what you already know
• What do I already know
or think I know about this topic?
5. Predict
• I think this text is
going to be about....
We also thought the rules
for creating coherent summaries were very helpful not only for our students but
will also be helpful to us.
Rules to help students
create coherent summaries:
Rule 1: Delete unnecessary material (e.g., delete details
that are not germane to the main topic).
Rule 2: Delete redundant material (e.g., delete repetitious
statements made in the text).
Rule 3: Select a word to replace a list of items (e.g.,
replace “beans, flour, sugar, and dried fish” with “food”).
Rule 4: Select a word to replace the individual parts of an
action (e.g., replace a long description of soldiers crossing a mountain pass
with “the soldiers crossed the mountain pass”).
Rule 5: Select a topic sentence (e.g., select a sentence
that captures the main idea or gist of a paragraph or passage).
Rule 6: Create a topic sentence if one is not available.
(McNeil & Donant, 1982)
We found Neufeld’s effective
comprehension strategies for instructing these strategies very helpful.
Regardless that they were in phase 1 and 2 teachers and students will move back
and forth between both.
PHASE 1: EXPLICIT
INSTRUCTION OF INDIVIDUAL STRATEGIES
Introduction and
justification: The process of
explicit instruction is one in which the teacher must take an active role in
teaching the strategy to be learned, rather than simply presenting it and
hoping the students “catch on” and learn to use it effectively.
- Modeling: Through demonstration and thinking aloud teachers guide the
students through the strategy.
- Guided Practice: Providing students with numerous opportunities
to practice the strategy. The
teacher and the students implement the strategy together, sharing the
responsibility.
- Independent practice: Teacher gives assignments that require students
to assume full responsibility for using the strategy while teacher
moniters and gives feedback.
Phase 2: Teaching for
self-regulated strategy use
The ultimate goal is to help
students read a point where they independently approach and read texts in
strategic fashion.
- Choosing and Then using the appropriate strategy or strategies given their purpose for reading.
Short list of
Comprehension instructional helpful hints
• Teaching a few
comprehension strategies well is more effective than teaching many strategies
poorly (Brown, 2002).
• Teach students to use
strategies flexibly, adapting them to their needs, their individual
preferences, and the text at hand (Pressley, 2002c).
• Remember that reading
comprehension strategies are a means to an end and not the end. The end is
helping students become expert comprehenders of challenging texts.
• Students need many
opportunities to practice the strategies they are learning (Brown, 2002).
Discussion article 2
LAURA S. PARDO
What every teacher
needs to know about comprehension
We
discussed some important areas to work with and focus on to help our kids stay
on track with their comprehension skills from this article. Here is a list of some of the
important areas discussed:
Her
definition for comprehension: “comprehension is a process in which readers
construct meaning by interacting with text through the combination of prior
knowledge and previous experience, information in the text, and the stance the
reader takes in relationship to the text.” (Pardo, page 272)
Other
key thoughts we discussed from Pardo:
- comprehension
happening “the literary event”.
- Background knowledge helps them
make sense of what they are
reading.
- Teachers, can
1.
teach decoding skills,
2.
build fluency
3.
help build and then
activate background knowledge
4.
teach vocabulary words
5.
motivate them
6.
engage them in personal
response to texts.
- Structures of text are
important. Be sure to teach text structures, model appropriate text
selections for them, and give them time to read independently to practice
what you have taught them.
- Support the ‘transaction’
by providing explicit instruction of useful comprehension strategies
(multiple strategy approaches)
1. teach them to monitor their reading and ‘repair’ by
applying appropriate strategies they have learned
2. use a scaffolding approach to gradually release
responsibility to them
3. help them see the connection between reading and
writing. Good writers can become good readers.
We
feel both of the articles will help us while teaching comprehension. I know I will refer to them often. They both gave me a better insight to
teaching comprehension.
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