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Reading
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Reading





EXC 7765

Teaching & Learning II

Spring 2004

Standards Based Reform &

Special Education

IDEA 1997

Establish goals for the performance of

students with disabilities that are consistent

with goals & standards for all students

Address and report on the performance of

students with disabilities on assessments,

graduation, drop-out rates

 Provide access for students with disabilities

to the general education curriculum

Research-based Best Practice

“The ultimate beneficiaries of education

research must be children, not the

researchers themselves. Enlightened

educators look to education research for

well-founded evidence to help them do a

better job with the children they serve”

(Slavin, 2004, p. 27).

Differentiation

(Tomlinson, 1995, ED38914)

• Variety of ways for students to explore curriculum

content

• Variety of sense-making activities or processes

through which students can come to understand

and “own” information and ideas

• Variety of options through which students can

demonstrate or exhibit what they have learned.



Quality vs. quantity

Differentiation

(Tomlinson, 1999; Strieker, 2004)



• Readiness: Readiness for a given skill, concept,

or way of thinking (ability). Begin where students

are.

• Interests: Those things learners find relevant,

fascinating, or worthy of their time. Engage

students in instruction.

• Learning Profile: Learning style, intelligence

preference, processing preferences, and/or how the

learner sees himself in relation to the rest of the

world. Students learn in different ways

Differentiated Instruction

(Tomlinson, 1999)



Grouping

Interest

Modalities

Rates of instruction

Level of complexity

Active exploration

Highly FEW Functional or

complex WILL Access Skills

LEARN









MOST WILL LEARN

PLANNING

PYRAMID Next important

concepts or skills







ALL WILL Learn

Most Important

Concepts & Skills

http://www.nrrf.org/synthesis_research.htm





A Synthesis of Research on Reading

from the National Institute of Child

Health

and Human Development



by Bonita Grossen

University of Oregon

November , 1997

Phonemic awareness



Children who are not phonemically aware are not able to

segment words and syllables into phonemes.

Consequently, they do not develop the ability to decode

single words accurately and fluently, an inability that is the

distinguishing characteristic of persons with reading

disabilities.

Phonological Processing

Component Skill Assessment

Phonological Awareness Say cat without the /t/

sound

Phonological recoding in Name objects, letters,

lexical access (Rapid colors quickly

naming)

Phonological recoding in Repeat sentences, words,

working memory or digits accurately.

Key principles of effective reading

instruction identified in the research

1. Begin teaching phonemic awareness directly at an

early age (kindergarten).

2. Teach each sound-spelling correspondence explicitly.

3. Teach frequent, highly regular sound-spelling

relationships systematically.

4. Show children exactly how to sound out words.

5. Use connected, decodable text for children to practice

the sound-spelling relationships they learn.

6. The use of interesting stories to develop language

comprehension.

Balance, but don't mix.

http://www.cornerstoneliteracy.org/

"To read, to write, to

think critically, to

reason, to analyze and

evaluate information,

to communicate

effectively in a variety

of forms, and to inquire

systematically into any

important matter."

Proficient Reader Research Miller (2002)



• Activating relevant, prior knowledge (schema) before,

during, and after reading text (Anderson & Pearson, 1984)

• Creating visual and other sensory images from text during

& after reading (Pressley, 1976)

• Drawing inferences from text to form conclusions, make

critical judgments, and create unique interpretations

(Hansen, 1981)

• Asking questions of themselves, the authors, and the texts

they read (Raphael, 1984)

• Determining the most important ideas and themes in a text

(Palinscar and Brown, 1984)

• Synthesizing what they read (Brown, Day, and Jones,

1983)

Stages of Reading Development

• Readiness

Listening comprehension

Phonemic awareness

• Beginning Reading

Phonological processing

Automaticity

Reading comprehension

• Functional Reading

Locating information

Following directions

Organizing ideas

• Recreational Reading

Choosing appropriate reading materials

Reading Comprehension

Reading comprehension is viewed as the

process of using one’s own prior

knowledge and the writer’s cues to

infer the author’s intended meaning

(Johnson, 1981, p. 16).

Reading comprehension requires active

involvement by the reader.

Strategy Use (Keene & Zimmerman, 1997)

• Uses schema (connections)

• Infers

• Asks questions

• Determines what is important in text

• Monitors comprehension

• Visualizes & creates mental images while

reading

Rand Reading Study Report (2001)

http://www.rand.org/publications/MR/MR1465/index.html



Reading comprehension capacity builds on

successful initial reading instruction









Text Activity







Reader

How Good Readers Process Text

(Irwin, 1991)



• Microprocesses – individual sentence level

• Integrative processes – use of context

• Elaborative processes – interaction with

past

• Macroprocesses – reading strategies for

main ideas

• Metacognitive processes – self-monitoring

strategies

Building Connections (Herrell, 2000)

• Listening to proficient reader (teacher/parent)

• Proficient reader stops to check understanding

of new or key vocabulary words

• Role play or act out new vocabulary words

• Picture or realia to represent new vocabulary

word

• Repetition – reread/continue role play

• Students use vocabulary in context – oral and

then written

• Repetition of student use in context.

Crafting sessions

• Quality children’s literature

• Teacher model

• Student participation

• Active engagement

• Monitor

• Review

Vocabulary Journals



New words How I used my word



Flung I told my mom, “I flung my

towel over the towel rack.”





Intently I asked my dad, “What are

you looking at so intently?”

(He was impressed.)

Vocabulary Instruction

• Essential vocabulary

– Survival

– Literacy

• Reading vocabulary

– Comprehension

– Semantic map

• Content vocabulary

– Comprehension

– Relationships

Levels of Word Knowledge

(Snyder, 2003)





• Unknown No idea at all what word means

• Acquainted Must deliberately think about

word in order to recall its meaning

• Established Recognizes word and gives

meaning to it easily

• In-depth Word is thoroughly understood in

all or most contexts; uses word flexibly; can

associate it with range of experiences

Processing unknown words

• Unknown word: eleemosynary

• Write the word

• Context sentence: The philanthropist made

an eleemosynary gesture.

• Synonym: gratutious

• Definition : Of or relating to alms or the

giving of alms; contributed as an act of

charity

Learning New Words

(Snyder, 2003)



• Label known concept

• Receptive – expressive oral vocabulary

• Oral – reading vocabulary

• Clarification & enrichment – known words

• New meanings for known words

• Multiple meanings for known words

• Receptive – expressive written vocabulary

• New words & new concepts

Balance



Genres • Listening

• Speaking

Learning to read • Reading

Reading to learn • Writing



Surface skills

Deep structure

http://www.standards.dfee.gov.uk/literacy/





Closure Review





Differentiated

practice Explicit

activity Instruction

Dimensions of Learning

(Marzano, 1992)



1. Positive attitudes and perceptions about

learning

2. Thinking involved in acquiring and

integrating knowledge

3. Thinking involved in extending and

refining knowledge

4. Using knowledge meaningfully

5. Productive habits of mind

Vocabulary Enrichment &

Dimensions of Learning

(Marzano, 1992)

1. Positive attitudes and perceptions about

learning

2. Thinking involved in acquiring and

integrating knowledge

3. Thinking involved in extending and

refining knowledge

4. Using knowledge meaningfully

5. Productive habits of mind

Dimension 1: Positive attitudes

and perceptions about learning

• Task value March Madness

– Student interest

– Product choice

• Wait time Stahl, 1994 (ED 370885) 3 seconds

– Processing time

– Active engagement

• Guidance

– Cues & prompts Crossword, “sounds

– Feedback like, synonym

Vocabulary Instruction & Reading

Comprehension (Smith, 1197, ED412506)

Vocabulary instruction should be included

across all areas of curriculum

Direct involvement of students in

constructing meaning is more effective

that memorization techniques

Study of relationships is important in content

area reading

Beginning with current student framework

facilitates learning

Dimension 2: Acquiring and

integrating knowledge

DeclarativeKnowledge



KWL

Representations

Patterns

Graphic Organizers

Memory Strategies

Vocabulary Frames are a flashcard method for learning new vocabulary. Do not use

Vocabulary Frames for every vocabulary word encountered. Words that introduce new

concepts are best used with Vocabulary Frames.









Isolate any prefixes

Top Right Corner: Write the word’s

Isolate the root

definition top

Note the meaning of the

Left Corner: Write the word’s

root

opposite and cross it out

Isolate any suffixes

Lower Left Corner: Write a silly

Label the part of speech

sentence that uses the definition of

in parenthesis

the word

Lower Right Corner: Draw a graphic

to help you visualize the concept http://litsite.alaska.edu/uaa/workbooks/readi

In the Center: Write the word ngvocabulary.html

WRITING YOUR OWN DEFINITION

DEFINITION WORD CHART

http://www.tandl.leon.k12.fl.us/lang/Elementary/Anchorvoc.html



Word



Things I know

about the word

General category

this word might

belong in

Examples of other

related words

My definition

Dimension 2: Acquiring and

integrating knowledge

Procedural Knowledge



Algorithms

Strategies

General rules

Analogies

Think Aloud

Flow Charts

Latin & Greek Roots

• http://www.quia.com/jg/275995.html

• http://english.glendale.cc.ca.us/quizr.html

• http://hyper.vcsun.org/HyperNews/nherr/get

/SED646/S99.1/104.html?nogifs

• http://www.resourceroom.net/Comprehensi

on/index.asp

Dimension 3: Extending and

refining knowledge

• Comparing

• Classifying

• Inducing

• Deducing

• Analyzing errors

• Constructing support

• Abstracting

• Analyzing perspective

Dimension 4: Using knowledge

meaningfully

• Application-oriented tasks

• Long-term tasks

• Student-directed tasks

Dimension 5: Productive habits

of mind

• Self-regulated thinking and learning

• Critical thinking and learning

• Creative thinking and learning

Integrating & Weaving

Vocabulary Instruction Across

the Curriculum



• Graphic organizers

• Compare/contrast

• Preview strategies

Facilitating retention, understanding &

independent application

Elaboration Techniques

• Teach new vocabulary in context (meaningful

subject-matter lesson)

• Select vocabulary that is:

– Key to understanding

– Repeated

• Facilitate student discussion to promote use of

new term

• Build on previous knowledge

• Use examples/non-examples

• Use multiple formats

Clarifying Table (Titanic)

Term Elitism

Core Idea being especially proud of belonging to a small

group who thinks its superior

Use it to describe Clarifiers Knowledge connections





Example of: “Superior to others” belief Snobby acting movie stars





“more valuable” belief





Snobby acting





Aristocracy, super-rich,

celebrities

Integrating & Weaving

Vocabulary Instruction Across

the Curriculum



• Graphic organizers

• Compare/contrast

• Preview strategies

Facilitating retention, understanding &

independent application

Elaboration Techniques

• Teach new vocabulary in context (meaningful

subject-matter lesson)

• Select vocabulary that is:

– Key to understanding

– Repeated

• Facilitate student discussion to promote use of

new term

• Build on previous knowledge

• Use examples/non-examples

• Use multiple formats

Clarifying Table (Titanic)

Term Elitism

Core Idea being especially proud of belonging to a small

group who thinks its superior

Use it to describe Clarifiers Knowledge connections





Example of: “Superior to others” belief Snobby acting movie stars





“more valuable” belief





Snobby acting





Aristocracy, super-rich,

celebrities

Stages of spelling development

• Readiness 20xot7



• Prephonetic TR



• Phonetic tejr



• Transitional teechir



• Correct teacher

Communication Disorders

• Language - cognitive function

• Form:

• Phonology (sounds)

• Morphology (parts)

• Syntax (grammar)

• Content

– Semantics (vocabulary)

• Use

– Pragmatics (function)

Language Disorders

• Pragmatics

– Function or use of language

– What to say

– Who to say it to

– When to say it

– How to say it

– Under what circumstances

Expansion of Expressive

Vocabulary

• Opportunity

• Model

• Expansion

• Establish

• Transfer

• Maintain

• Correction

http://toread.com/

http://www.brainconnection.com

http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/timely/briiss.htm

http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/timely/brires.htmhttp://www.ericfa

cility.net/ericdigests/ed435986.html

http://www.indiana.edu/~eric_rec/ieo/digests/d144.html

http://www.indiana.edu/~eric_rec/ieo/bibs/balanced.html

http://www.dfes.gov.uk/index.htm


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