Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Chapter 8: After-Reading Strategies

Chapter eight has a lot of activities to help students with comprehending what they have read. I think comprehension is a huge issue that students have most of their trouble with. They can get through reading a book but when it comes to talking about what they read they go blank. Having a support system or somewhere to start would help them immensely. 

One common problem with students in all classes is that they are afraid to answer a question because they might get it wrong. Even if students have a glimpse of the answer they are afraid that they will be made fun of by other peers. So, strategies like using Scales would help students think about their reading while not being afraid of getting it wrong. One student told the teacher that he didn't feel he could get the answer wrong after she started using Likert scales because they seemed more opinion-based (Beers 142). This shows that students will take part in an activity if they think they won't get made fun and only their opinions will tested. 

I had never heard of the Somebody Wanted But So strategy so it was interesting to find out that this simple activity can help students with summarizing information. It is just what it says, somebody wanted something but something happening so instead another thing took part. Asking students to give answers to these questions helps them to see what is going on as the teacher puts the answers on the chart. This helps the students by being able to both see it and hear it. One thing to remember about this is that it usually works better with narratives. Later on we will see strategies that work better with nonfiction. 

Retelling's are a simple strategy that can really help students focus on what happened in the story. I best liked how teachers charted the students progress. This showed the students how they were progressively getting better, boosting their self-awareness. Also retellings can help teachers see how well they are teaching. Retellings can help teachers re-structure their lesson plans if something they thought they were teaching was not obvious to the students in their retellings. 

The It says-I say strategy is used to transfer what the text says into what you get out of it. This activity helps the students take the question and get quotes directly from the book to then convert it into what that student actually thinks. This helps the student be able to rephrase or grasp main ideas from what is being said. It allows them to put what's being said back into their own ideas. 

There were so many strategies in this chapter. I think this will be a good guide for the future to gain ideas for our own classrooms. Once putting them into action they will make more sense and seem more affective. The last short strategy I liked was-Save the Last Word for Me. Students were asked to copy passages onto a card of their favorite parts. Then, on the flip side they wrote what they thought of the passage. The students went around in circles reading their cards and having the other students respond to them. The student whose card it was got the last turn reading what they thought. The ending was my favorite part because I think it would distill a sense of pride in the reader. Allowing them to feel like they got that one last word in to make the difference and leave a lasting affect on all the other listeners.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Chapter 7--Constructing Meaning-->During Reading

Reading is an active process. To kids this is a misconception. They think you have to be standing up or jumping around. Rather it is an active mind process. Students must be thinking, predicting, visualizing, and questioning. So many students think certain people can do certain things because "It's just the way things are" (Beers 103). In the opening of the chapter Gene gave that exact response. We as future teachers need to stop that accepting behavior and make students want to change those things they have previously thought couldn't change, whether it be their reading skills or studying skills.

Making sense is about rereading, figuring out definitions and figuring out what you don't know. Ama used this to show Lavern what all it takes to read and understand a passage. Two strategies Lavern could use to understand the poem he was reading is Say Something and Think-Aloud. This two strategies are closely related, although the first deals more with a group and the second more of on an individual basis. 
Say Something:
Students are in groups and take turns reading. Every now and then they stop and make some sort of statement (question, prediction, comment,etc.) and the partners are to reply to them. Everybody gets a turn to help the students remember what they are reading as they go along. 
Think-Aloud:
Students are partnered with someone so that as the student reads he/she will randomly stop and do their thinking out loud. The partner will note what kind of comments he/she made and talk to him/her about them when they are finished reading. 

Both of those two strategies need to be modeled by the teacher before being performed by the students. The teacher should first model the strategy showing how it is to be done and then explain how to go about doing it and the exact rules for it. One thing I like about the Say Something strategy was when the teacher would give the students stem starters so I student didn't have to think for a long time something to say. Instead they had a piece that they just had to finish. You can find a lot of stem starters on page 108. One think to help make clarity in the Think-Aloud activity is to make a verbal or visual cue when thinking that way students know that you're not reading from the book but rather activating your mind.

Rereading
"Probably the number one strategy independent readers use" (Beers 113)
"Probably the last strategy dependent readers use" (Beers 113).
Rereading is an important strategy for students to use. This is probably the strategy I use the most, if I don't understand something I find myself going back over it, whether it's to read the whole passage or just a chunk it doesn't matter. Some students don't know what to look for when they reread. They think that they will find the same information as they did the first time. So it's best to offer some sort of questions for them to answer or think about after they reread to see if they found out any new information, which they should have. Another issue that this chapter brought to my attention was the debate about rereading a book you already had for a book review. If teachers are recommending students reread passages for understanding then what's so wrong with rereading a book for a review? Most likely students will find new information that they didn't pick the first time.

Two of the end strategies that I thought would really help students was bookmarks and post-it notes--
I liked the bookmarks because they let the reader jot down special phrases or paragraphs they liked and keep it with them throughout the book. Also, there were many ways you could use this type of bookmark. Instead of writing down phrases they could write down words they didn't know or popular themes throughout the book.
I am a post-it note guru! It's a simple way of jotting something down that will stay with you as well. If you later decide you want it somewhere else you can transfer it. My elementary librarian always taught us to never write in our books. She was very apt about us never doing that because it ruins the book. To this day I feel somewhat guilty when I write in a novel. So for me post-it noting helps as well as if you want to take notes in a book that you borrowed.

This chapter was filled with great strategies to get students to construct meaning. It offered a variety that could allow students to work in groups or by themselves. This way the student will always have some type of strategy they can use no matter the circumstance.

Chapter 5---Inferences

Kylene Beers tells us "An inference is the ability to connect what is in the text with what is in the mind to create and educated guess" (61-62).We learned that inferences help students with comprehension. They have to be able to infer what's going on in order to be able to grasp the concept of what the text is telling them. So many students have problems with comprehension because they can't make those inferences. 

The inference in the book about the man buying a movie ticket for another lady seemed rather easy to me. It's like a puzzle, fitting the pieces together to make a perfect match. Students have to use pieces of the beginning of the text in order to figure out what's happening at the end. 

The Step Inside a Classroom section made me realize how hard making inferences is for some students. They just give up and quit trying. It seems like it's too complex for them to be able to wrap their mind around what's happening and put it together to see what all is being said. Beers used a study by Rosenblatt to "[explain] that readers interact with the text to create meaning" (69). The students use what is being to told to them to mix with what they already know to figure out what's being said. Some students don't have the prior knowledge others do so it might be harder for them. That doesn't mean it's impossible. In this section the students didn't think beyond what was actually stated. If movie was not given then they thought it was dumb. What they need to do is use the skills on page 65 of skilled readers. Those skills would help the students that struggle become better at making inferences so they can think beyond what's actually stated.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Chapters 4 and 6

 Comprehension
We are going to be teachers our job is to teach children not just explain or define something. This chapter started out with teaching comprehension. I think that is one of the hardest skills to teach. When I was in about fourth grade I can remember coming home with a packet of papers to practice my comprehension skills but that was something I really struggled with. We have the choice to teach something or to explain something. Explaining is the easy way out where students won't remember how to do it the next time. Teaching is a way of making students understand how to do something and the ways to doing it. I can explain to you how to ride a bike by saying sit on the seat, put your feet on the pedals and push but that probably won't help if you are trying to get on one for the first time. With comprehension we need to be able to teach students ways to comprehend the information for example by comparing and contrasting, predicting, or summarizing. The students will have a better idea of how to do it after you show them and go through the process with them rather than just explaining.

The one example in the book talked about the teacher being good at giving instructions or telling the students what to do but not being good at instruction where she was supposed to be teaching the students how to do it.


Frontloading Meaning
In most of our lives we are anticipating events to come. It could be anticipating the quiz being given in the next class, a party this weekend, or the end of the summer. We all are looking ahead at something or another. This applies to reading as well. Good readers use anticipation to try to figure out what they are going to read or what's going to happen next. Pictures, quotes, and reviews can all be used to help you anticipate something that's going to happen in the book. Those things might be the hook that gets you intrigued. It's better to have some sort of idea about what's going to happen than to be thrown full force into something clueless. Teachers can use a variety of activities to introduce students to themes and ideas that they will be encountering throughout the lesson. This will help the students to grasp a foundation to build their learning on. 

One of the simple tasks that I liked was the K-W-L charts. This is very simple and yet can help students link information together. They can do it on their own or the teacher can complete it as a class. The basis is to fill out what students know and using that information to determine what they want to know and after the lesson fill out what they learned. If used properly these charts can really help but the information all needs to be linked together and you have to get students involved in filling it out so they will be looking for answers to their questions throughout the lesson.

Chapter 3

One important problem I saw with dependent readers is that they will continue reading something even if they have no clue what it's saying. I know we all just want to finish whatever tasks we have to perform, to check of that check list but just reading will not get us or students anywhere. At times I find myself just reading and not really comprehending what it is that I'm reading so I have to go back and skim over the selection to see what it was that I was just glazing over. Everyone does it, perhaps we get caught up in something that's going on around us or think of an upcoming event but what students need most is to stay intrigued in their readings. It's not so much how much they read but what they get out of what they actually read and comprehend. I think this is why so many teachers give quizzes after readings, to make sure that students know what they are actually reading about and have learned something from the reading. 


A lot of dependent readers probably think that independent readers get all the answers right just because they're smart. Which in some cases could be true but most of the time the independent reader knows what to do because of the skills they have developed. What I liked about this chapter of the book was the strategies that good readers do. I'm not saying I'm an excellent reader but I know when I'm understanding something and when I have to try something else because I'm lost in my reading. Thus, good readers
  • recognize the purpose for reading
  • use a variety of comprehension strategies
  • make a range of inferences
  • use their prior knowledge
  • and monitor their reading 
It does not seem like that many things are going on in your head when you read but in actuality if you are a good reader there are. Dependent readers need to be aware of these types of skills so they can try to use them to while they are reading to help them become better readers. 

Friday, September 10, 2010

Chapters 1 and 2

The first chapter just seemed to be an overview but there was one part that I particularly liked. On page 6 the author talked about the strength of kids just showing up. Kids that have continued to fail and still show up show so much strength on their part. If you try yet continue to no succeed there will probably be a time that you say you will just stop trying. Why try if you are only going to fail? That is what a lot of students think and so they just quite doing whatever it was they were trying. On the other hand there are some students that know they have failed in the past but continue to offer hope to succeed. They are the ones that continue to come to class and do their work even though they know they might not pass. These students are the ones we really need to look after because they are ultimately putting in the most work.

I particularly liked the beginning of the second chapter. It's interesting to see how many questions a little kid can come up with in just one question. Leah was asking "What is it?"She didn't want to know just what the brass ring was but she wanted to know how to get it, what you do with it once you have it, do you have to give it back, and why it was made out of brass? Most of us would think to just ask those different questions but she thought those questions were included in "What is it?" As teachers we are going to have to think more in depth. We are going to have to analyze what students are saying and try to figure out what they mean by the questions they ask. 
Another misconception is about the struggling reader. Most people that were asked to sit like a struggling reader sat with their head down and arms crossed but there are more to struggling readers than that hunch. There are struggling readers that might just try to be invisible to the teacher yet has a lot of friends and there might be ones that are the attention getter, that want other kids to laugh and have fun but when it comes to the teacher calling on them they will freeze. There is not just one style to struggling students and we need to be aware of the other students so we can help them just as much as we can help the ones hunched over with their heads down. 
There are going to be independent readers and dependent readers. Our job as teachers is to make dependent readers into independent ones. An independent is not necessarily a perfect reader but they know how to continue through a passage if they get stuck. I think that technique is one of the most important. Somewhere along the line students and even teachers are going to get stuck on a passage but they need to know what to do from there. Independent readers know to move on and try to come back and figure out the passage later. Just because your good at something doesn't mean you have to be perfect but you need to know how to figure things out if you do happen to stumble.