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+ Bait the Reading Hook…

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ASCD’s publication Educational Leadership offered an article by Jennifer McCarty Plucker,  a reading coordinator and literacy specialist at Eastview High School in Apple Valley Minnesota.

She writes that research  indicates high-achieving students read more than low achievers. 

In Plucker’s suburban high school, she and her colleagues decided to narrow the discrepancy by “providing a double dose of literacy instruction” in an academic literary class required in addition to their 9th grade English class.

In the 2008-9 and 2009-10 school years, Eastview High School had four class periods of the course.  Each was taught by one of three highly trained and licensed reading teachers.

Classes were kept small (no more than 10 students per teacher).  Students were selected on the basis of standardized reading tests, informal reading assessments, and recommendations from the middle school reading specialist.  These were students typically whose scores on standardized tests were in the 10th-30th percentiles.

A minimum of 25 minutes of the 50-minute daily class were “held  sacred” for silent reading-for-enjoyment.

Once students have started reading for fun, the class brainstorms and sets goals for stealing minutes outside the school day for reading.

Developing the Materials

Eastview High School did not purchase a commercial reading program.  Instead, they created their own. 

They looked at their resources, considered students’ needs, and read widely in recent research on adolescent literacy.  Then they used their funds to build a classroom library with high-interest young adult novels, create an appealing and comfortable environment for teens – and also provide professional development for teachers.

Developing and maintaining a classroom library of high-interest young adult novels can be a challenge.  However, daily access to engaging books is imperative for the success of growing readers.  Yes, we lose books.  No, our classroom isn’t organized like our media center.  We tend to organize books by theme or likely audience, so we might have a table of sports books or of teen romances instead of books organized by authors whose names may be unfamiliar to struggling readers.

They work continually to find books that give students the right level of challenge.  A book can’t be so easy that students won’t grow, and it can’t be so difficult that the students won’t understand it.

Instructors help students figure out what books are just right for them.  By February of the school year, most students can  independently choose books that will accelerate their literary growth.

Strategies

Plucker writes that instead of teaching “strategies for strategies’ sake,” they take a reflective approach.

Teachers begin by helping students share their thinking as they read. Once they learn what “comes naturally” for each reader, they focus on honing skills in other areas.

When a student, for example, is reading difficult text with lots of description, he is encouraged to make a ”mental movie” as he reads. 

If a student is reading an article about current events, she is advised to ask questions.  Rather than get discouraged, she gets help using metacognitive strategies to clear up confusion as it happens.

Ultimately, we want our students thinking as they read, recognizing that reading is a complex process.  One student shared his newfound thinking skills when he came into my room last winter, saying “Dr. McCarty, I can’t listen to my iPod when I read anymore.  My metacognition voice is too loud!”

The instructors try to give students opportunities for choice and collaboration, as research suggests.  When more difficult texts require scaffolding, choices are more limited, but still there are choices. 

For example, if they are teaching students to annotate a text — to write their thoughts in the margin — they might offer them three current events articles, so they can choose the one that appeals to them most.

Then a student is asked to choose a purpose for reading: does he want (for example) to understand the author’s reasoning, or develop an argument against the author, or look for holes in the author’s logic?

At Eastview, they don’t make the classroom an electronics-free zone; rather they work with students to develop goals for taking control of distractions.

They also determine which literacy skills students use outside school, and then link these skills to academic tasks.  They have used online discussion forums, videos, digital posters, podcasts, texting and classroom social networking sites in order to engage students and allow them to use skills they already have for academic purposes.

Fluency Development

Just like elementary students, adolescents need to hear highly fluent readers.  These students won’t listen to read-alouds they consider “lame,” and so Plucker and her colleagues try for shared reading experiences that students think are really great.

Plucker says that her students enjoyed Skeleton Creek, by Patrick Carmen (Scholastic, 2009) — a novel written as a journal by a high school student named Ryan.   Ryan’s friend Sarah sends him videos via email, and these videos are available online at http://www.scholastic.com.

Plucker writes

Last winter, I knew we needed to incorporate small-group reading instruction.  But how was I going to make guided reading cool?  When in doubt, try an acronym.  We implemented CREW (Collaborative Reading Enhanced Work) Time.  Simply calling it CREW Time made it cool.

We adjusted our crews depending on what strategy or minilesson we felt the small group needed.  One minilesson we used with our crews was explicitly teaching students to take their reader response journal entries from lower-level thinking (making connections) to higher level thinking (making judgements).

Students need to practice reading aloud, but they resist vehemently.  So they were asked to create unrehearsed reading podcasts of a children’s story of their choice.  Nobody said no to reading into a microphone!

After a week of fun fluency activities disguised as games, students  then re-recorded the stories and compared the podcasts.  They were able to compare the difference and reflect on what they heard.

Then they experimented with readers’ theater.  Students made a field trip to a neighboring elementary school and performed stories for first grader.

Plucker and her colleagues feel that after three years, they have found an effective way to lure students into reading.  And the students evaluate the experience with words like fun, comfortable, a place to feel smart, my favorite class.

sole source: article in Educational Leadership, ASCD’s monthly publication, October 2010.  Author Jennifer McCarty Plucker can be reached at Jennifer.Plucke@gmail.com.

tutoring in Columbus OH:  Adrienne Edwards  614-579-6021 or email aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Teaching With Mysteries

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From Kim Haynes at TeachHub, some suggestions for engaging the interest of students. 

She suggests that you try using Web sites which offer “Five-Minute Mysteries,” for example Mystery Nethttp://www.mysterynet.com/ ) or U-Solve-It Mysteries ( http://www.scholastic-direct.com/usolveit/audiofiles/mm1.asp).  These sites offer very short stories which encourage careful reading or listening.

How about Nancy Drew or Encyclopedia Brown?  Mysteries follow a predictable pattern, but keep the readers guessing.  Haynes suggests Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, or Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine.

You can get a student’s attention by just making the topic “mysterious.”  Kim Haynes suggests that you ask questions such as ”Why is this species becoming extinct?”  “Who really wrote Shakespeare’s plays?”  Talk about “unexplained events:”  the Loch Ness Monster or the Bermuda Triangle.  (But she warns that you have to be prepared yourself to deal with whatever arises out of such a conversation!)

For practicing math, Haynes suggests Math Maven,           http://teacher.scholastic.com/maven/ ,  a site that offers “capers” that need solving.  Every story is at a particular level of difficulty.  Topics range from whole number operations to geometry and probability. 

For teaching plot structure, just working with mystery stories is useful.  Such stories follow predictable patterns, so concepts such as exposition, “inciting incident,” and rising action are fairly easily observable.

And for adding content knowledge, Haynes suggests http://www.teacher.scholastic.com/histmyst/index.asp for history; http://www.eduweb.com/pintura/ for art; http://www.marshallschools.com/teachers/aldredgel/mystery/ for science.  For more options, Haynes says searching “mystery options” might gather interesting results.  In addition to learning content, these exercises teach tech skills too.

Old fashioned language in classic books can be a challenge for today’s young people.  — Edgar Allan Poe or the Sherlock Holmes stories –these texts can be an entry point into Victorian language.   They are shorter than the Brontes or Austen, and their plots appeal to boys. 

CSI in the classroom?  Science and technology play significant roles in solving crimes.  So take advantage of kids’ fascination with forensic science with some Crime Scene Investigation opportunities at http://www.sciencespot.net/Pages/classforsci.html .

Build writing skills with mysteries’ easily recognizable templates: there are basic character types, basic sequences of events, etc.    Use them to demonstrate setting: many rely on stormy weather and creepy locations to set mood.  Help your students analyze mystery stories and write one of their own. Visit http://www.mysterynet.com/learn/lessonplans/writing.shtml  or http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/lesson-plans/everyone-loves-mystery-genre-796.html.

Students learn about research through mysteries — it’s a little known fact that mystery writers do lots of research before they write.  They need to know about law, or medicine, or unusual facts, historical details…  Help your students learn research skills by looking up information.  Ask them to read a story and then do the  research to prove whether the details are accurate.  Haynes warns you though — some crime stories get gory; so use your knowledge of your students and be prepared.

Other suggestions: read a mystery that connects to your subject.  She suggests the Periodic Table Mystery Series by Camille Minichino for science, Suzanne Adair’s Revolutionary War-era mysteries, or Jacqueline Winspear’s Maisie Dobbs series set during the period just after World War I. 

sole source: Kim Haynes’s “Elementary My Dear Teacher: Teaching with Mysteries” at http://www.teachhub.com/news/article/cat/14/item/349 .  Visit TeachHub.com for teacher resources of all kinds!

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021  or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Academic Clubs for Teaching Social Studies

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The Lab School of Washington (LSW) has a unique approach to social studies and humanities instruction, according to a rich article by Noel Bicknell in the LDA publication Learning Disabilities: a Multidisciplinary Journal.

In this arts-driven lower school program, every child spends 40 minutes a day in a room that simulates a specific historical time and place.  These sessions are called “academic clubs.” 

Currently, there are seven:

  • Cave Club — for the study of human evolution and pre-historic culture.  Students evolve through five stages of early human development, and explore the origins of human language, shelter, agriculture, and culture.
  • Gods Club — for the study of Egyptian, Greek and Roman history, mythology and culture.  Students become “gods” and “goddesses,” and study daily life, art and period technology.
  • Knights and Ladies Club — for the study of medieval Europe, emphasizing the influence of church and feudalism.  Students progress from page to knight and study warfare, arts and the trials of daily life.
  • Renaissance Club –  is set in the city-state of Florence.  Students study the rebirth of Greek and Roman ideas, influences from Asia, and developments in the arts and sciences.  A student works as a guild artist for a patron (teacher) to explore daily life, humanities, geography and the history of the technology.
  • Revolution Club — is set in Colonial America.  Sessions build chronologically to the declaration of independence from England.  Students become historical characters who represent the multiple experiences and perspectives of early American life during this period.
  • Museum Club — study of world history through the eyes of museum curators preparing exhibits.  Periodic museum openings presented to the larger LSW community exhibit recreated artifacts from early civilizations, such as Mesopotamia and ancient China.  Includes a comparative study of world religions.
  • Industrialists Club — a study of American history through the eyes of powerful industrialists as well as their adversaries.  New technology, the conflict between capital and labor, economics, management of natural resources and the progression of civil rights are explored.

Designed for the non-reading and possibly motor-impaired  student, academic clubs aim to build on children’s strengths.  

Students with learning disabilities are often disorganized, but they can also be very creative, visual thinkers.  They frequently show a talent for making quick connections between disparate concepts and ideas.

The academic club provides order and structure: the way the room is entered, the seating arrangement, the ritualistic opening ceremony, the activities presented, the formal dismissal.

LSW feels that this total environmental approach envelops a child in a number of topics and, by using all five senses, helps him or her amass a storehouse of information.

Furthermore, since students with learning disabilities are often passive learners, instead of offering lectures the clubs allow a child to become an active part of each topic studied. 

The content of LSW’s club activities is highly academic.

Using a panoply of art forms students learn history, geography, civics, archaeology, literature and economics.

Participants risk trying new skills and foster a tightly knit group dynamic by developing passwords, routines and rituals.  This learning is total immersion – multi-sensory and project-based.

Terminology

The word club was chosen carefully.  It implies membership, belonging and ownership.  Clubs are groups where each person has a recognized place.  There is room for individualization built into group activities in a club. 

LSW feels that a club is non-compartmentalized – arts, subject matter, concepts and  ideas all bear on one another; they reinforce one another and funnel toward the same objectives, while the children are immersed in their play. 

The word leader is used instead of  ”teacher.”   “Leader” reflects the experiential nature of the academic club environment, where   children are given active rather than passive learning roles. Leaders act as facilitators of discovery. 

Clear Structure

  • Imaginary identities give each child a specific role and the teacher authentic authority.
  • A decorated entrance door depicts the club’s theme.
  • Specific historical characters/roles are given to students and teachers.
  • Costumes suggest time and place.
  • Passwords, used for entry, convey membership.
  • Total room decorations communicate the club’s topic.
  • An opening ritual marks entry into time and place.
  • A behavior code based on the club’s theme is established.
  • A closing ritual helps students transition to their next activity.

The leader’s role is to help find each child’s path to learning.  Importantly, the dramatic framework provides psychic cover for students who have experienced previous academic failure. 

According to Bicknell,

Just as each plant or animal in an ecosystem occupies a specific environmental niche — its own critical habitat to survive — students with learning disabilities need a highly structured yet pedagogically flexible environment in which to learn how to learn and express their strengths fully.

For the entire article, with much more information about how this rich learning experience is mounted and deployed, see “Learning Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal,” Spring/Summer 2010.  Noel Bicknell’s article is titled The Academic Clubs: Theory to Practice,” pp.85-89.  

Noel Bicknell is in his eleventh year leading Academic Clubs at The Lab School of Washington.  He also coordinates the Academic Club Teaching Service, a training program for schools interested in using the methodology in thier programs.

Become a member of LDA, Learning Disabilities Association of America: http://www.ldaamerica.org or email info@ldaamerica.org.  

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021  or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Help Kids “Tune Into Interesting Words”

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Research has proven that kids need multiple exposures to a word in order to anchor it in long-term memory, and to have it become a spontaneous part of his vocabulary.

From The 2 Sisters Website, The Daily CAFE (www.thedailycafe.com), here are some strategies parents can use at home.

USE THESE STRATEGIES AT HOME

  • Ask your child about words collected from books at school.   Explain about “tuning in” to interesting words as they come up.  Create a family word collector for home.  Hang it on the refrigerator, or some place central to family life.
  • When your child is reading (or being read to), ask him to find three interesting words.  Have him write them down.  Talk about the meaning.  See if anyone in the family is able to use the words in a sentence.  Add these words to your family word collector.
  • Encourage your child to find interesting words when watching TV or from daily conversation.  When tuning in to an interesting word, help him understand it.  Then add it to the family word collector.
  • Modeling is always the best way to spark interest in children.  When you are reading a magazine, newspaper or book, let your child see you “tuning in to an interesting word.”   Discuss your word with him.  Explain that adults tune into words, too, and build understanding just the same way they do.

source: The 2 Sisters Website The Daily CAFE, at www.thedailycafe.com, where you will find teaching tips from successful, experienced teachers.

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021   or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Asking Questions: Types, Structure, Leading a Discussion

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From YouthLearn.org, a technology, media & project-based learning site, here are some thoughts about inquiry-based learning.  http://www.youthlearn.org

Three Types of Questions

  • Factual — Only one correct answer (“What did you eat this morning?”)  They can be complicated, though (“What makes a curve ball curve?”).  Factual questions make the best inquiry-based projects — but they must be answerable, and they must have room for exploration.
  • Interpretive — More than one possible answer, but they must be supported with evidence. (“Why did Ahab chase Moby Dick?)  Answers aren’t wrong unless they have no relationship to the text at all.  Interpretive questions that build on each other are important for any type of text (video, fiction, non-fiction, a painting, poetry, etc).   They’re especially good for stimulating a look back at the text.  Such questions are excellent for discussions and as prompts for oral and written language exercises.  They lead to good inquiry-based learning projects.
  • Evaluative – Have no right or wrong answers, since they ask for some kind of opinion, belief or point of view.  Since answers depend on prior knowledge and experience, they are good ways to lead discussions (“What  woud be a good place to take kids for a field trip?”) or explore books or other artistic works (“Do you agree with Ahab’s views on whales?”)  Note:  they rarely make good inquiry-based projects since they are internally focused.  But they can be a great way to connect with and elicit interaction from young or shy students (“Who’s your favorite Pokemon?”)

The Structure of Questions

In general, say the folks at YouthLearn, start a question with the WH questions: who, what, when, where, why

Be honest: how many times do you begin a question with “Tell me…” or “Describe for me…”?

When you frame a question that way, you take control of the learning process because you’re giving a command as well as asking for input.

When you ask a question, the most important thing is generating a true and honest curiosity about the answer.  So open-ended questions are best unless you have a particular reason for leading someone to a specific conclusion  — or need a fact supplied to you.

Try to avoid yes-no questions.  They’re usually a dead-end. 

Open-ended questions…

  • invite opinions, thoughts and feelings
  • encourage participation
  • establish rapport
  • stimulate discussion
  • maintain balance between facilitator and participant

 Try playing “The Question Game”

To begin, two participants decide on a topic to question.  One person starts with an open-ended question, then the other responds with a related open ended question.  This goes back and forth as long as they can continue without making a statement or repeating a previous question. 

For example, the topic might be an object in the room, a light bulb.

A:   Why is it important to have light?

B:   Where does light come from?

A:   How does light help people?

B:   Where is light used?  

A:   What would happen if there were no light?

Try asking a question and going around the room, each person asking a question based on the one before.

Leading a Discussion

Good learning programs involve everyone in planning and activities — whether it’s a discussion among your team about goals or a brainstorming session among kids planning a video project. 

Some Good Ground Rules for Leading a Discussion

  • Everyone prepared — This might mean everyone has received handouts or that the story for discussion has been read aloud.  
  • Know your purpose — Is the goal to arrive at a decision or just to brainstorm possible ideas to be followed up later?
  • Opinions must be supported by evidence — If you’re discussing a book, ask follow-up questions about why the student believes what she does.
  • Leader just asks  – Leader does not answer questions.
  • Care about each of your questions — Avoid generic questions; prepare in advance.
  • Maintain high energy level — Enthusiasm is contagious!
  • Be spontaneous sometimes — interpretive questions are an important part of all discussions.  Advance prep actually leads to better spontaneous questions.
  • Allow questions to lead to other questions — Be aware of practical and logistical issues (e.g. time limits) but never squelch enthusiasm when kids are on a roll.
  • Use techniques when possible/appropriate – For example, mapping can provide a conceptual, visual structure to the ideas you’re hearing.  Let people see you writing their thoughts and ideas on the map.

Visit the YouthLearn site:  http://www.youthlearn.org .  

Created by the Morino Institute , it is now led by Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC).  YourthLearn.org  provides the assistance you need to start or strengthen both after-school and in-school programs. 

My source was The 2 Sisters Newsletter  at www.thedailycafe.com

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021   or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com   

+ Skills That Support Comprehension: Getting to The “Situation Model”

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The entire issue of IDA’s Spring issue of “Perspectives” is dedicated to comprehension.

An article by Kate Cain, “Making Sense of Text: Skills That Support Comprehension and Its Development,” focuses not on accurate and efficient word recognition, but on comprehension of text.

What is Comprehension?

Cain offers a short text:  

James went to the beach for a picnic with his friends.  He trod on some broken glass.  His friends took him to the hospital.

To understand this text, Cain reminds us, a reader must retrieve the meanings of the individual words and combine them into phrases and sentences. 

This leads to a representation in which specific word meanings and the syntactic form of sentences are retained; such a representation is not stored for any long period of time unless the precise wording is important, as in a joke.

But if a person is reading for meaning, he must go beyond surface representation.  He has to construct a representation that relates the ideas and concepts expressed in separate clauses and sentences. 

The pronoun “he” refers back to James, for example, and links the sentences, enabling their meanings to be integrated.  This is called “local coherence.”

But this isn’t always sufficient; to understand the concepts and information contained in the text we need to know why James went to the hospital.  Oh… James cut his foot on the glass.

By establishing how the ideas fit together as a whole, the reader achieves “global coherence.”

And so he now has, not a description of the text itself, but a representation of the situation.  We call this a “situation model.” 

Such meaning-based representations are lasting.  They can be retrieved several days after the information was presented. 

And — they are not unique to reading comprehension:  they also apply to the successful comprehending of spoken laanguage.

Learning to Read Isn’t An End in Itself

The process of comprehending text is dynamic and interactive. 

It involves several sources of information and knowledge.  These sources include:

  • information provided by the writer;
  • the reader’s linguistic, pragmatic and world knowledge;
  • and the reader’s memory for  text that has been read thus far (the “situation model”).

The “situation model” provides the context for interpreting subsequent words, phrases and events.  The second sentence of our text might have read, “He ate a peanut butter sandwich.”   In that case we could infer an allergic reaction.

Kids With Reading Comprehension Difficulties

Approximately ten percent of young readers acquire age-appropriate word reading skills, but don’t develop the commensurate reading comprehension skills. 

They’re unexpectedly poor comprehenders.  ( And, remember, these children’s listening comprehension is also poor.)

Such poor comprehenders have weaknesses on the many language and cognitive tasks that influence their ability to construct a situation model of a text’s meaning. 

Some of these children do have weak semantic and syntactic skills. 

Some, however, have problems processing the text and can’t construct a situation model, which involves

  • integration and inference,
  • comprehension monitoring and
  • knowledge and use of text structure [macrostructure]. 

Integration and Inference

 Integration and inference-making are necessary for good text comprehension.  A reader must integrate meanings across sentences.  Kids with poor reading comprehension are not able to do that.   And they can’t  generate inferences, combining text information with their general knowledge of the world.

Comprehension Monitoring

Skillful readers monitor their comprehension as they read.  They are able to notice when when their “situation model” needs them to do additional processing, or rereading, or if an inference needs to be made.  (This is called “metacognition:” watching your brain at work.) 

But less skillful readers are not able to monitor their own comprehension.  They fail to notice if two lines in a text state contradictory information.

Knowledge and Use of Text Structure

A good reader also needs to understand text macrostructure.  “Macrostructure” awareness provides a framework for the identification and integration of important information. 

Narrative texts, for example, typically comprise a goal-directed, causally related sequence of events.

A common method used to assess whether a child has the ability to recognize and apply narrative text structure is to get children to produce their own stories. 

When a child is asked to tell a story about a general topic, for example “the vacation,” a poor comprehender will produce a poorly structured  story.  It tends to be made up of lists of events with no obvious goal.  (Performance does improve when picture sequences and informative goal-directed titles are used as prompts.)

By contrast, good comprehenders are more likely to produce narratives with a clear causal structure, in which events happen for a reason and characters develop goal plans to achieve aims. 

Memory

Of course text comprehension and the skills that support it are dependent on memory. 

Short term memory enables the reader (or listener) to store and recall short pieces of information.  It is useful for processing long or complexly structured sentences.  

Although short-term memory is often poor in children with word reading difficulties, a child with good word reading but poor comprehension will typically do well on measures of short term memory.

Working memory refers to the type of memory involved in the simultaneous processing and storage of information, and many comprehension processes rely on it.   For example, the integration of two sentences means a child must hold on to the meaning of one sentence as he reads another sentence.

 Text Processing and Memory

Children with poor comprehension have deficits in the three skills that  directly contribute to the construction of a situation model.  As we said before, these are integration and inference, comprehension monitoring, knowledge and use of story structure.

Research suggests that poor comprehension on these tasks may be due to working memory limitations.

For example, poor comprehenders are particularly bad at spotting inconsistencies in text, especially when several lines of text separate the two contradictory sentences. 

When this happens, a reader can only notice that something does not make sense if it’s possible to integrate information he has just read with his existing situation model in its entirety, rather than simply paying attention to the previous sentence.

Which Skills Drive the Development of Reading   Comprehension?

Kate Cain and Jane Oakhill tracked the development of reading comprehension in young readers.  They explored how skills that support the construction of situation models influence comprehension development.

They found that word-reading development requires different skills from those required for reading-comprehension development. 

Word reading ability comes about through verbal skillfulness, vocabulary, and phonological processing.  Verbal ability and vocabulary knowledge are also important predictors of later reading comprehension, they found. 

The three major text processing skills were each important predictors of a child’s level of reading comprehension at age eleven.

At each time point in their study, the researchers observed that working memory was related to reading comprehension and those three text processing skills.  

Wider Consequences of Poor Comprehension

Dyslexic children experience reading difficulties all through life.  Reading comprehension problems also do not disappear with age, say experts.

Poor comprehension may also have an impact on language and literacy development.  

Children who fail to understand adequately what they read probably won’t have the motivation to read in their free time.  As a result, they will get less practice in word reading and comprehension than their peers; they will have fewer opportunities to acquire new vocabulary and knowledge.  Their vocabulary development will suffer over time. 

Poor comprehension skills  will impair the ability to learn more generally.  The consequences of unremediated reading comprehension difficulties  extends beyond literacy skills — as test results in math and science have shown.

Implications for Teaching

 When children have unexpectedly poor reading comprehension, they have difficulties with the skills needed to contruct the meaning-based representation of a text.

These difficulties are not restricted to text;  as we said, these students also have listening comprehension problems. 

Such students will certainly require targeted interventions to remediate their comprehension difficulties.

How to Spot a Poor Comprehender

Although children with unexpected comprehension difficulties may comprise about ten percent of school population,  they are rarely noticed by their teachers. 

It’s easy to detect a child with word reading problems, because they clearly read slowly and inaccurately.

But children with unexpectedly poor comprehension may go unnoticed by teachers, and also by parents, because their accurate and fluent word reading skills are hiding their difficulties.

These comprehension difficulties become apparent only when those children are asked questions about texts that require more than recall of simple facts.  For example, in order to answer the question, “Why did James go to the hospital?”  a reader must generate an inference.

Poor comprehenders also produce poorly structured written and oral narratives.  Ask them to tell a story or relate an event.

What Should Be Taught?

Direct instruction in text processing skills helps students with the development of comprehension.  Also effective: teaching children to summarize what has been read so far, and teaching them how to generate questions to check their understanding. 

Clue words: poor comprehenders  have also been successfully taught how to make inferences from “clue” words.  For example, steam, splash, soap and towel probably indicate a bathroom. 

Significant gains for some students has been achived by a combination of methods: training in both lexical inference and question generation.

Although poor comprehenders demonstrate limited memory capacity, it doesn’t appear that inference training leads to memory gains.  

What may be happening instead is that poor comprehenders learn to compensate by using their memory resources more effectively.

When Should We Teach These Skills?

We’ve long known that the foundation skills for good reading begin before children begin to learn to read.  In a similar way, reading comprehension draws on skills and knowledge that develop before beginning to read.

Preschoolers generate inferences as they strive to understand spoken and televised narratives.  Tiny children are monitoring their own comprehension – they detect when the order of events in a cherished book has been altered. 

So an understanding of narrative develops long before schooling begins, through listening to stories and making sense of events in daily life.  

Nurture this skill  before a child’s reading instruction begins, during storybook times and conversations.

sole source: Kate Cain’s article in the Spring Issue of IDA’s “Perspectives.”  Kate Cain, D.Phil., Sussex University, is a Reader in the Department of Psychology at Lancaster University. 

Her research focuses on the development of language comprehension in children, with a particular interest in the cognitive and language-related skill deficits that lead to comprehension problems. 

She is associate editor for the International Journal of language and Communication Disorders and the Journal of Research in Reading.

Join the International Dyslexia Association (IDA) today — to support its efforts and receive ”Perspectives”  four times a year.   Visit www.interdys.org.

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021   or email   aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Touch Makes Connection Between Letter and Sound

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According to the research team headed by Edouard Gentez at the Laboratory of Psychology and Neurocognition at Grenoble, the sense of touch allows us to make a better connection between sight and hearing, and therefore helps people learn to read.

The results have been published in the journal PloS One.  It is believed that this information should improve learning methods for children learning to read as well as for adults learning foreign languages.

In order to read words we’ve never seen before, we have to learn to associate a visual stimulus (a letter, or grapheme) with its corresponding auditory stimulus (the sound, or phoneme).

When visual stimuli can be explored both auditorily and by touch, adults learn arbitrary associations between auditory and visual stimuli more efficiently.

How did researchers reach this conclusion?

Using a group of thirty French-speaking adults, they compared two learning methods with which the adults had to learn 15 new visual stimuli, inspired by Japanese character, and their 15 corresponding sounds (new auditory stimuli with no associated meaning).

The two methods differed in the senses used to explore the visual stimuli. 

  • The first, “classic,” method used only vision. 
  • The second, “multisensory,” method used touch as well as vision for the perception of the visual stimuli.

After the learning phase, the researchers measured the performances of each adult using different tests. 

The first two tests respectively measured the learning capacity for visual and auditory stimuli using recognition tests.  In a visual test a visual stimulus had to be recognized among 5 new visual stimuli.  In an auditory test, the target had to be recognized among 5 new sounds.

They found all the participants had acquired an above-chance ability to recognize the visual and auditory stimuli using the two methods.

The researchers then went on to test the participants by two other methods, this time to measure the capacity to learn associations between visual and auditory stimuli. 

In the “visual-auditory” test, the subject was presented with a visual stimulus and had to recognize its corresponding sound among five other sounds.  In the “auditory-visual” test, the opposite was done.

The results of this testing showed that the subjects were capable of learning the ssociations with both learning methods, but that their performances were much better using the  “multisensory” learning method.

And when the subjects were given the same tests a week after the learning phase, the results were the same.

These results support those already found by the same team, in work done with young children.  The explication lies in the specific properties of the “haptic” sense (touch, ability to feel the letters) in the hands, which plays a “cementing” role between sight and hearing, favoring the connection between the senses.

What goes on in the brain remains to be explored, as does the neuronal mechanism.  The researchers plan to develop a protocol that will let them use fMRI to watch the brain in action and see which areas of the cortex are activated during “multisensory” learning.

sole source:  article in Science Daily on 3/18/09, “Touch Helps Make the Connection Between Sight and Hearing.”  Edouard Gentez is CNRS researcher at the Laboratoire de Psychologie et Neurocognition in Grenoble/ Universite Pierre Mendes France de Grenoble/Universite de Savoie.   http://sciencedaily.com

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021   or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Orton-Gillingham Academy Spring Conference Offers Math Too

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The Academy of Orton-Gillingham Practitioners and Educators  (AOGPE)  is hosting its Annual Spring Conference, May 1-2, 2009 at Harrah’s Hotel & Conference Center in Las Vegas Nevada.

Topic: The Orton-Gillingham Approach: Empowerment

The conference is directed to teachers, clinicians, children and parents.  

  • The keynote speaker on Saturday will be Dr Drake Duane. 
  • Joyce Stevens will lead a math symposium. 
  • Kay Howells and Jean Osman will present a sesion about teaching written language skills from basic through advanced levels of language. 
  • Phyllis Hutson will lead a grammar symposium.
  • Other notable speakers include Arlene Sonday, Diana King, and Wilson Anderson.

There will be many more informative sessions as well.

Check the academy website at www.ortonacademy.org or call 845-373-8919 beginning in February  for the full brochure.

tutoring in Columbus OH: Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021   or email   aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ Chess as an Education Strategy in Idaho

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In the NY Times, Dylan Loeb McClain writes: 

Once a week, Deborah McCoy, a third-grade teacher in Donnelly, Idaho, unpacks chessboards and pieces and spends an hour teaching her 20 students how to play the game.

Mrs. McCoy does not do this because she is passionate about chess; she barely knew how to play before this school year. But she began teaching it as part of an unusual pilot program under way in more than 100 second- and third-grade classrooms across Idaho.

On Thursday, state officials will announce in Boise that the program will be extended in the fall to all second and third graders — making Idaho the first state to offer a statewide chess curriculum.

The state’s $1.5 billion education budget, passed two weeks ago, includes a guarantee to finance the instruction. Tom Luna, the state’s superintendent of education, said participation by teachers would be voluntary, but if reaction to the pilot program is any measure, interest will be great.

There are no studies showing that teaching chess has benefits for children, but there is anecdotal evidence, Mr. Luna said.

“One of the things that we hear is that too much of what we do is based on rote memorization,” Mr. Luna said. “The part I really like about this program is that kids are thinking ahead.”

Mrs. McCoy said she has been pleased with the results.

“So many kids spend their time plugged into video games, iPods, television and so they are more isolated,” she said. “They learn give and take in chess. There are courtesies that you follow. It has been really beneficial for them.”

Idaho has 40,000 second and third graders, and Mr. Luna estimated the instruction will cost about $200,000 to $250,000 a year, although it could run as much as $600,000 “if everybody jumped on it the first year,” he said. The money is expected to come from reducing administrative expenses in the school system, though state officials said they had not yet identified where the savings would be made.

Idaho is using a curriculum called First Move, which was developed by America’s Foundation for Chess, a nonprofit, Seattle-based organization that promotes teaching chess in school. First Move is now taught to 25,000 students in 18 states, according to Wendi Fischer, the vice president of the foundation.

Rourke O’Brien, the foundation’s president, said the idea to introduce chess into Idaho’s school system arose out of a discussion between Erik Anderson, the foundation’s founder, and Roy Lewis Eiguren, a lawyer and lobbyist who lives in Idaho.

Mr. Anderson and Mr. Eiguren sit on the board of the Avista Corporation, an energy company based in neighboring Washington. After hearing about the benefits of teaching chess, Mr. Eiguren set up a dinner early last year and invited Mr. Luna, Karen McGee, an education-policy adviser to the governor, and three Republican state lawmakers — Representatives Eric Anderson (no relation to Erik Anderson) and Bob Nonini, and Senator John W. Goedde.

The dinner participants agreed to create the pilot program, and Mr. Nonini volunteered to provide $600 of his own money to pay for one of the classrooms in his district for a year, Mr. O’Brien said. The rest of the cost, about $60,000, was paid by the state.

First Move differs from some other chess-in-school programs in that it is taught by classroom teachers and is intended as a curriculum enhancement for second and third graders. It incorporates elements of math, history and vocabulary.

Teachers who wish to use it do not need to know chess. They are trained at seminars over a day or two before the school year starts, and are provided with an instructional DVD, a DVD player, chess sets, boards, online resources and a manual. Every other week, an experienced player is available to answer questions.

Mrs. McCoy said her town was so remote — Donnelly is about a two-hour drive from Boise — that the expert player, Mark Morales, was available only online, but she had found that was adequate. She said it was good for her students to be exposed to a sophisticated game like chess.

“Donnelly is approximately 250 people,” she said. “We are right smack dab in the mountains. Most of our kids live on ranches or in small towns.”

Some of the benefits of the program, Mrs. McCoy said, came in unexpected areas.

“I actually have one student who is originally from Russia and two Hispanic students who have limited English skills, and chess kind of leveled the playing field, and it kind of helped their self-esteem issues,” she said. 

source: This is Dylan Loeb McClain’s article in the NY Times on 3/20/08.  www.nytimes.com

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021   or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com

+ 40 Schools Participate in “U.S. History Schools” Project

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An article in Education Week by Kathleen Kennedy Manzo describes a major nationwide project to push the learning of U.S History.

In this era when the emphasis in schools is on math, reading and science, one organization is trying to ensure that history doesn’t just survive, but flourishes.

Forty “U.S. History Schools,” and 21 affiliates, get resources and academic support from the Gilder Lehrmen Institute of American History.

The schools require participating students to take a U.S. history course each year, in addition to any requisites in world history and other subjects.

The courses emphasize a scholarly approach to the subject, as well as in-depth research and structured projects that challenge students to demonstrate their knowledge.

The New York City-based Gilder Lehrman Institute (www.gilderlehrman.org) provides an extensive online collection for anyone to use of documents and historical images, as well as lesson plans, research guides, podcasts of lectures by prominent historians, and traveling exhibitions.

Many of the network’s schools supplement the curriculum with Saturday courses.

This endeavor began in 1996, when philanthropists Lewis Lehrman and Richard Gilder sought an outlet for promoting history and for sharing their expansive collection of historical documents.

The program now includes a diverse group of schools in cities from Savannah to Milwaukee to Los Angeles.  Some participating school systems, such as the 169,000-student Palm Beach County district, have expanded the program to middle schools.

source: Education Week article by Kathleen Kennedy Manzo on 1/9/08.  www.edweek.org.  Visit the information-rich Gilder Lehrman Institute Web site at www.gilderlehrman.org .

tutoring in Columbus OH:   Adrienne Edwards   614-579-6021   or email  aedwardstutor@columbus.rr.com