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Comprehension Instruction: Apprenticing Young Readers in the Art and Science of Reading P. David Pearson Michigan State University
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Michigan State University P. David Pearson - CIERA · for that passage, that skill, and for ... Ask and answer a good question & ... Harm Humans Forests Deserts Cities Wolves Dogs

Apr 05, 2018

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Page 1: Michigan State University P. David Pearson - CIERA · for that passage, that skill, and for ... Ask and answer a good question & ... Harm Humans Forests Deserts Cities Wolves Dogs

Comprehension Instruction:Apprenticing Young Readers inthe Art and Science of Reading

P. David PearsonMichigan State University

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Papers on which my talk is based

&Go to www.ciera.org and find my site&OR access my website directly:

http://ed-web3.educ.msu.edu/pearson/&See working papers:

✍ Linda Fielding and P. David Pearson, BalancingAuthenticity and Strategy Awareness in ComprehensionInstruction (in archives)

✍ Nell Duke and P. David Pearson, Effective Practicesfor Developing Reading Comprehension in press innew edition of What Research Says to the Teacher

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An all too brief history ofcomprehension instruction&Last Turn of the Century

✍ Simple view of reading was dominant/ Comp = Decoding times Listening Comprehension

✍ Teach decoding via the alphabetic approach

✍ Kids could then understand to the degree thattheir knowledge and oral language skillpermitted

✍ The best way to improve comprehension is,therefore, to increase knowledge

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The first paradigm shift

&While the seeds of demise for the alphabeticapproach began in the 1840s, they did notbear fruit till about 1910.

&Two major movements✍ Testing (an outgrowth of the scientific

movement in education)

✍ Silent reading (the transparent evidence fromoral reading was no longer available)

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Developments from 1915-1970

&The expansion of comprehensionassessment✍ Open ended

✍ Multiple choice

&The development of skills to match theassessments and the workbook (1930-1970)

&The final straw (skills managementsystems--codified the skills)

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The Comprehension Revolution:1970-1990&Impact of Chall’s book on early reading

&A gnawing feeling that there was somethingmore to reading than decoding

&Durkin’s embarrassing little study (1978)✍ Some 4,000 minutes of classroom observation

✍ A grand total of 11 minutes devoted tocomprehension instruction

✍ Lots of testing and lots of questioning duringdiscussion

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&New intellectual tools✍ Psycholinguistics

✍ Cognitive Science/ Text analysis

/ Schema theory

&Recycled instructional ideas✍ Direct instruction

✍ Model-guided practice-independent practice

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Gradual release of responsibilityT

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100Student Responsibility

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Attempts to achieve a research-based approach tocomprehension instruction&Determine the skills that are associated with

skilled reading

&In small scale experiments, teach the skills to kidswho do not excel at them and determine whetherlearning them leads to improved comprehensionfor that passage, that skill, and for comprehensionmore generally construed.

&Build a streamlined comprehension curriculum ofmainline skills/strategies

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&By 1985, we had documented the efficacyof a whole set of instructional routines andstrategies…

&But...

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Why did comprehension take aback seat for a decade and a half?&Did not really fit either of the big

movements of the late 80s/early 90s.

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&Whole language found the tradition ofexplicit instruction in comprehensionstrategies a little too “skillsy” in feel.

&Preferred to have comprehension emergefrom genuine encounters with authentic,engaging texts.

&Provide good texts and good assignmentsand it will happen (and if it doesn’t, well atleast . . .)

Resistance from WholeLanguage

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&Does not really fit the zeitgeist of the newphonics renaissance either

&Those who champion phonics first and fasttend to hold a “simple view” of reading✍ Reading Comprehension equals the product of

listening comprehension and decoding prowess

✍ RC = [LC * Dec]

&If you want to build oral language, fine.But comprehension strategies don’t reallymatter

Resistance from the NewPhonics

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We (well at least some of us) seemto be ready for a comprehensionrenaissance&Realization that no matter how important

the code is, it is not the point of reading

&Suspicion that the simple view (RC = LC XDec) will not get us where we want to go

&That we will have to work on strategiesdirectly.

&RC = [(LC x Dec) x CompStrat]

&So how do you design a comprehensioncurriculum?

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What would it take to re-energizeour K-12 comprehensioncurriculum?

&A goal

&A supportive context

&A model

&A comprehensioncurriculum

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&Active

&Purposeful

&Monitor for goalachievement

&Size things up

&Attend selectively

&Revise meaningmodels

&Integrate text with PK

&Infer word meanings

&Evaluate text quality

&Fit strategies to textgenre✍ Plot,setting, character

✍ Evolving summaries

✍ Structuralrepresentations

1. You need a goal: what is anexpert reader

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2. You need a supportiveclassroom context

&Opportunity: large amounts of time for actual textreading

&Authenticity: reading real texts for real reasons

&Range: reading THE range of text genres

&Talk: talking about text, with a teacher and oneanother

&Words: Conceptually driven vocabularydevelopment

&Enabling Skills: solid base of decoding, monitoringand fluency

&Writing: writing texts for others to comprehend

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What that supportive context cando...

Jasmin using all the cues

Video from New StandardsPrimary Literacy Standards

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3. a model: Cognitive apprenticeship

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100Student Responsibility

With any luck, we move this way (----->) over time.But we are always prepared to slide up and down the diagonal.

Gradual Release of Responsibility

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Teacher sliding up and down thescale

Jennifer’s gr 3 class and the finger puppets

Video from New StandardsPrimary Literacy Standards

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4. You need a comprehensioncurriculum: sure fire strategiesand routines/packages.

&Individual Strategies

&Making predictions

&Think-alouds

&Uncovering textstructure

&Summarizing

&Question-generation

&Routines or Packages

&Reciprocal Teaching

&SAIL/TransactionalStrategies Instruction

&Questioning theAuthor

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Reciprocal Teaching

&Premise: teachers who guide students in theacquisition of a routine that can be appliediteratively to text segments help them get toand through texts that would otherwisebaffle them.

&Pick a small set of key strategies and applythem again and again.

&Gradual release of responsibility

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Reciprocal Teaching: Thestrategies&Summarize

&Ask and answer a good question

&Clarify puzzling parts

&Predict the next bit

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The evidence

&Really helps improve comprehension

&Works across the grade levels: K-12

&Pretty easy to apply

&Many regard it as biased toward a✍ Cognitive emphasis

✍ Meaning-is-in-the-text perspective

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Basic Goals1. Using strategies in a flexible and opportunistic

manner (problem-solving).

2. Acquiring strategies while engaged in authenticreading

3. Exploring the strategy environment that is createdby both teacher and student.

4. Broadening strategies to include both cognitiveand interpretive strategies.

Transactional Strategies Instruction

For a full treatment of SAIL, a curricular approach to TSI, seeseveral articles in Elementary School Journal [1992, 94 (2)]

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Basic Components of TSI

Cognitive strategies

& Thinking Aloud

& Constructing images

& Summarizing

& Predicting (priorknowledge activation)

& Questioning

& Clarifying

& Story grammar analysis

& Text structure analysis

Italics = also in ReciprocalTeaching

Interpretive Strategies

& Character Development:Imagining how a character mightfeel; identifying with a character

& Creating themes

& Reading for multiple meanings

& Creating literal/figurativedistinctions

& Looking for a consistent point ofview

& Relating text to personalexperiences

& Relating text to other texts

& Responding to certain text features--point of view, tone, mood

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The evidence for TSI

&Solid evidence of improvement on✍ specific strategies

✍ content of the lessons

✍ more general comprehension

&Used in 1-9, but most of the research in 2-4

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Questioning the author

&Work by Beck, McKeown and colleagues

&Basic premise: Try to get inside theauthor’s head to ask why (s)he might havesaid things the way (s)he did.

&Critical, but within the boundaries of theintended message.

&Basic strategy: Ask questions that goad thereader into questioning the author’s goalsand motives.

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Questioning the Author Goal Candidate Questions

Initiate the discussion • What is the author trying to say?• What is the author’s message?• What is the author talking about?

Help students focus on the author’smessage

• That is what the author says, butwhat does it mean?

Help students link information • How does that connect with whatthe author already told us?

• What information has the authoradded here that connects to or fitsin with ….?

Identify difficulties with the way theauthor has presented information orideas.

• Does that make sense?• Is that said in a clear way?• Did the author explain that clearly?

Why or why not? What’s missing?What do we need to figure out orfind out?

Encourage students to refer to thetext either because they’vemisinterpreted a text statement or tohelp them recognize that they’vemade an inference

• Did the author tell us that?• Did the author give us the answer

to that?

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The evidence for QtA

&Teachers can learn the techniques

&Students double their participation indiscussions

&Students increase their performance onhigher order comprehension and monitoring

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Teacher-Directed Instruction inComprehension Strategies&Some key aspects of strategy instruction

✍ Authenticity of strategies (things that realreaders use)

✍ Demonstration by teachers (what, why, when,and how): making thinking public

✍ Genuine apprenticeships: gradual release ofresponsibility, learning from one another

✍ Authenticity of texts (essential that it be appliedto real texts)

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Teacher-Directed Instruction inComprehension Strategies&Embedding Strategy Instruction in Text

Reading✍ the paradox of generalization: to get strategies

that generalize, we have to focus on theparticular text at hand.

✍ situated cognition: what we have to guide us innew situations are more like precedents thangeneral routines

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The use of visual displays andother “structural” devices.&Why they work

✍ Help students “see” relationships and structure(render the structure of the text transparent)

✍ They carry an implicit syntax (help students seerelationships)

✍ Allow for active “transformation” ofinformation (REpresentation)--a summary yes,but an “interpreted” summary

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Example Visual DisplaysMatrices

Home Food Enemy Communication

Ants Hills Omni Bees Hive Nectar

Termites Wood

Uses:

&Compare/Contrast situations (the economy,politics, and geography of the countries of Africa)

&Successive descriptions of members of a commoncategory (game animals, edible plants)

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Example Visual DisplaysFlow Charts

Uses: Processes, Narratives, Event structures

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Example Visual Displays

Coyotes

FoodHabitats

Relatives

FamousCoyotes

NaturalEnemies Ways to

Help Humans

Ways to Harm Humans

Fore

sts

Deserts

Cities

Wolves

DogsHyenas

Semantic Maps

Uses: just aboutanything: even baskets of facts

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Jennifer’s classroom, gr 3 Japanschemas

Video from New StandardsPrimary Literacy Standards

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The importance of talk about text

Hannah’s classroom-gr 2

Video from New StandardsPrimary Literacy Standards

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Young readers can do more thanwe think

Hannah, gr 1, Ashanti

Video from New StandardsPrimary Literacy Standards

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Just so we remember what it isall about

Alyssa and intertextuality

Video from New StandardsPrimary Literacy Standards

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Summary: Comprehensionimproves when&We support it with other types of instruction

(vocabulary, word identification, fluency,writing)

&We teach strategies and routines explicitly.

&We provide lots of opportunities for justplain reading

&We contextualize it with engagingdiscussions that embrace ideas, feelings, andinsights and clear purposes for reading

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References

& Palincsar, A. S., & Brown, A. L. (1986). Interactive teaching topromote independent learning from text. The ReadingTeacher, 39, 771-777.

& For a full treatment of SAIL, a curricular approach to TSI, seeseveral articles in Elementary School Journal [1992, 94 (2)]

& Isabel L. Beck, Margaret G. McKeown, Rebecca L. Hamilton, andLinda Kucan. (1997). Questioning the Author: An Approach forEnhancing Student Engagement With Text. Newark, DE:Internatiional Reading Association.

& For research on comprehension instruction generally see,Pearson, P. D., Roehler, L., Dole, J., & Duffy, G. (1992).Developing expertise in reading comprehension. In S. J.Samuels & A. E. Farstrup (Eds.), What research says to theteacher (2nd Ed) (pp. 145-199). Newark, DE: InternationalReading Association.