1 / 9

Reading Comprehension Strategies

Reading Comprehension Strategies . What works for students with High Functioning Autism?. Susan Hines. Characteristics of HFA. Do not make connections with others. Are most often visual learners. Tend to be literal and concrete thinkers and have difficulty with abstract ideas.

fineen
Download Presentation

Reading Comprehension Strategies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reading Comprehension Strategies What works for students with High Functioning Autism? Susan Hines

  2. Characteristics of HFA • Do not make connections with others. • Are most often visual learners. • Tend to be literal and concrete thinkers and have difficulty with abstract ideas. • Have difficulty finding or following a pattern or sequence. • Often develops an area of intense interest.

  3. Do not make connections Help the student make connections to text before he reads. Ask questions of your students to assess prior knowledge. Strategies • Complete the K segment of a “KWL” chart. • Complete a Mind Mapping Activity.

  4. Make Connections • “KWL” “K” What do you already know about this topic? What do I predict this will be about? ? • “Mind Mapping” Organize key concepts and vocabulary into a visual map that is a pictorial representation of the topic. Add familiar “landmarks” to help new information fit into current background knowledge.

  5. Graphic Organizersfor Visual Learners

  6. Help with abstract ideas: Anaphoric Cueing • With a fairly short list of anaphora (words that refer to other words) that can be listed on a bookmark  we can teach them when to stop in their reading and what to ask themselves before they move on. • When we read: he, she, they, we, I, you We ask who? • When we read: hers, his, its, theirs, ours, yours We askwhose?

  7. Anaphoric Cueing • When we read: it, that, this, can, do We ask what? • When we read: here, there, come, go We ask where? • When we read: then, before,after We ask when?

  8. Finding Patterns or Sequences • Help students see that stories follow a pattern. • Divide a page into four boxes. • Box One - Setting: where and when the story took place. • Box Two – Characters: identify the main character and one or a couple helper characters. • Box Three – Problem: describe the problem of that story or chapter or draw a picture showing the problem. • Box Four – What Will Happen Next: Describe what will happen next in words or pictures. 

  9. Build on Interest

More Related