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Session Objective. This session will: explore the characteristics and nature of expository text identify the significance of matching readers' abilities and reading materials discuss effective instructional strategies utilizing expository text and materials in the content areas. Reading in the Co
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1. Strategies for Enhancing Expository Text for Diverse Learners Gerlinde Beckers, Ph.D. Earl H. Cheek Jr., Ph.D.
Louisiana State University
2. Session Objective This session will:
explore the characteristics and nature of expository text
identify the significance of matching readers’ abilities and reading materials
discuss effective instructional strategies utilizing expository text and materials in the content areas
3. Reading in the Content Areas There are many factors that contribute to the difficulty of content reading.
What are some factors that you think impact student learning?
5. Role of Content Area Teacher Special Role of English Teacher
Comprehension and study skills, and advanced word recognition skills
Specialist vs. Content Teacher
Generalization of strategies across content areas
Making Better use of time
Content area literacy skills save time
Allotted time vs. engaged time
“Down time is bad time” behavior problems
6. Assessing Content Area Texts Knowing the demands made by a particular subject matter text, teachers are in a better position to help students comprehend material in that area
Because texts are a key element in most content area classes and can make a significant difference in students’ learning they should be carefully assessed
7. Objective Measures to Estimate Readability Syllable Formulas:
Fry Readability Graph: is one of the most popular, measures sentence length and number of syllables in a word. Directions:
Randomly select 3 - 100 word passages
Plot average number of syllables
Plot average number of sentences
Flesch-Kincaid formula: found in Microsoft Word, measures sentence length and number of syllables in a word.
9. Flesch-KincaidHigher scores indicate material that is easier to read Lower numbers mark harder-to-read passages90-100 Average 5th grade60-70 8th – 9th grade0-30 College Level
10. Vocabulary
11. Selecting Words to be Taught Ask, “What do I want my students to learn?” lesson objective, benchmarks, standards, grade-level expectations
Present only 7 or 8 words at one time
Focus on high priority words and teach to a conceptual level
Other, less important, less frequently appearing words might be taught to a definitional level.
12. Estimating Students’ Vocabulary continued Stahl (1986) Describes three degrees of word knowledge
Definitional knowledge means that the student can tell what a word means
Contextual knowledge requires understanding the core concept the word represents and how that concept is changed in different contexts (required before comprehension is fostered)
Generative knowledge “Oh! That's like ..." It's the process of constructing links between new and old knowledge, It is required before words become part of our expressive, speaking and writing vocabularies
13. Estimating Students’ Vocabulary Important prerequisite for building vocabulary
Dale and O’Rourke (1971) Four Stages:
I never saw it before
I’ve heard of it, but I don’t know what is means
I recognize it in context – has something to do with
I know it
Knowledge Rating Scale
16. Vocabulary Strategies
17. Feature Analysis - Category Planets
18. Key Word Approach Students create images to help them associate a meaning with a new word
Fold index card in half, word on outside , picture on the inside
How effective is the key word approach? Jones, Levin, Levin, & Beitzel, (2000), students who used the key word approach learned almost twice as many words as those a conceptual sentence composing approach
19. What is the meaning of this word?PNEUMONOULTRAMICROSCOPICSILICOVOLCANOCONIOSIS
20. Used in context Because of his proximity to Mount St. Helens, he contracted pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoco-niosis.
21. Morphemes……. Pneumono – related to the lungs
Ultra – transcending; super
Micro – small
Scopic – related to a viewing instrument
Silico – mineral, silicon
Volcano – eruption in the earth from which molten rock, steam, and dust escapes
Coni (konis) – dust
Osis – referring to a disease condition
22. The answer is… A disease of the lungs caused by habitual inhalation of very fine silicon dust particles.
23. Morphemic Analysis Strategy A morpheme is the smallest unit of language which has an associated meaning
60-70% of words contain morphemic units or clues
Two types
Free morphemes can function as a word
“ some” or “thing”
Bound morphemes are those units that occur only as attachments, prefixes, suffices, or roots
“tele,” “er,” “cide”
24. Morphemic Analysis Example
25. Where can I find these prefixes, suffixes, and root words to teach?
www.wordinfo.info
---click index for
a list of all Greek
and Latin sources
28. List-Group-Label A brainstorming technique in which students tell what they know about a topic and organize that information
Steps:
Write topic
Student tell what the topic makes them think about
List all the responses
Categorize the words into groups of three or more
Label the categories
29. Egypt List
Nile River
Papyrus
Cataract
Mummy
Pharaoh
Pyramids
Hieroglyphics
Rosetta Stone Group
Nile River
Pyramids
Pharaoh
Mummy
Papyrus
Cataract
Hieroglyphics
Rosetta Stone
30. Concept Map A concept map organizes information according to categories but ALSO uses words to show interrelations among concept.
Steps:
1- list key terms or concepts
2- arrange concepts from most general to most specific
3- add linkage words that relationships among their concept
31. Example of a Concept Map
32. Comprehension
33. Causes of Inadequate Comprehension Key technical terms my be unknown or known but used in a unfamiliar manner
Concepts are unfamiliar
Figurative language is misunderstood
Paragraphs organization if difficult to follow
Pronouns and antecedent relationships are unclear
Relationships among paragraphs and sections are not established
34. Causes of Inadequate Comprehension continued… The reader becomes lost in details, key ideas are misinterpreted
The reader has inadequate prior knowledge, or a conflict exists between that knowledge and the text
The reader reads the passage in rapid narrative style instead of careful, analytic fashion
35. Factors Related to Comprehension Schemata – background knowledge
Sensory and Perceptual abilities
Thinking abilities
Word recognition strategies, and
Affective aspects
Attitudes
Motivation
Self-concepts, and
interests
36. Purposes for Reading Enjoyment;
To perfect oral reading performance or use a particular strategy;
To update knowledge about a topic, to link new information to that already known;
To obtain information for an oral or written report to confirm or reject predictions;
To perform an experiment or apply information gained from the text in some other way;
To learn about the structure of a text;
Or to answer specific questions
37. The Role of Metacognition and Comprehension Strategies Metacognition or metacognitive awareness is being conscious of one’ mental processes – literally to think about one’s thinking
Effective comprehension strategies are those used in preparing, organizing, elaboration, rehearsing, and monitoring (metacognition)
Affective comprehension strategies are motivation and interest and the role they play in the construction of meaning.
38. Instruction Comprehension strategy instruction should make use of the student’s own textbooks or trade books
The teacher should:
describe the strategy,
model it.
Provide teacher-guided practice with it, and
provide cooperative and independent practice opportunities.
About one-fifth of each period should be spent on explicit strategy instruction, with rest spent on reading, responding to, analyzing, and discussing materials
39. Comprehension Strategies
40. Interaction of Reader, Reading Situation, and Text
41. Prereading Strategies Activate prior knowledge
Previews
Predicting
Anticipation guides
Purpose questions
Semantic mapping
Writing before reading
42. Semantic Mapping A graphic organizer that uses lines and circles to organize information according to categories
Steps
1 - Announce the topic and invite brainstorming responses
2 – Group and label responses
3 – Discuss and revise the map
4 – Use the map as a reference as they read, revising and adding as needed
44. During Reading Strategies Metacognitive strategies
Does it makes since?
Who or what am I reading about
What is the most important thing about who or what?
Guiding questions
Close procedure
45. Cloze Procedure Steps:
1) instruct the learners to read and supply the words to fill in the blanks
2) have the learners write down the words they use
3) In partners, discuss the word choices they have made
4) encourage the learners to read the text again silently, using the appropriate words
46. Example
47. Innovative Cloze Task Follow these steps to make the cloze task more fun and interesting:
Give each group of students a different page of the book
Make into a cloze passage with space left for an illustration
Assemble them to create a class-made version of the book
Write the names of all the “authors” and provide other book cover information
48. Using PowerPoint Mountains affect the local climate in a region. They change the movement of air masses. Mountains also affect patterns of precipitation. The cloud shows air being forced up over a mountain. As the rising air cools, water vapor in the air condenses to form clouds.
49. Postreading Strategies Postreading strategies help students integrate new information into existing schemata and allow students to elaborate upon learning that has taken place.
Questions
Visual representations
Retelling
Application
50. Frayer Model The Frayer model is a four square graphic organizer that prompts students to analyze the concept (definition and characteristics) and synthesize/apply knowledge by thinking of example and non-examples
Steps:
1 provide a definition
2 list characteristics
3 provide examples and non-examples
52. THIEVES Strategy Expository Text – Taught Explicitly
T: Title
H: Headings
I: Introduction
E: Every first and last sentence in a paragraph
V: Visuals and Vocabulary
E: End-of-Chapter questions
S: Summary
53. Questions? Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested: that is, some books are to be read only in parts, others to be read, but not curiously, and some few to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention. ~ Francis Bacon ~