Title: Turning Reading Challenges into Reading Successes
1Turning Reading Challenges into Reading Successes
- Janette Klingner
- University of Colorado at Boulder
2What Do We Mean by Evidence-based?
- Instruction should be based on scientific
research evidence about what works. - However, it is essential to find out what works
with whom, by whom, for what purposes, and in
what contexts.
One size does not fit all.
3Evidence-based Literacy Instruction
Includes explicit instruction in phonological
awareness, the alphabetic code, fluency,
vocabulary development, and reading comprehension.
Builds on students prior knowledge, interests,
motivation, and home language. Helps students
make connections.
Includes frequent opportunities to practice
reading with a variety of materials in meaningful
contexts.
4Sample Resources
- CEC Division for Learning Disabilities (DLD)
http//www.teachingld.org/ld_resources/alerts/defa
ult.htm - Francis, D. J., Rivera, M., Lesaux, N., Kieffer,
M., Rivera, H. (2006). Research-based
recommendations for instruction and academic
interventions Practical guidelines for the
education of English language learners. Houston,
TX Center on Instruction. - Klingner, J. K., Vaughn , S., Boardman, A.
(2007). Teaching reading comprehension to
students with learning difficulties. New York
Guilford. - OConnor, R. (2006). Teaching word recognition
Effective strategies for students with learning
difficulties. New York Guilford. - What Works Clearinghouse http//www.whatworks.ed.
gov/
5Phonological Awareness
- Phonological Awareness Training
- Matching
- Oddity detection,
- Same/different judgment,
- Simple production,
- Counting,
- Compound production (Current Practice Alerts
Troia, 2004) - Multiple programs (What Works Clearinghouse)
- DaisyQuest
- Auditory Discrimination in Depth (ADD)/Lindamood
Phonemic Sequencing (LIPS) - Earobics
- Ladders to Literacy for Kindergarten Students
- Stepping Stones to Literacy
6Phonological Awareness and ELLs
- Phonological awareness transfers from L1 to L2.
- Instruction in phonological awareness benefits
ELLs. - Phonological awareness (in English) can present
special challenges to ELLs. - Some phonemes may not be present in the students
native language and, therefore, might be
difficult to distinguish auditorily from similar
sounds. - Sound placement in words differs across
languages. - Phonological tasks with unknown words are more
difficult. - Teachers can help ELLs by finding out which
phonemes exist and do not exist in their native
language and helping them hear new sounds.
7The Alphabetic Principle
- Multiple Approaches (What Works Clearinghouse)
- Reading Recovery
- Corrective Reading
- Early Intervention in Reading
- Fast ForWord
- Kaplan SpellRead
- Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS)
- Read, Write, Type
- Start Making a Reader Today (SMART)
- Success for All
- Voyager Universal Literacy System
- Waterford Early Reading Program
- Wilson Reading System
8Alphabetic Principle, Decoding, and ELLs
- The process of learning to read in English is
faciltated when students are already literate in
their L1 and the orthographic systems of the two
languages are similar it is more challenging
when they are not. - Spanish and English share many similarities
(e.g., the sounds represented by the letters b,
c, d, f, l, m, n, p, q, s, and t). - However, vowels look the same in Spanish and
English but represent different sounds.
Therefore, English vowel sounds and their various
spellings can be very challenging for ELLs. - Unfamiliar phonemes and graphemes make decoding
and spelling difficult. - Not knowing English vocabulary prevents ELLs from
using word meaning to figure out how to read a
word.
9Fluency
- Repeated reading
- Provide opportunities to hear a more expert
reader model fluent, expressive reading - Classwide Peer Tutoring At least 25 studies
support the effectiveness of CWPT (Current
Practice Alerts Maheady, Harper, Mallette, 2003) - Multiple Approaches (What Works Clearinghouse)
- Corrective Reading
- Fluency Formula
- Kaplan SpellRead
- Ladders to Literacy
- Reading Recovery
- SMART
10Fluency and ELLs
- Fluency includes both word recognition and
comprehension - ELLs typically have fewer opportunities to read
aloud in English with feedback - Effective practices
- Opportunities to hear a more expert reader model
fluent, expressive reading (e.g., echo reading,
tape-recordings) - Ensuring students understand text before they
read it - Repeated reading
- Classwide peer tutoring partner reading
11Vocabulary
- Pre-teach critical vocabulary, using explicit
instruction. - Use visuals, diagrams, and concept maps.
- Teach how to
- use prefixes, suffixes, and root words to figure
out word meanings, - use context clues,
- use resources such as dictionaries and
glossaries. - Help students access schema and connect with
their prior knowledge. - Provide multiple and frequent opportunites to
practice.
12Vocabulary and ELLs
- Some ELLs are able to read phonetically (word
calling) yet do not understand what they read. - ELLS begin school knowing fewer English words and
sayings than their peers. - ELLs and English speakers may have different
concepts for the same label. - Words with multiple meanings, anaphora, and
idioms can all cause confusion. - ELLs literate in an L1 that has many cognates
with English have an important resource.
13ACTIVITYRemembering Vocabulary
14Sample Tree Diagram
15Sample Concept Map
Main Category
Animal
CHARACTERISTICS
Has no backbone.
Subordinate Category
Body has 3 parts.
Has 6 or more legs.
Many have wings.
Insect
EXAMPLES
Ants
Spiders
Flies
16Sample Word Map
Example
My cat when she is sleeping in the sun.
Tranquil
Calm
Upset
Synonym
Antonym
Me when I get in trouble.
Non-example
17Semantic Feature Analysis
18Reading Comprehension
- Reading Comprehension Strategies (Current
Practice Alerts Brigham, Berkley, Simpkins,
Brigham, 2007) - Multiple Strategy Approaches
- Reciprocal Teaching (Palincsar Brown, 1984)
- Collaborative Strategic Reading (Klingner
Vaughn, 1998) - Multiple Approaches (What Works Clearinghouse)
- Accelerated Reader
- Early Intervention in Reading
- Failure Free Reading
- Kaplan SpellRead
- PALS
- Reading Recovery
- SMART
19Reading Comprehension and ELLs
- Reading comprehension is a complex process of
constructing meaning by coordinating a number of
skills related to decoding, word reading, and
fluency and the integration of background
knowledge. - Many factors affect the reading comprehension of
ELLs, such as - language proficiency,
- vocabulary knowledge,
- ability to use comprehension strategies,
- differences in text structure,
- culture influences,
- schema.
20Reading Comprehension Strategies
- Typically little attention is paid to teaching
ELLs how to use comprehension strategies, even in
the upper grades, because teachers tend to focus
on word recognition, pronouncing words correctly,
and answering literal comprehension questions. - Teach BEFORE, DURING, and AFTER reading
comprehension strategies. - Provide opportunities for collaboration.
21ACTIVITY
22- Swedes Win!
- Switzerland put one stone in the middle and piled
guards in front of it before Swedish second
Cathrine Lindahl took out two stones with one
shot to get the edge back. With her first stone,
Swiss skip Mirjam Ott curled her rock around a
guard, but it didn't get inside the Swedish rock
that was sitting on the lip of the red 4-foot
circle. Norberg cleared one of the stones away
from the front so she would have a clean shot at
the target, or house, if she needed it. If
Norberg could convert with the hammer, the gold
medal was theirs. They called timeout. The crowd
made some noise. And then it fell quiet again.
Norberg pushed out of the hack and let the rock
slide. It bounced first off one yellow-handled
Swiss rock and then the other, clearing them out
of the scoring zone. As it came to rest in the
white 8-foot circle - alone in the house - the
Swedes celebrated.
23Influence of Schema
- Second language readers better comprehend and
remember passages that either are compatible with
their native cultures or are considered more
familiar. - When texts are inconsistent with the readers
expectations, comprehension is negatively
affected and recall may be distorted. - Activating background knowledge improves
comprehension.
24Prior Knowledge
- Ask students to brainstorm what they already know
about a topic. - Help students make connections between new
content and prior learning. - Help students connect new learning with real
life experiences outside of school. - Provide common experiences that build students
prior knowledge. - Teach using thematic units that help students
build in depth knowledge about a topic. - Use graphic organizers when introducing new
topicsadd info as the unit progresses.
25- Graphic Organizers (Current Practice Alerts
Ellis Howard, 2007)
26Motivation
- Snow, Burns, and Griffin (1998) emphasized the
importance of motivation in the precursor to the
National Reading Panel report, Preventing
Reading Difficulties in Young Children, noting
that motivation is crucial. - To promote motivation, include
- opportunities for social interaction and
collaborative learning - choices about reading materials and tasks
- independent reading activities that are
purposeful and a good reader-text match - instruction that is at an appropriate level and
provides students with many opportunites for
success and - meaningful, interesting, engaging tasks that
connect with outside-of-school experiences.
27Factors that Influence Learning to Read for
English Language Learners
Learning context
Reading skills in L1 L2
Teachers skills behaviors
Oral proficiency in L1 L2
Instructional practices
28The Relationship b/w Oral Proficiency and
Second-Language Reading
- L2 oral proficiency and L2 reading are positively
related, particularly at higher grade levelsthe
best predictor of English reading in grades 3
through 5 may be L1 reading ability, but in
grades 6 through 8 the best predictor may be oral
English proficiency. - ELLs need some knowledge of English before they
can successfully draw on L1 reading abilities
when reading in English. - There seems to be a reciprocal relationship
between oral proficiency and reading achievement,
with instruction in L2 reading comprehension
facilitating gains in L2 oral skills.
29Factors that Influence Learning to Read for
English Language Learners
Learning context
Reading skills in L1 L2
Teachers skills behaviors
Oral proficiency in L1 L2
Instructional practices
30Understanding Bilingual Students' Cognitive
Reading Processes
- Concepts learned in ones first language transfer
to English when the appropriate English
vocabulary is learned. - Native language literacy instruction promotes
literacy in English.
Common Underlying Language Proficiency
31Differences b/w Second Language Readers and
Native English Readers
- Translation, cognate awareness, and information
transfer across languages are strategies unique
to bilingual reading. - Unknown vocabulary is an obstacle for bilingual
readers in a way that it is not for the
monolingual reader. - Good second-language readers focus much more on
word meaning than do good monolingual readers. - Cohesive signals (e.g., referents such as them
or it) are more problematic for second language
readers.
32Differences b/w More and Less Proficient Second
Language Readers
- Proficient bilingual readers differ from
marginally proficient or struggling bilingual
readers. They - actively transfer information across languages,
- translate from one language to another,
- access cognates,
- use more schematic knowledge,
- use a greater variety of metacognitive and
cognitive strategies and use them more
frequently, - take more action on plans to solve breakdowns in
comprehension and check their solutions more
often, and - make better and/or more inferences.
33Factors that Influence Learning to Read for
English Language Learners
Learning context
Reading skills in L1 L2
Teachers skills behaviors
Oral proficiency in L1 L2
Instructional practices
34Contexts for Literacy Instruction
- We can close the achievement gap for culturally
and linguistically diverse students by changing
their learning contexts (Alvermann, 2005). - Culturally and linguistically diverse students
are more likely to excel academically when - they are provided access to high quality
teachers, programs, curricula, and resources - they are taught with the most effective
practices and - their culture, language, heritage, and
experiences are valued and used to facilitate
their learning and development--every learner
brings a valid language and culture to the
instructional context.
35Factors that Influence Learning to Read for
English Language Learners
Learning context
Reading skills in L1 L2
Teachers skills behaviors
Oral proficiency in L1 L2
Instructional practices
36Teachers of ELL Students Need to Know
- Instructional strategies linked to academic
growth for culturally and linguistically diverse
students - The language acquisition process and the unique
needs of ELLs - Assessment procedures for monitoring progress,
particularly in language and literacy - How to differentiate instruction for students who
do not seem to be responding
37Factors that Influence Learning to Read for
English Language Learners
Learning context
Reading skills in L1 L2
Teachers skills behaviors
Oral proficiency in L1 L2
Instructional practices
38Oral Language and ELLs
- Optimal programs for ELLs include a focus on oral
English language development. - ELLs benefit from frequent opportunities to
engage in structured, supported, academic talk. - This focus on oral language development includes
not only vocabulary, but also common language
structures. - When students oral language improves, so do
their reading fluency and comprehension.
39Response to Intervention A Three-tiered Model
- Intensive assistance,
- as part of
- general education
- support system
Research-based instruction in general education
classroom
40 2nd Tier
- Intensive support that supplements the core
curriculum and is based on student needs as
identified through screening, progress
monitoring, and other means by a problem-solving
or intervention team. - Only for those students who differ from their
true peers in rate and level of learning. - Support is provided as part of general education.
41Characteristics of Effective Interventions
- Timely
- Intensive
- Explicit
- Systematic
- Includes many opportunities for guided practice,
with effective error correction procedures and
immediate positive feedback - Guided by data on student progress
- Motivating, engaging, and supportivea positive
atmosphere is essential
42Tier 1 Examples
- Note All examples are from real classrooms with
English language learners, most at beginning
levels of English proficiency.
43- Students are seated in a circle on the alphabet
rug. Teacher asks them to stand up, and says,
Lets do the alphabet rap song. Teacher begins
to rap and makes motions with her hands to
symbolize sound-letter correspondence. Sings
A-Alley, B-Bubba, C-Catina, D-Deedee Students
are trying to mimic the teacher, however, they
are falling behind. Students are not
understanding this--the teacher is going too
fast. Teacher says, Lets try it one more
time. More and more students are falling behind
to the point where the majority are just looking
around and bumping into each other. They look
like bumper cars. These students cannot keep up
with the song and hand motions. Teacher, S is
for Sammy Snake (making a slithering motion)... V
is for Vinny Vampire (motioning with her hands to
her mouth that she had vampire fangs).W is
Willie Weasel. (Orosco, 2007)
44- The whole Class is sitting in a circle (on the
A-B-C rug), with the teacher seated at the head.
Teacher says, Yesterday, how many of you knew
your sight words? One student speaks out, One?
Another, Three? Teacher replies, You are
right. Three students were able to tell me their
sight words. We need to practice these words we
are really behind. Every one of you should know
these sight words by now. You need to practice
these at home. Dont you practice these at
home? Teacher says this with frustration in her
face and voice. Teacher states, Only those 3
students will be able to pull from the treasure
chest. Teacher begins sight words practice
and holds up index cards with-Big, My, See, Like,
I, At, This, And, Up, Have, Too. Students repeat
sight words as Teacher holds up index cards. This
is a repetitive process. She then holds up the
word Big without saying anything. One student
says the word Big. She holds up a another.
See. The same student says the word again. She
holds up the word see again and tells the
student who knew the previous answer not to say
anything. Pause. Another says see. She
continues to go through this process with all the
words, and says, Okay guys, you need to practice
these at home, you are not paying attention, you
should have known these words by now. (Orosco,
2007)
45Tier 2 Example
- The literacy teacher provides Tier 2
interventions. The following excerpt finds the
literacy teacher reinforcing a previous literacy
lesson that this homeroom teacher had started on
Zebras.
46- Literacy teacher This book is called Zebra
Play. She starts singing, One little Zebra went
out to play, on the savanna one fine day. (He)
had such enormous fun. He asked another zebra to
come. Literacy teacher prompts one student to
take off running like a Zebra. One student runs
around the classroom (acting like a zebra).
Literacy specialist picks another student to do
the same. She then picks another and so forth.
Literacy teacher is doing choral singing of
Zebra Play as students run around the
classroom. They grew tired as they ran around.
Therefore, they all lay down Students are
running around however, they are not singing or
chanting the Zebra Play they are just playing
and running into each other.
47- Are the teachers implementing evidence-based
instruction? Why do you think this? - What do you conclude about these students
opportunity to learn? - What would you do?
48Selected References
- August, D. Shanahan, T. (2006). Developing
literacy in second-language learners Report of
the National Literacy Panel on language-minority
children and youth. Mahwah, NJ Lawrence Erlbaum. - Echevarria, J., Graves, A. (2006). Sheltered
content instruction Teaching English-language
learners with diverse abilities. Boston Allyn
and Bacon. - Fitzgerald, J. (1995). English-as-a-second-languag
e learners cognitive reading processes A review
of research in the United States. Review of
Educational Research, 65, 145-190. - Francis, D. J., Rivera, M., Lesaux, N., Kieffer,
M., Rivera, H. (2006). Research-based
recommendations for instruction and academic
interventions Practical guidelines for the
education of English language learners. Houston,
TX Center on Instruction. - Hoover, J., Klingner, J. K., Baca, L., Patton,
J. (2007). Methods for teaching culturally and
linguistically diverse exceptional learners.
Upper Saddle River, NJ Merrill/Prentice Hall. - Klingner, J. K., Vaughn, S. (2004). Strategies
for struggling second-language readers. In T. L.
Jetton J. A. Dole (Eds.), Adolescent Literacy
Research and Practice (pp. 183-209). New York
Guilford.
49Collaborative StrategicReading
50CSR Teachers Views
- "CSR is an excellent technique for teaching
students reading comprehension and building
vocabulary and also working together
cooperatively. I think it is wonderful. We have
been using it with the science text and it's
turned out beautifully (Lucille Sullivan, 5th
grade teacher)." - CSR is great for kids with LD because they
contribute to their groups and feel successful,
and they get the help they need with their
reading (Sallie Gotch, Inclusion Specialist).
51- When the Miami-Dade County Public Schools
Language Arts Director observed CSR for the first
time, she said excitedly - You have worked out all the kinks. Reciprocal
Teaching, as great as it is, just seemed too
challenging to implement with an entire class.
But youve figured out how to make it work. I
love it. If the superintendent were to say that
starting tomorrow every teacher in M-DCPS would
have to implement CSR in order to keep their job
in this district, I would jump up and down and
shout hallelujah!
52ACTIVITY
53Por que es importante enseñar estrategias de
comprensión?
- Las Estrategias de Comprensión reflejan los
procesos o tácticas mentales utilizados por
lectores de gran habilidad cuando están
activamente envueltos con el texto. La
instrucción de las estrategias de comprensión
está basada en la premisa de que aún los
estudiantes que tienen dificultades entendiendo
el texto se les puede enseñar con éxito a aplicar
las estrategias usadas por los lectores de gran
habilidad, y de que cuando los lectores que
tienen dificultades aprenden a aplicar estás
estrategias, su comprensión de la lectura
mejorará. Las estrategias de comprensión
benefician a todos los lectores, pero son
esenciales para los estudiantes con problemas del
aprendizaje.
54Collaborative Strategic Reading
- Collaborative Strategic Reading (CSR) combines
cooperative learning (e.g., Johnson Johnson,
1989) and reading comprehension strategy
instruction (e.g., Palincsar Brown, 1984). - CSR was designed to promote content learning,
language acquisition, and reading comprehension
in diverse classrooms that include English
language learners and students with learning
disabilities (Klingner, Vaughn, Schumm, 1998).
55CSR Goals
- To increase conceptual learning and the
acquisition of content knowledge in ways that
maximize students' involvement. - To enhance reading comprehension skills for all
students and particularly those with learning
disabilities or at-risk for reading difficulties. - To provide access to the general education
curriculum.
56CSR Overview
- Students of mixed achievement levels apply
comprehension strategies while reading content
area text in small cooperative groups. - Initially, the teacher presents the strategies
(preview, click and clunk, get the gist, and wrap
up) to the whole class using modeling, role
playing, and teacher think-alouds. - After students have developed proficiency
applying the strategies through
teacher-facilitated activities, they are then
divided into heterogeneous groups where each
student performs a defined role as students
collaboratively implement the strategies.
57CSRs PLAN for STRATEGIC READING
DURING READING
Click Clunk
BEFORE READING
AFTER READING
1. Were there any parts that were hard to
understand (clunks)? 2. How can we fix the
clunks? Use fix-up strategies a) Reread the
sentence and look for key ideas to help you
understand. b) Reread the sentences before and
after looking for clues. c) Look for a prefix or
suffix in the word. d) Break the word apart and
look for smaller words.
Preview
1. BRAINSTORM What do we already know about the
topic? 2. PREDICT What do we predict we will
learn about the topic when we read the passage?
Wrap Up
1. ASK QUESTIONS What questions check whether we
understand the most important information in the
passage? Can we answer the questions? 2.
REVIEW What did we learn?
Get the Gist
1. What is the most important person, place, or
thing? 2. What is the most important idea about
the person, place, or thing?
58CSR Previewing
- Students preview the entire passage prior to
reading each section. The goals of previewing
are - For students to learn as much about a passage as
they can in a brief period of time. - To activate students background knowledge about
the topic. - To help students make predictions about what they
will learn. - To motivate students interest in the topic and
to engage them in active reading from the onset.
59CSR Click and Clunk
- Students click and clunk while reading each
section of the passage. The goals of clicking
and clunking are - For students to monitor their reading
comprehension. - To identify when they have breakdowns in
understanding (clunks). - To use fix-up strategies to figure out clunks
- Reread the sentence without the word. Think
about what would make sense. - Reread the sentence with the clunk and the
sentences before or after the clunk looking for
clues. - Look for a prefix or suffix in the word.
- Break the word apart and look for smaller words
you know
60Examples Fixing Clunks
- Sylvia Pads.
- Marcos Pads es . . . clunk expert?
- Carol Read the sentences before or after the
clunk looking for clues. OK. Look at
these bones that have pads of cartilage
between them. It is saying that cartilage
has something that is between them,
something that protects them. OK, it is
something that protects the bone. - Marcos Pads es algo que protege los huesos.
- Carol OK, everybody understand now?
61- Albert Who has a clunk?
- Pablo Calcium.
- Albert Try to read sentences in the back and in
the front to try to get a clue. Think if you
see any sentences in the back or in the front
that can help you. Did you get anything? - Pablo No.
- Albert OK, now I do, I get something. It is a
tiny crystal-like mineral. Do you know what
mineral is? - Pablo Yeah.
- Albert What is it?
- Pablo Its like a kind of vitamin.
- Albert OK, calcium is a type of element that
there is in the bones. And, the bones need that.
Calcium helps the bones in order to make them
strong. Do you now understand what calcium is? - Pablo Yes.
- Albert What is it again, one more time?
- Pablo It is a type of element that helps the
bones grow. - Albert OK, good.
62ACTIVITY
63CLUNK PRACTICE
- Is there a middle ground between an obsession
with aging and an intelligent commitment to a
healthier lifestyle? How much time, money,
energy, and angst should we devote to the fight
against senescence?
64- In Shakespearean drama, both tragic and comic,
the storms and calamities that shake the
sublunary globe are reflections of turmoil in the
hearts of men.
65- Among other preliminary activities, the
prospective groom's party formally inquires as to
the girl's clan-name this is a ritualization of
the taboo on consanguineous marriage.
66- Excess is Mr. King's stock-in-trade, and he has
used his prodigious energies over the years to
soak up vast quantities of material about weird
literature and film Mr. King, who possesses an
enviable superabundance of imagination, suffers
from a less enviable logorrhea. Along with
hundreds of names, relevant and irrelevant - from
Shirley Jackson to Joan Didion, from H.P.
Lovecraft to Ronald McDonald - we are exposed to
thousands of Kingian pronouncements there is
nothing that doesn't elicit an opinion from him -
or a definitive statement.
67CSR Get the Gist
- Get the gist means to find the main idea in a
section of text. The goals of get the gist are
to - Teach students to restate in their own words the
most important point as a way of making sure they
have understood what they have read. - Improve students memory of what they have
learned. - To get the gist, students
- Identify the most important who or what in the
paragraph or section of text they have just read. - State in their own words the most important idea
about the who or what. - Provide the gist in as few words as possible.
68Getting the Gist
- Paul Who would like to get the gist?
- Luis I think it is talking about how the bones
connect together and how they couldnt slide
off. How they could be twisted and not slide
off. - Paul OK, does anybody want to add more to that?
Does anybody have another opinion? Que es tu
opinion? Si quieren agregar algo a lo que el
digo? Que es la idea principal de este pedazito
de lo que leemos? - Luis Bueno, la idea principal de lo que leemos
es de los cartilagos, de los huesos y como se
unen. (OK, the main idea of what we read is
about the cartilage, about the bones and how
they join.) - Paul Muy bien. Frank?
- FrankYo creo que la idea principal es como los
huesos se unen, como ellos se envelven uno a
otros. Como el joint ayuda a los huesos
moverse. (I think the main idea is how the
bones join, how they are involved with each
other. How the joint helps the bones move.)
69Fixing a Clunk Getting the Gist
- Maria Que cosa quiere decir wrinkle? (What does
wrinkle mean?) - Susana Es lo que cubre el cerebrum. (It is what
covers the brain.) - Stan No, es cuando tu tienes que planchar y
tiene arrugas. Son arrugas. (It is when you
have to iron and it has wrinkles. They are
wrinkles.) - Susana OK, can someone get the gist? Gloria?
- Gloria It is talking about the cerebrum and its
surface is like wrinkled and folded.
70ACTIVITY
71Seabirds
- A seabird is any bird that spends most of its
time at sea and depends on the sea and its
islands for all its basic needs. The sea provides
food and its remote islands and rocky
outcroppings provide safe nesting and resting
places. For 60 million years, these highly
specialized diverse birds have adapted to life on
the worlds vast oceans.
72- Who or What
- Seabirds
- Most Important Information
- Seabirds depend on the sea and its islands for
their basic needs. - The sea provides food, resting and nesting
places. - Write the gist in 10 words or less
- Seabirds get what they need from the sea.
- Seabirds depend on the sea for everything they
need.
73- Mount Lassen went off with a bang. The
California volcano erupted in a series of
explosions between 1914 and 1917. It threw out
tons of hot ash, boulders, and melted rock called
lava. The boiling lava melted the snow at the top
of Mount Lassen. It made the earth beneath the
snow turn into mud. The thick mud flowed down the
mountainside like a river. It mowed down miles of
trees in its path and filled meadows with up to
20 feet of mud.
74- Who or What
- Mount Lassen
- Important Information
- The volcano erupted.
- It threw out hot ash, boulders and lava.
- The earth beneath the snow turned to mud.
- The mud flowed down the mountainside.
- The mud mowed down trees and filled the meadows
with mud. - Write the gist in 10 words or less
- Mount Lassen erupted and caused damage.
75The Structure of Chloroplasts
- The cellular organelle where photosynthesis
takes place is called a chloroplast. Chloroplasts
contain chemical compounds called chlorophylls
that give these organelles a green color. When
you observe a plant, all the green parts you see
contain cells with chlorophyll and can carry out
photosynthesis. In most plants, the leaves
contain the most chloroplasts and are the major
sites of photosynthesis.
76- Who or What
- Chloroplasts
- Important Information
- The cellular organelle where photosynthesis takes
place is called a chloroplast. - Chloroplasts contain chlorophyll and carry out
photosynthesis. - Leaves contain the most chloroplasts and sites of
photosynthesis.
77- Write the gist in 10 words or less
- Chloroplasts in cellular organelles contain
chlorophyll that carry out photosynthesis. - Chloroplasts contain the chlorophyll that carry
out photosynthesis. - Leaves have chloroplasts with chlorophyll
molecules to perform photosynthesis.
78CSR Wrap Up
- Wrap Up has 2 parts Question Generation and
Review - Question Generation
- The goals are to improve students knowledge,
understanding, and memory of what was read. - Students use question starters who, what, when ,
where, why, and how (the 5 Ws and an H). - Students ask some questions about information
stated explicitly in the passage and other
questions that require an answer not right in the
passage, but in your head. - Other students try to answer the questions.
- Review
- Students write down the most important ideas they
learned that day in their CSR Learning Logs. - They then take turns sharing their best ideas.
79Questioning during Wrap Up
- Tasha What might happen if your bones did not
contain enough calcium? - Anthony They will break.
- Tasha OK, they will probably break. But can we
add a little bit? - Natalie Well, first of all, what is calcium?
And then we can figure out what it says and how
it helps the bones. - Anthony OK, calcium is something that keeps the
bones healthy and stuff like that. - Natalie Tasha?
- Tasha If you dont have enough calcium the bones
will rot and you will be dead. And, then after
you die you know your bones decay and you turn
into dust. Your bones will like decompose in
your body which will destroy and corrupt. If it
does not have enough calcium, then the bones
will get weak and break. - Luis OK, I would say the same thing because the
bones without calcium are nothing. - Natalie All right, well, we finished this.
80Wrap Up
- Step 1 Generate Questions
- Think of questions and write them in your
Learning Log. - Ask and answer questions.
- Step 2 Review
- Think about what you learned from the reading.
- Write it in your Learning Log.
81Question-Answer Relationships (QAR) Taxonomy of
Questions
Textually Explicit A question whose answer is
stated explicitly in the text. Textually
Implicit A question where the information needed
to answer the question is located in several
sentences or paragraphs. The reader must
integrate this information to generate the
answer. Scriptually Implicit A question whose
answer must be supplied from the readers
background knowledge. The reader needs to
activate a schema or script to generate the
answer (Raphael, 1984).
82Question Answer Relationships Question Types
- Right There - The answer is easy to find in the
reading. The words used to make up the question
and the words used to answer the question are
right there in the same sentence. (Textually
Explicit) - Think and Search - The answer to the question is
in the reading. The answer is made up of
information that comes from more than one
sentence or paragraph. You have to put together
information from different parts of the reading
to find the answer. (Textually Implicit)
83QAR Question Types
- The Author and You - The answer to the question
is not in the reading. Think about what the
author tells you and what you already know.
(Scriptually Implicit) - On My Own - The answer to the question is not in
the reading. You can answer the question by
thinking about what you already know.
(Scriptually Implicit)
(Raphael, 1984)
84Activity
- Held Back Classifying Questions
85Questioning Strategy
- Identify the important ideas in the selection.
- Use these ideas to write questions.
- Start each question with a question word.
- Write different types of questions.
86Modeling CSR
87Paper Six-Pack Rings May Save Animals Lives, by
Fred Berendam/Peter Arnold, Inc.
- Six-packs of soft drinks and juice are often
held together with rings made of plastic. The
plastic rings can cause problems if theyre left
behind by careless people. Animals can get
tangled in the rings. The rings can make it hard
for animals to swim, to eat, or to fly. Sometimes
the animals die. - Now, a new kind of six-pack ring could help save
animals lives. The rings are made of paper.
Birds and other animals can free themselves if
they get tangled in paper rings. And, after a
short time, the rings fall apart, or biodegrade.
Nothing is left to harm the environment.
88CSR Cooperative Group Roles
- Once students are proficient in applying the
comprehension strategies, they are ready to learn
their CSR roles. - Roles are important because cooperative learning
works best when all group members have an
assigned, meaningful task. - Roles should rotate.
- Students can perform more than one role at a
time. - Anyone can be a successful CSR Leader!
89CSR Roles
- Leader Leads the group in the implementation of
CSR by saying what to read or which strategy to
do next. - Clunk Expert Leads the group in trying to figure
out difficult words or concepts. - Gist Expert Guides the group towards the
development of a gist and determines that the
gist contains the most important ideas but no
unnecessary details. - Announcer Calls on different group members to
read or share an idea. Makes sure everyone
participates. - Encourager Watches the group and gives feedback.
Looks for behaviors to praise. Encourages all
group members to participate and assist one
another. - Time Keeper Sets the timer for each portion of
CSR and lets the group know when it is time to
move on. Helps keep the group on task.
90CSR Materials
- CSR Learning Logs
- Clunk Cards
- Click and Clunk Practice Sentences
- Cue Cards
91CSR Learning Log
92CSR Learning Log
Todays Topic_____________________________________
_ Date ____________ Before Reading
After Reading PREVIEW WRAP UP
During Reading CLUNKS
GISTS
93CSR LEADERS CUE CARDS
94Clunk Cards
95CLUNK CARDS FOR THE PRIMARY GRADES
96CSR Reading Materials
- Expository textbooks
- Weekly Reader, Scholastic, or a similar
non-fiction publication
97CSR Teachers Role
- Provide explicit instruction in the CSR
strategies and procedures to students. - Implement CSR 2-3 times a week.
- Once students are working in groups, circulate
and provide ongoing assistance. - Actively listen to students' conversations
- Clarify difficult words
- Model strategy usage
- Provide encouragement
- Conduct whole-class previews and/or wrap ups to
introduce and/or review important concepts. - Conduct follow-up activities.
98Comprehension Instruction Across the Grades
- Use consistent vocabulary for comprehension
strategies, starting in kindergarten. - Help students understand beginning in K that
reading is thinking. - Teach comprehension strategies in K and 1st grade
during whole class activities (e.g., reading Big
Books, trade books). - In 1st, 2nd, and 3rd, teach comprehension
strategies during Guided Reading or during other
small group instruction as well as with whole
class activities. - Once students in 2nd and 3rd grade are proficient
in applying the strategies, you may want to have
them work in pairs before they work in groups.
99ACTIVITY
100Trying Out CSR
- In groups of 4-6, select someone to perform each
of the CSR roles. - Its OK for you to perform more than one role at
a time. - You will read Noise On, Language Off
- The asterisks indicate where each section ends
(so that the article has 3 sections). - I will let you know when to begin.
101- What do you like about CSR?
- What concerns do you have?
- Any questions?
102A few CSR references
- Klingner, J. K., Vaughn, S., Dimino, J., Schumm,
J. S., Bryant, D. (2001). Collaborative
Strategic Reading. Longmont, CO Sopris West. - Klingner, J. K., Vaughn, S., Argüelles, M. E.,
Hughes, M. T., Ahwee, S. (2004). Collaborative
strategic reading Real world lessons from
classroom teachers. Remedial and Special
Education, 25, 291-302. - Klingner, J. K., Vaughn, S. (1999). Promoting
reading comprehension, content learning, and
English acquisition through collaborative
strategic reading (CSR). The Reading Teacher, 52,
738-747. - Klingner, J. K., Vaughn, S. (1998).
Collaborative strategic reading (CSR) Involving
all students in content area learning. Teaching
Exceptional Children, 30, 32-37.
103For more information
- Janette Klingner
- University of Colorado at Boulder
- School of Education
- 249 UCB
- Boulder, CO 80309-0249
- E-mail Janette.Klingner_at_Colorado.EDU