Автор: Акманова Екатерина Владимировна Должность: учитель английского языка Учебное заведение: ГБОУ гимназия №66 Населённый пункт: город Санкт-Петербург Наименование материала: статья Тема: Developing reading skills Раздел: начальное образование
Составила: Акманова Екатерина Владимировна
Учитель английского языка
ГБОУ гимназия №66, г. Санкт-Петербург
Developing reading skills.
Composing and comprehending: two sides of the same basic process. The
National Assessment of Educational Progress reveals that eighty-five percent of all
thirteen-years-olds
can
correctly
complete
a
multiple
choice
check
on
comprehension,
but
only
fifteen
percent
can
write
an
acceptable
sentence
summarizing the paragraph read.
Such conditions, too frequent in most of today’s schools, stem inevitably
from a failure to recognize that composing and comprehending are process-
oriented thinking skills which are basically interrelated. Our failure to teach
composing and comprehending as process impedes our efforts not only to teach
children to read and write, but our efforts to teach them how to think.
Comprehending is critical because it requires the learner to reconstruct the
structure and meaning of ideas expressed by another writer. To possess an idea that
one is reading about requires competence in regenerating the idea, competence in
learning how to write the ideas of another.
This aspect of the relationship between comprehending and composing
explains Graves and Hansen report early success in their exploratory project
encouraging first grade children to write about their reading ( and to verbalize
about the process) (1982). The relationship and the absence of adequate interaction
about ideas also explains why preschool children learn little from the 5,000 or
more hours they spend watching television (Schramm 1977). Activity without
language does not become experience. The work of Ann Brown and others with
their
studies
of
metacognition
(1977,
1978,
1982),
Duffy
and
Roehler’s
explorations in reading (1981), and Perry Lanier’s work in mathematics at the
Institute
for
Research
on
Teaching,
Michigan
State
University
(1982),
are
demonstrating
how
thinking
about
the
process
of
comprehending,
that
is,
consciously considering the reconstructions that one composes, can enhance the
basic process itself.
The skills required to read science must acquired through reading science.
The skills required in writing science can be learned only by writing science. Basic
reading and writing instruction can provide children with a rudimentary vocabulary
and certain basic skills of literacy, but application to higher levels of processing
requires specialized uses. We have long since learned that unless children are
taught to apply basic comprehension skills to a variety of subject mutters – and
experience guided practice in applying the skills – they will not easily transfer their
skills. Instances of ability, say, to apply academic reading skills to life situations
have been widely reported. See, for example, the Adults Functional Literacy
Project (Murphy 1973).
One reason, of course, is that the skills have unique and particular relevance
to every discipline. Reading for sequence in a short story, for example, is very
different from reading for historical sequence, or reading for sequence in a process
article. Direct attention to skill applications in reading (and writing, too) appears to
be mandatory and is one reason why content area selections must be introduced in
basic reading programs. Restricted only to reading poems, plays, and stories,
children can too easily find their competence restricted to literary activity as well.
In the elementary schools, many lessons designed to develop children’s
reading skills have their origins in basal-reader materials. In addition, some lessons
have
their
beginnings
in
firsthand
experiences.
Working
from
a
common
experience, children dictate sentences that the teacher records; later they read what
they have composed.
The almost exclusive reliance on basal readers and experience charts for
teaching reading skills has an unfortunate outcome. Because stories and poems
predominate in basal reading books and because expository pieces, when included
in these texts, often lack the main and subheads that characterize conceptual and
relational
content,
young
readers
have
little
opportunity
to
develop
an
understanding of how expository prose is structured. Expressed in more technical
terms, they have little opportunity to refine the schemata they hold in their minds
as to how, conceptual and relational content is organized on paper and thus to build
the skills necessary to comprehend lengthy or complex passages.
Even when children draft story charts together and they use these to build
reading skills, the content young writers compose is typically stories, poems, and
paragraph that describe personal experiences. This is equally true when elementary
youngsters
write
independently;
stress
is
on
drafting
stories,
poems,
and
descriptions of firsthand experiences. Only infrequently do children compose on
relational topics from science and social studies. As a result, students have little
opportunity to develop their ability to organize expository content on paper. Yet
this learning basic, for it relates to reading as well as to writing. In learning to
organize informational content for writing, students gain insight into how authors
handle complex ideas on paper; in so doing, they are refining their schemata for
comprehending this kind of content.
This lack of attention to building schemata for interpreting and composing
informational content seems to occur even though study in science and social
studies is part of elementary programs and children read from content area texts as
early as first grade. An analysis of teacher’s guides to science and social studies
text hints at the reason for this lack. Few series suggest ways to encourage young
learners to perceive the structure within which ideas are organized in a chapter, to
gather data systematically based on their comprehension of that structure, and to
organize points gleaned into an original structure for writing.
A basic strategy for introducing students to the structures through which
informational content is expressed in written form is factstorming. Factstorming is
the process in which students randomly call out phrases that come mind on a topic
while scribes record these on chart paper or the chalkboard in the order given. To
be productive, of course, factstorming must be based on a data-gathering activity.
For example, students may view a film or filmstrip or listen to an informational
passage shared orally by their teacher. They may read in several references on the
topic. or they may collect data through a combination of approaches that are part of
unit study. In any event, students must have informational background to bring to
the factstroming.
The next category in the instructional sequence is categorization, or the
systematic organization of facts “stromed”. This can be achieved in several ways,
depending on the sophistication and previous experience of students with the
process. One way is for the teacher to select an item of information laid out on the
board and ask students to locate a second item that is in some way like first.
Students tell how the two items are related, circle them. and locate other items that
share the same relationship, circling them in the same manner. Having developed
one cohesive category of facts in this way, students proceed to organize the
remaining facts into other categories according to shared relationships, indicating
related items by circling them with different colored markers.
Dittoed lists of terms and points “stromed” are helpful when students have
had little experience categorizing. Youngsters factstorm one day, perhaps listening
on a chart points recalled from an informational film viewed or from a series of
paragraphs read. These points are reproduced on a ditto, so that each youngsters
the next day has a copy and can circle related points on it with different colored
crayond.
Once students grouped related points into labeled categories, they can take
the next step - drafting shorts paragraphs based on each of the categories. Again
there
are
several
ways
of
proceeding.
With
youngsters
who
have
had
little
experience drafting informational paragraphs based on one main idea, a good
introductory strategy is teacher-guided group writing. Guiding either the total class
or
a
small
writing
team,
the
teacher
focuses
attention
on
one
category
on
information previously charted and encourages children to compose sentences on
this topic. The teacher or a student scribe records sentences suggested and then
guides the students is revising what they have drafted. The teacher may also ask
students for a general statement to use as a summary at the beginning or the end of
the paragraphs – a topic sentence, so to speak. He or she may ask students to
reorder the sentences drafted so that they flow more logically, to combine two
sentences into one, to substitute a more expressive word for one used, to write
another sentence that supplied added information. In short, children and teacher
together mark over, cross out, insert, reorder, and finally title their paragraph.
Now in small writing teams, students work in the same way with other
categories of information they have charted. If each group drafts a paragraph on a
different subtopic, the result is several titled paragraphs, each on a main idea that
relates to a broader area.
With
sophisticated
students
who
have
had
considerable
experience
composing informational paragraphs based on categorized lists or data charts, of
course the teacher can offer the option of individual writing. Each youngsters
composes a titled paragraph on one category information. Later those who have
drafted paragraphs on the same category can pair off to talk about how they
organized the given points into paragraphs and to help with the editing of each
other’s papers.
Having drafted and edited paragraphs, students can share them by recording
copies on a chart or the chalkboard. Now the task is to decide on the order in which
the individual paragraphs can be combined into a composite report. Students reach
a consensus by talking about possible orders and the advantages and disadvantages
of each.
After students have sequenced their collaborative report, they can talk out
the
content
of
an
introductory
paragraph,
cooperatively
frame
a
beginning
sentence,
and
dictate
several
supporting
sentences
that
can
be
part
of
the
introduction to their report. Again, this work can be handled as a teacher-guided
group writing activity; the teacher asks questions that encourage students to think
of a good beginning sentence and to identify key content that is to follow in the
body of the report. In the same way students can formulate either a summary
paragraph or one that proposes generalizations based on the content included in the
report.
Conclusion:
1. The ability to read silently and rapidly is the ultimate aim.
2. Oral reading is a specific and useful skill but not a major objective;
therefore it is not essential for every pupil to acquire proficiency in it.
3. Oral reading is a useful means in the early stages to train the pupils in the
technique of rapid reading.
4. Oral reading is useful throughout the course for the purpose of intensive
reading in which attention is drawn to vocabulary, idioms and grammatical forms.
5.
Oral reading is an auxiliary speech exercise.
6.
It is the reading aloud of the text and not the oral
reading practice of the pupils that is most important.
7.
Silent
reading
is
a
valuable
form
of
collective
activity and ought to be practiced in class. The class should be
called
upon
(beyond
the
initial
stages)
to
read
a
section
rapidly
and
then
answer
questions
on
the
contents.
This
method forced the slow readers to accelerate their reading
pace.
Progressive stages. As reading is a skill for which the pupil must be trained,
it is advisable to proceed in series of progressive stages with each serving as
preparation for the next. The ultimate aim is free reading by pupil unaided by the
teacher but with the occasional aid of the dictionary. The end, however, need not
also be the means; the early stages may have objectives of their own differing from
that of the ultimate aim.