chapter 15 informational
DESCRIPTION
Chapter 15 from Teaching Reading Sourcebook, 2nd editionTRANSCRIPT
Chapter 15: Informational Reading
Teaching Reading Sourcebook 2nd edition
Informational Text Informational or expository text tends to
be more complex, diverse, and challenging than narrative text.
It is important to integrate expository texts in language arts instruction and integrate comprehension into content-area teaching.
Types of informational texts include instructions, brochures, catalogues directions, recipes, manuals, signs magazine and news articles, websites, textbooks
Informational Text Structure
Informational text structures include Description: explains or defines topic or concept Compare-Contrast: presents similarities and
differences Cause-Effect: presents reasons an event
happened and its results Problem/Solution: poses a problem and suggests
possible solutions Time Order (Sequence): groups ideas by order or
time
Graphic Organizers
Concrete representations of informational text structure provide students a means to record information about underlying text structure; see how concepts fit within the structures; focus on the most important ideas; examine relationships among concepts; recall key text information; write well-organized summaries.
Considerate Texts
Three overlapping features characterize and help to define considerate texts. Structural cues: introductions, summaries, titles,
headings, charts, tables, type font, bullets etc. Coherence: clarity of writing in explicitly stated
main ideas, information supports development of main idea, logical order of events and ideas, use of signal words, precise language, smooth transitions
Audience appropriateness: conceptual density or the number of new concepts introduced
Strategy Application
Recognizing informational text structure can be developed through detecting signal words; noting graphic features (e.g. headings, tables, etc.); creating graphic organizers to lay out or organize
information. Monitoring comprehension when reading to
learn new information requires metacognitive awareness knowledge about ourselves as learners knowledge of the tasks we face knowledge of the strategies we use
Strategy Application
Connecting to World Knowledge Students learn new information by connecting it to
knowledge from their prior experience. Readers’ world knowledge shapes the way they
perceive information in text. The K-W-L procedure can be used to tap prior
knowledge. K- assessing what students know W- assessing what students want to learn L- noting what students have learned from the text
Strategy Application
Predicting Students make predictions about informational
text by scanning structural cues that indicate its organization.
Students make predictions about the purpose of the text as a whole, as well as the functions of various parts of the text.
Previewing the text in this way organizes students’ thinking, preparing them to learn new information presented in the text.
Strategy Application
Asking Questions Students need instruction in how to ask higher-level
questions to help them learn from informational text. In the strategy elaborative interrogation, students ask
why a fact makes sense, which helps them explain or expand text information and better remember it.
Answering Questions The QAR framework is a type of question-answering
instruction that focuses on a three-way relationship among question types: 1.Right There 2.Think and Search 3. On My Own 4. Author and Me.
Strategy Application Constructing Mental Images
Readers can create pictures in their minds, which depict the content of the text.
Think aloud models help students to learn the thinking processes needed to visualize.
Summarizing strategies Paragraph shrinking: identify main ideas: shrink it into one
sentence 10 words or less Collaborative Strategic Reading: substitute a more general
term for a list of terms; delete redundant information; delete information that is not central to overall meaning; select or create a topic sentence
Reader Response
Even when reading informational text, students use their existing knowledge to respond to the author’s point of view and bias. Discussion-Oriented Instruction such as
Questioning the Author (QtA) teaches students to question what they read, to think, to probe, to associate, and to critique.
Writing for Content-Area Learning provides opportunities for response to informational text by writing reviews of texts, making improvements to texts, and creating their own informational texts.
Motivation and Engagement
Engaged Readers are motivated; are knowledge driven; are socially interactive; believe in their reading skills; persist in the face of difficulty; possess a variety of cognitive comprehension
strategies.
Web-Based Text
The benefits of Web-based text Readers can follow links to definitions, background,
and more detailed explanations to support comprehension.
Readers learn more easily from Web-based than printed text as long as options for navigation and browsing are limited.
Electronic text can be more motivating especially for struggling readers.
Reading on the Web requires additional demands on the reader in specialized strategy application.
When to Teach
Primary grade students need increased instructional time with informational text. Young children often prefer age-appropriate
informational text, which builds world knowledge. After grade 3, reading content-area texts
becomes increasingly important to expand their knowledge.
It is critical to balance and integrate explicit comprehension strategies instruction with emphasis on the content of the text.
When to Assess and Intervene
It is necessary to assess comprehension processes as well as outcomes
When assessment reveals that students are misusing or not using a specific strategy, additional instructional support is required
Comprehension Assessment Response Formats include cloze: maze CBM open ended/ multiple choice questions retelling think aloud protocol