the modified sentence completion task as a scaffold for expository reading and writing by josé...
TRANSCRIPT
The Modified Sentence Completion Task as a Scaffold for Expository
Reading and Writing
by
José Montelongo, Ph.D.
California Polytechnic State University
The Problem
Elementary students do not have an awareness of expository or informational text structures
Elementary students possess an awareness of the text structure for narrative stories
– Parents read narrative stories to their children– Most of the books students read in elementary school
possessive narrative structures– Most students in elementary reading programs such as
Accelerated Reader select fictional books to read (Clifford books, R.L.Stine books)
The Problem Exacerbated
Expository text is largely ignored in the early primary grades, where emphasis is on narrative text
Strategies for reading expository text are not taught or developed in the upper elementary grades because teachers believe students already know how to read (Clinton, 2002)
Importance of Knowing Text Structure
Reflect logical connections among the ideas in text– Important for understanding and studying
information contained in textbooks, reference books and nonfictional works
– Important for organizing information in memory– Important for retrieving information
Some Ways of Organizing Information(i.e., Types of Expository Structures)
Sequence (Chronological ordering of events) Comparison/contrast (Similarities & differences
between things) Cause/effect (Reasons why something happens or
exists) Problem-Solution (Statement of problem with steps
for its solution) Generalization (Stating a main idea and defending it
with supporting details)
Practical Importance of Knowing Informational Text Structures
Students must be able to read textbooks if they are to be successful in the “Information Age” (Moss,Leone, & Dipillo (1997)
In order to get information from the Internet students must be able to read expository text (Schmar-Dobler, 2003)
In an era of “high stakes testing,” 70%-80% of reading content on standardized tests is expository. (Daniels, 2002)
Effects of Underconcern for Expository Reading
Students have problems organizing and remembering information resulting in lower-level and often faulty thinking
Students have problems identifying important information Students have problems finding the main ideas
Students have problems remembering the information Students read a history book in the same way they would
read a funny story
Sentence Completion Task(Fill-in-the-Blanks Activity)
Students complete the sentences by filling in the blank with appropriate vocabulary word.– Used nearly every time new vocabulary is
introduced– Used to reinforce vocabulary usage– Used in every grade, K-12 and beyond– Used in the language arts and content areas
Modified Sentence Completion Task(A better mousetrap?)
Eight or more sentences requiring a vocabulary word to complete a sentence.
A paragraph is embedded amongst the unrelated sentences.
Students must fill in the blanks and abstract the related sentences.
Students arrange the related sentences in order to form a paragraph and paste them onto a graphic organizer.
Students use the abstracted paragraph as a scaffold for their own composition.
(Montelongo, 2004; Montelongo & Hernández, forthcoming)
The Modified Sentence Completion Task and the Reading Classroom
Reinforce Vocabulary Usage Acquaint students with the different
expository structures found in content area textbooks
Reinforce Reading Skills such as Locating the Main Idea and Noting Important Supporting Details
Reinforces Recognizing Signal Words Strengthens Use of different Graphic
Organizers
The Modified Sentence Completion Task and the Content Area Classroom
Reinforce Content Area Vocabulary Reinforce Learning of Main Ideas in the Social
Studies classrooms Acquaint students with the Text Structures particular
to a specific discipline Aids students in writing expository paragraphs Representations of Arithmetic Word Problems Writing Science Laboratory Experiments
Advantages of the Modified Sentence Completion Task
Reinforces Expository Reading and Writing Skills throughout the Curriculum.
Reinforces Expository Reading and Writing Skills throughout the School Year
May be used to reinforce Content Area main ideas particular to unit of study and/or to re-introduce and review main ideas from prior learning.
More Significant Advantages of the Modified Sentence Completion Task
Challenges students to form mental representations of the information and to think logically:
While they search for the related sentences As they order their sentences to form a paragraph To include or delete supporting details as they write their
own paragraphs When they create their own arithmetic word problems As they write their science laboratory reports
Grounding for the Modified Sentence Completion Task
Researchers suggest that reading skills instruction is much more fruitful when skills are taught in tandem rather than in isolation (Donndelinger, 2005).
Building Automaticity
Emphasizing links (such as connecting reading with writing processes) and providing enough practice opportunities to build automaticity are among the important metaprinciples for developing curricular components (Carver, 2001)
Advantages Creating Your Own Materials
Difficult to find materials that conform to one type of expository structure
Teachers can create their own models Teachers can tailor the exercises for their own
classes Choose the content to be reinforced Modify vocabulary words Choose the different types of expository structures
Creating the Materials
Find paragraph(s) that contains a main idea from the unit currently being taught or from a previously learned unit
Select a vocabulary word from each one of the sentences. If you can’t find a suitable word, use a challenging synonym of one of the words.
Create challenging unrelated sentences (foils) Scramble the order of the related sentences Mix the related and unrelated sentences
Introducing the Modified Sentence Completion Task
Introduce task using small groups Review vocabulary words Have students complete the fill-in-the-blanks exercises Ask students to cut out sentences and sort them into
two piles: related and unrelated Have students arrange the sentences in logical order Have students paste the related sentences onto a
graphic organizer Have students rewrite the paragraph in their own words
Maintenance of Modified Sentence Completion Task
Use to reinforce important content area concepts or main ideas
Use when new vocabulary is introduced Use in different content areas: History, Science,
Mathematics Assign tasks for homework Create more challenging activities:
embed two paragraphs make categorization task more difficult
Technology and the Modified Sentence Completion Task
http://www.angelfire.com/ill/monte/textstructure.html
Advantages of Posting Activity on the Web
Students can work more creatively on a computer Permits students to self-correct their work Allows students to type their compositions Students may avail themselves of reference works
such as on-line encyclopedias, thesauri, dictionaries, and the Internet.
Students can embellish their own work by using clip art or pictures from the Internet
(Montelongo, Herter,and Littlefield-Cortez, in preparation)
For Which Students?
Basically, this exercise can probably be done by any student that can complete a fill-in-the-blanks activity– Williams (2004) suggests that students in the
second grade are sensitive to text structure
Students at the fourth grade and above like it Great with adult ESL students
Use in Math/Science Classes
Use for word problems as a diagnostic tool
What information are students using to solve word problems?(Montelongo, Riley, Berber-Jiménez, and Herter, in preparation)
Use in Science Classes Structure laboratory reports (Montelongo, Berber-Jiménez, Hernández, and Hosking, 2006;
Berber-Jiménez, Montelongo, Hernández, and Hosking, submitted)
References
Clinton, P. (2002). Literacy in America: The crisis you don’t know about. Book, 1-7, http://www.bookmagazine.com/issue24/literacy.shtml.
Daniels, H. (2002). Expository text in literature circles. Voices From the Middle, 9, 7-14. Donndelinger, S.J. (2005). Integrating comprehension and metacognitive reading strategies. In S.E. Israel, C.C. Block, K.L.
Bauserman, and K. Kinnucan-Welsch (eds.), Metacognition in literacy learning: Theory, assessment, instruction, and professional development. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Earlbaum Associates, 241-260.
Garner, R., Alexander, P., Slater, W., Hare, V.C., Smith, T. & Reis, R. (1986). Children’s knowledge of structural properties of expository text. Journal of Educational Psychology, 78, 411-416.
Montelongo, J. A. (2004). Reinforcing student’s knowledge of expository paragraph structure through sentence completion exercises. New Mexico Journal of Reading, 24, 14-22.
Montelongo, J. A., Berber-Jiménez, L, Hernández, A. C., & Hosking, D. (2006). A vocabulary activity to reinforce text structure fluency in a science class. Science Teacher, 73(2), 28-31.
Montelongo, J. A. and Hernández, A. C. (forthcoming). Reinforcing expository reading and writing skills: A more versatile sentence completion task. The Reading Teacher.
Moss, B., Leone, S. & Dipillo, M. L. (1997). Exploring the literature of fact: Linking reading and writing through information trade books. Language Arts, 74, 418-429.
Schmar-Dobler, E. (2003). Reading on the Internet: The link between literacy and technology. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 47, 80-85.
Wood, K.D., Lapp, D., & Flood, J. (1992). Guiding readers through text: A review of study guides. Newark, DE: International Reading Association