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Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 1
Text Comprehension 1
Text Comprehension: Facilitating Active and Strategic
Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. University of Wyoming [email protected]
The Plan
1. Text comprehension processes & expectations 2. Effective instruction & role of SLP 3. Teaching comprehension strategies
Teaching tools ! learning tools 4. Specific instruction procedures & texts 5. RISE+ and contextualized skill intervention
Text Comprehension 2
Reading Comprehension • The process of simultaneously extracting and
constructing meaning through interaction and involvement with written language (RAND, 2002, p. xiii)
• Active nature of comprehension • Beyond silently reading a printed page to meaning-
making through spoken interactions around print – Listening to others read – Having book discussions – Building on each other’s contributions – Talking about written-style sentences and discourse, – Referring to texts to find information
Text Comprehension 3 Text Comprehension 4
Factual, Inferential, and Applied Understanding
On, Between, Beyond
• Understanding the author’s stated message • Interpreting the message’s underlying meaning and
implications • Applying the message in meaningful ways
Text Comprehension 5
Comprehension > The Person
Reader Abilities, knowledge, effort,
attitude
Text Topic, level of detail, discourse structure
(E.g, Fry’s readability index of sylls & sents per 100 words)
Activity Print size, lighting, distractions…
Purpose of reading
Reading Comprehension w/o Decoding?
Ks will, in group reading activities, for literature and informational text, with prompting and support: • Ask and answer qns about key details in a text • Retell familiar stories including key details • Identify the main topic and retell key details • Describe the connection between two individuals,
events, ideas, or pieces of information • Compare and contrast adventures and experiences of
characters in familiar stories (Common Core, 2010)
Text Comprehension 6
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 2
The “Text” Part?
= print, sort of = discourse, sort of = carrier of communication, sort of
• Main body of printed or written matter on a page
• Prose: sentences connected into paragraphs and passages, such as in books, essays, and reports
• Document: noncontinuous words and phrases, e.g., forms, websites, pamphlets
• Multi-modality: plus spoken words, diagrams, photos… Merriam-Webster (1993), Kutner et al. (2006), Alvermann & Wilson (2011)
Text Comprehension 7
Overview of Effective Reading Comprehension
Instruction
Text Comprehension 8
Effective SLP Intervention
Effective Instruction Procedures
• NRP (2000): 1980-1998, gr3-8 = 205 controlled studies • 7 teaching procedures with firm scientific basis
1. Cooperative learning 2. Answering teacher questions 3. Graphic organizers 4. Story structure analysis 5. Comprehension monitoring 6. Question generation 7. Summarization
• Multiple procedures > any single procedure • DK most effective amounts or combos
Text Comprehension 9
Successful Features of Instruction Kamil et al. (2008) systematic research review, ≥8th grade: 1. Explicit vocabulary instruction (Strong) 2. Direct and explicit comprehension strategy instruction
(Strong) 3. Opportunities for extended discussion of text meaning
and interpretation (Moderate) 4. Increasing student motivation and engagement in
literacy learning (Moderate) 5. Plus, for struggling readers, tx (Strong)
Strong = well-designed controlled trials with no contradictory evidence Moderate = multiple studies and no contradictory evid, but features that limit generalization or causation
Text Comprehension 10
Text Comprehension 11
Fundamental Change in Teacher Role
OLD: Task director & Students answering content qns
⇓ NEW:
1. Qns on text structure, links to background knowledge, encouraging student qns
2. Giving up sustained control, moving students into independence
3. Teacher as cognitive model: when, why, how, not just what
Text Comprehension 12
The State of Instruction
Fundamentals of effective teaching methods known BUT : • How much of what when for whom? • How to support comprehension of challenging texts • How to teach and assess inquiry-based learning? • How to surmount structural and behavioral obstacles to
effective implementation? Continuing concern with infrequency and weakness of reading comprehension instruction in real classrooms (Adams, 2011; Calkins et al., 2012; Common Core, 2010; NRP, 2000; RAND, 2002; Kamil et al., 2008; Shanahan et al., 2010)
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 3
Development of Reading 1. Emergent literacy
– Letter knowledge, print concepts, literate language, holistic word recognition
2. Learning to read – MOM vs. BLEEG – Basic decoding and comprehension
3. Reading to learn – Fluent word recognition, strong comprehension – Gaining new knowledge – Hopefully, actively and independently achieving
learning goals Fourth Grade Slump (Chall, 1983)?
Text Comprehension 13
Challenges to Teaching Disciplinary Literacy
• Consumption (and production) of disciplinary texts 1. Deep knowledge of topic 2. Knowing communication conventions of discipline 3. Having clear purposes for reading task 4. Being in control of skills & strategies for purposes
• Challenges to teaching disciplinary literacy – I am not a reading teacher – I need to get through the curriculum – The students need to know the basic content before this
high level stuff – How do I do it? I am not a historian or a chemist
Text Comprehension 14
And Multi-Modal Text Comprehension
• Text as communication carrier in any modality and form • Beyond written word to visual, sound, and touch with
computers, labs, demos, projects, experential learning… – Purposeful integration, not just adding fun activity
• Alvermann and Wilson (2011): middle school unit on soil erosion – Connections from outdoor observations to science
textbook, maps, and photos of dust bowl in1930s – Learning to comprehend and demonstrate concepts
across modalities in ecological disciplinary manner – Embedding metacognitive processes, compreh
strategies, and language flexibility Text Comprehension 15
American Adult Literacy Realities
NAAL, 2003: >19,000 U.S. adults in homes and prisons on prose, document, and numerical literacy • Basic = Locate info, make low-level inferences,
integrate easy info in short, common texts (medic instruction, jury pamphlet, TV guide) – 14% below basic; of 14%, 45% HS degree or GED – 5% of 16-18 yrs, 25% of >25 yrs (also 1992 NAAL)
• Proficient = Synthesize and analyze complex prose and docs (compare views in editorials or interpret table of blood pressure, age, and physical activity) – 5% of adults with high schl and GED – 33% of college graduates
Text Comprehension 16
5th Attribute: Intervention
For students with low ach or LD: • Strong evidence for intensive, explicit, individualized tx
by trained specialists • Substantial improvement if struggling sts ided, strengths
and weaknesses systematically assessed, and intensive individualized interventions provided
• Consistent sizeable improvements from txs of mainly teaching reading strategies
• Older students > 3rd-6th graders from meta-cognitive approach
Kamil et al. (2008), Sencibaugh (2007), Solis et al. (2012), Swanson et al. (2014)
Text Comprehension 17
That means SLPs 1. Resource teachers:
– Curricular knowledge and daily extended contact with students
– For assistance in content instruction, rich vocabulary learning experiences, and extended meaning-making discussions about readings
2. SLPs: – Curricular freedom, underlying skills focus, problem-
solving orientation, teaching through talking – For explicit, individualized, scaffolded instruction of
skills and strategies connected to classroom
BOTH must connect to subject area teachers Text Comprehension 18
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 4
What Should SLPs Do? 1. Improve language skills
– Vocabulary breadth and depth – Syntax and grammatical morphology – Narrative and informational discourse – Pragmatics of what to use when and how
2. Improve metalinguistics and language-related skills – Word analysis – Selective and sustained attention – Memory and word retrieval – Setting, reviewing, and achieving learning goals
3. Comprehension strategies
Text Comprehension 19
Comprehension Strategies Awareness and optimization of mental processes to improve comprehension and learning of academic texts • Actions selected deliberately to achieve particular goals • Heuristics: Short-term, general problem-solving
procedure that highlights information and guides attentional focus
• Strategies (and skills) can be applied for many reasons including expertise, repeated practice, compliance with directions, luck, and naïve use
Gersten, Fuchs, Williams, & Baker (2001), Paris et al., 1991; Willingham (2006)
Text Comprehension 20
Strategic Reading Logistic regression allows one to predict a discrete outcome such as group membership from a set of variables that may be continuous, discrete, dichotomous, or a mix. Because of its popularity in the health sciences, the discrete outcome in logistic regression is often disease/no disease. For example, can presence or absence of hay fever be diagnosed from geographic area, season, degree of nasal stuffiness, and body temperature?
What does logistic regression do?” What is the main idea? Why is logistic regression popular in the health sciences?
Willingham (2006). Usefulness of brief instruction in rdg compreh strategies. Amer Educator, Winter, 39–50.
Text Comprehension 21
Before, During, and After Reading
1. Pre-reading: Think about what is known, predict text content, look for organizing concepts, id plan for rdg…
2. During-reading: Maintain reading purpose, note important info, pause and paraphrase, integrate new with known info, notice lapses in understanding, re-read to clarify, manage time…
3. After-reading: Recall important ideas, decide what to recall, recognize ambiguous ideas and try to clarify, re-read to fill in gaps, plan next-step study strategies…
Try reading to learn from a difficult text and reflect on your own cognitive processes
Text Comprehension 22
Text Comprehension 23
Strategic Use of Skills and Strategies Knowing When to Use What Strategies Why and How And when to just sit back and read…
Aim students toward: Frequent skillful reading and listening
fluent, automatic, easy, and enjoyable Occasional strategic reading and listening
Effortful but worthwhile for learning and change Aiming for all our students to be strategic and skillful
readers and listeners for learning and enjoyment
Text Comprehension 24
Strategic Reading is Hard -- • August et al., (1984): Strong & weak 5th gr, story missing
a pg: altho more skillful slowed rdg & looked back, half children in both groups did not report a problem and both made non-warranted fill-in inferences (August et al., 1984)
• Garner & Reis (1981): Strong & weak 4th-10th gr on look-back for open-book test qns: altho older strong better, many of both groups did not look back when needed
• Paris et al (1991, p. 621): Even 12-year-old good readers do not detect a large number of errors and inconsistencies inserted into meaningful text
Was hard and is still hard…
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 5
Text Comprehension 25
Strategy"Conscious, deliberate, effortful
use of a mental action
Skill"Unconscious,
automatic, fluent use of a mental action
-
Skills resurface as strategies in times of challenge or for
inspection and modification
Skills & Strategies: Two Sides of the Coin
Selecting Tx Strategies (or Skills)
NRP (2000), (Kamil et al., 2008): • 4 types of reading strategies with firm scientific basis:
1. Comprehension monitoring (readers being aware of their own understanding of the text)
2. Question generation (readers asking themselves questions about the text)
3. Summarization (readers integrating ideas from text) 4. Paraphrasing (readers restating a sentence in their
own words) • Plus word learning strategies of using context cues and
reference skills
Text Comprehension 26
More Specifically • Specific prompts with set wording
– About text ideas (e.g., “What is the main idea of this paragraph? What is the difference between this idea and the preceding idea?”)
– About text structure (e.g., “What was the problem in this story? Can you tell where in the story the problem was resolved?”)
• Self-monitoring speed and re-reading parts • Less beneficial is having students generate qns
– Based on perceptions of what is important – Based on what they think that a teacher might ask – Crafted to the content of each text (e.g., Mason, 2004)
Text Comprehension 27
A Simple Memorable Strategy Mnemonic: TWA Checklist
When to Think Strategy Done?
T Think before reading The author’s purpose What you know What you want to learn
_____ _____ _____
W While reading think about
Reading speed Linking what you know Rereading parts
_____ _____ _____
A After reading think about The main idea Summarizing information What you learned
_____ _____ _____
Text Comprehension 28 Mason (2004) and Mason et al. (2006)
Components of Effective Strategy Instruction
1. Explicit teacher modeling, 2. Practice with feedback 3. Adjustment of support to the learner level 4. Having students maintain mindful engagement Swanson & Hoskyn (1998): Syst rev tx res for LD sts, 3 of 20 tx components explained almost all common variance in outcomes:
a. Controlling task difficulty b. Using small interactive groups c. Having students use specified language or format for
strategy qns Text Comprehension 29
Cognitive Modeling • Demo thinking processes during purposeful reading so sts
see when, why, and how, not just what of reading • Preparation for modeling
1. Consider text from student perspective 2. Check text matches target strategies 3. Plan points in text to model (e.g., This paragraph isn’t
clear, I will reread it for the main idea) • Doing the modeling
1. Before sts read, demo how to read for X purpose 2. During reading, demo at designated stopping points or
when students have difficulties 3. After reading, review performance and demo more
effective use of the strategies Text Comprehension 30
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 6
Content + Strategy Instruction
McKeown, Beck, & Blake (2009) compared content vs strategy instruction • Six 5th gr classrooms for school year in 3 conditions: 1. Content: sts read passage aloud and discuss what
author trying to say at key pts (e.g., when major character introduced, important event occurred, or confusing statement made)
2. Strategy: Learn to summarize, predict, draw inferences, ask qns, and monitor comprehension plus understad story content
3. Basal text condition: Teacher asks compreh qns about content from basal text program
Text Comprehension 31
= Strategy and Content Overload Results of McKeown et al. (2009):
1. Big improvement for all conditions, incl compreh monitoring and recog of better summaries and inferences
2. For familiar and new text knowledge probes, responses better for content condition
• All 3 approaches encouraged active comprehen and mental discourse templates – BUT strategies condition had split focus
• /.. Teach strategies on short texts separate from main lesson, then intro in content lesson in natural opps
! SLPs!
Text Comprehension 32
Quality SLP Tx: RISE+
Repeated Opportunities Intensity of scheduling Systematic structural and interactive support Explicit Skill Focus + Learner factor
33 Text Comprehension
From Instruction to Intervention
Regular " Supportive " Intervention
R Few ⇒ Some ⇒ Many
I Class ⇒ Group ⇒ Individual; Occasional ⇒ Regular ⇒
Frequent; Short ⇒ Middling ⇒ Long
S Little ⇒ Some ⇒ Lots
E Implicit ⇒ Explicit ⇒ Meta
✚ Passive & minimal ⇒ Motivated attentive ⇒ Self-directed,
sustained engagement
34 Text Comprehension
Text Comprehension 35
Explicit Skill Focus
Explicit attention and modification to 1-3 target skills (as conscious strategies) • Known by both SLP and student • Avoid, assist, or ignore non-target skills
So in reading a science text, if summarization is the target,
1. Avoid difficult content 2. Assist with word decoding 3. Ignore sentence structure errors
Text Comprehension 36
Repeated Opportunities and Intensity • Intensively teach through small groups a few tx
objectives several times a week • With Repeated opps for learning and practice in
session and in classroom – Tx obj: X will use approach to reading based on
need: Recall all for test vs. Search for key details for project
– On 10 short passages, tell purpose and have student id approach, perform it, get info, explain how read, self-evaluate
– Repeatedly across sessions with lots of turns for each student
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 7
Text Comprehension 37
Structural and Interactive Scaffolds 1. Structural = Choosing or modifying meaningful text
– Short well-structured expository selections – Extracted from a single larger whole – Requiring a minimum of background knowledge – With decoding problems circumvented
2. Interactive = Dynamic moves in tx – Differential linguistic, response, and regulatory support – Matched to child need & task difficulty – Cognitive modeling of process – Systematic handover for internalization of strategies – Aim of student internalization and independence
•
Small Group Scaffolding • Better than classroom or 1:1 to “think aloud” about
reading strategies and comprehension processes – Thru talking with each other about the reading – SLP embedding strategic qns into conversations – SLP scaffolding children’s responses
• Reciprocal Teaching (Palincsar): Sts take turns being teachers and lead each other in practice sessions – With assistance, “student-teachers” lead process – Asking compreh qns of other students – Helping them find the answers – Evaluating their answers
Text Comprehension 38
STOP – Whose Strategy Is It?
• Strategy: teaching tool vs. learning tool – Grouped as “instruction strategies” – Who is using the strategy?
• Many tx studies for younger sts do not systematically scaffold to independence
• Tx research for older sts typically includes some guided and independent practice, but instruction and outcome measurement rarely address self-directed use in the classroom
NRP (2000), Kamil et al. (2008), Shanahan et al. (2010)
Text Comprehension 39
Teaching Vs Learning Strategies Many effective teaching strategies/tools/procedures • Pose qns to sts after reading a story • Place sts in cooperative learning groups • Lead sts in creating graphical organizers • Lead sts in stopping to self-qn comprehension… Versus learning strategies to improve own compreh before, during, and after reading or listening to acad texts • Sts explicitly and systematically taught to stop and ask
selves a qn or map a main idea & details as needed – With lots of practice with decreasing support – And attn to internal motivation that habit is worthwhile
Text Comprehension 40
Text Comprehension 41
The Aim: Purposeful Strategic Reading
Bazerman (1985): Physicists reading physics • 7 physicists perusing journal articles • Talked aloud as they read • Results
– Discarded 3/4 of the articles – Considered titles, authors, and abstracts re: own
research interests and source labs – Read selectively: jumping around, looking for
specific features or surprising elements – Constant judgments re: value of reading material
versus time and thought investment – Articles set aside for reflection and a second reading
The Challenge of Student Ownership Chan and Cole (1986): 11-yr-old RD, 4 tx sessions:
1. Ask selves and a robot content qns 2. Underline interesting words with a fluorescent pen 3. Explain to the robot why these words were
interesting. • Control: Sts reread story to robot in case robot missed
parts the first time • Results: Sts improved compreh and recall vs control • BUT 1 day post tx, for stories with no directions
– NONE used explaining and qn strategies – Two-third used underlining strategy a bit
Text Comprehension 42
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 8
Specific Strategy Instruction
Text Structure Awareness Text Preview and Lookback
Main Idea and Summarization
Text Comprehension 43
Text Structure Awareness
Attend to structure of a narrative or expository text • Use structure to guide understanding • Discourse analysis with graphical support • Helps improve reading compreh
– Identify story grammar components – Separate out essential from trivial details – Work through the logical relations of a text – Organize and integrate content into a coherent mental
structure
NRP (2000), Kamil et al. (2008)
Text Comprehension 44
Narrative Text Structure
Crabtree et al. (2010) • Exp’tal multiple baseline design with 3 high schl LD sts • Tx: Sts learned to id elements of setting and episode,
– Sts stopped at designated pts in their reading and wrote elements in a structured guide
• Control: Baseline data on read stories and answer content qns
• Results: 1. Improved immediate story recall and compreh 2. Maintained correct use of guide w/o prompts to use 3. Sts reported they were likely to use it again
Text Comprehension 45
Expository Text Structure
Armbruster et al. (1991) • 4th and 5th grade sts • Tx: Teacher-directed and cooperative group activities
– Sts analyzed social studies textbook passages – Using cause-effect, problem-solution, and compare-
contrast frames • Control: Teacher-led content-focused qn-answers • Results: Better recognition and recall of information Scanlon et al. (1996): Similar benefits for middle schl sts with LD in inclusive lessons by history and civics teachers
Text Comprehension 46
Text Preview • Teach sts to intentionally become familiar with text
organization of rdg materials and how to locate info – Chapter titles and section headings – Abstracts, opening paragraphs, and conclusions – Preface, TOC, index, and glossary
• Especially useful for informational texts: – A lot of discrete information units – Vary considerably in organization and reader
friendliness • Applicable to electronic sources
– Understand organizational structure – Notice menus, navigational tools, and info location
Text Comprehension 47
Look Backs • Companion skill to look ahead is look back
– Awareness of gap in comprehension – Efficient (and permissible) text search procedure
• Sts rarely use spontaneously • Process
1. Examine qn for if answer “from your head” or “from the text”
2. Skim text to find most likely section for info 3. Notice why other sections not good candidates 4. At relevant section, note potential from the heading 5. Slow down and read each sentence carefully for
needed info Text Comprehension 48
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 9
Garner et al. (1984): Brief tx in lookbacks • 24 9-13 year olds, ok decoders, poor comprehenders • Control: taught main idea & summarization strategies • 5 days post tx: I am going to ask you to read a short article.
You will read it slowly. I will ask you three questions about the article when you're done reading. – 1 text print side down and 1 print side up – Print up text, if no look back: You can look back at any
part of the article to answer the qns
• Results: – Similar accuracy of simple recall qns: 31% and 33% – In-text qns: tx 70% use vs control 22% use; correct 72%
vs 31% – Tx looked back on own, flipped text over, asked if look
back ok; control only looked in text-up & after cueing Text Comprehension 49
Summary Composition Procedures Teaching sts to periodically stop and summarize paragraphs, sections, chapters, and articles 1. Gist: Reading a paragraph one line at a time and
gradually composing a single long sentence that encapsulates the ideas expressed in each line
2. Rule-governed: Systematic procedures for determining topic, supporting, redundant, and irrelevant statements, then building into coherent summaries
3. Hierarchical: Use chapter, section, and subsection headings to create summaries of large pieces of text
Text Comprehension 50
But What’s a Main Idea??
• Summarization procedures hinge on iding a main idea • Wong et al. (1986), in a multiple baseline design,
investigated teaching eight 7th LD graders to compose well-structured summaries
• Sts told to underline and paraphrase the main idea of simple paragraphs ! Ided random sentences and became frustrated
Mr. Brown was getting angry. His face was bright red. His pupils seemed to enlarge in size suddenly. His body began to shake. His voice was becoming louder and louder. Text Comprehension 51
Mapping the Main Idea
• Cover main idea box
• Do other sentences made sense without the main idea?
• Who are the sentences talking about?
• Whose voice is getting louder?
Text Comprehension 52
ing. Their scholastic >oor. The classroom :>able of higher aca-lt that motivational )f their poor perfor-these five grade 7
>uld be formally con-th attention deficits. hievement scores of es MacGinitie Read-tuse of interruptions )ean was not tested. ic of the five adoles-fficulties with social
dif-he purpose of this >otential subjects by Nas particularly con-with social studies.
:;ent were obtained, ly formally.
wse one objective of 1ualitative modifica-1arization strategy in .eline design across
design, Edwin was seline; Conrad and iVe a 5-day baseline; ive a 7-day baseline. 1ach adolescent was :;sage to summarize se passages ranged >rds. While the sub-e idea units from the IS difficulties in sum-
given operational
'res linitie Reading Tests 'quivalent scores) 1 Comprehension
4.6 7.9 4.8 7.2
8.6 4.8 9.2
, held at the end of the school
pointers developed by Palincsar (1982) on how to summarize by reducing lists, underlining the topic sentence if there is one, creating your own topic sentence, and getting rid of redundant items, they kept copying sentences from the text. This behavior was consistent across all subjects, leading to the obvious conclusion that they had very limited summarization skills.
The subjects complied with the request for summarization in the first baseline session. On the second baseline session, they demonstrated clear unrest (fidgety behaviors and much eras-ing) and uncooperativeness; e.g., staring at the passage and not summarizing. Because of their basic lack of summarization skills, the experi-menters felt it was meaningless to continue col-lecting summarization data. More important, continually urging them to summarize would ulti-mately induce undue frustration and erode any motivation to participate in the subsequent train-ing. Hence, the experimenters collected from each subject only two summarization samples, one during the initial baseline session and one during the session just prior to intervention. However, these data were representative of the subjects' pretraining summarization perfor-mance. Recall data were obtained for all the scheduled baseline sessions.
Intervention. The intervention had three phases that showed the developmental nature of the in-tervention research reported here. Prior to teaching the subjects a summarization strategy for use with social studies curricula, we had to teach them first to identify a main idea in simple and complex, single and double paragraphs; and second, to summarize simple and complex sin-gle paragraphs. The children were taught these skills individually. The first skill was taught to criterion before the second skill was taught. When the student demonstrated mastery on summarizing simple and complex single para-graphs, he or she progressed to learning a self-questioning summarization strategy for use with social studies materials.
Identification of a main idea in paragraphs. The following method of teaching identification of a main idea has been used successfully with learn-ing disabled and underachieving children, ado-lescents, and college adults by the first author since about 1980. The method builds on Mark Aulls' (1978) method. Aulls' approach is essen-tially a rules approach with three rules:
LD Focus, Fall 1986 23
(1) The main idea is the most general statement in the paragraph. It should explicitly explain the general topic. (2) Most of the other sentences should refer to it. (3) Most of the other sentences should elaborate or qualify this statement. (p. 102) Experience indicates that the most effica-
cious way of teaching a main idea concept is to use self-made simple single paragraphs initial conceptual acquisition) to demonstrate those three rules and to ADD an extra rule. Toil-lustrate:
Mr. Brown was getting angry. His face was bright red. His pupils semed to enlarge in size suddenly. His body began to shake. His voice was becoming louder and louder. The teacher uses an 8 in. x 11 in. piece of
paper and writes out the first sentence in the mid-dle of it and boxes it in. He or she then writes down the remaining sentences one at a time, each sentence sufficiently distanced but circling the first one; as shown in Figure 1.
The teacher then explains to the student the three rules used by Au lis (1978) to teach the main idea concept. In the first author's teaching ex-perience with learning disabled and underachiev-ing students, she found it necessary to add one
FIGURE 1 Diagram to Illustrate Teaching of Main Idea
His face was bright
I Mr. Brown was getting angry.
His pupils seemed to enlarge in size suddenly.
His body began to
shak.e.
Progressive Practice in Summarizing
• Paragraphs in which position of topic sentence varied • Paragraphs with two main ideas • Double paragraphs • Paraphrasing main idea statements • Adding important detail sentences
• Applying summarization skills to classroom social studies texts
Text Comprehension 53
Results of Summarization Instruction
Wong et al. (1986) • 1 mth for sts to paraphrase main ideas • After 3 mths of 3 30-min/wk, noticeable improvement on
summarization and recall of social studies passages • 6/8 maintained use one month post-tx and substantial
transfer to general science texts – 2 quickly learned to summarize and apply, maintain
use, and make mods indicating ownership – 2 showed little motivation, slow learning, and lack of
retention; fundamental disengagement with acad learning beyond study
Text Comprehension 54
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 10
Mapping Implicit
Main Ideas
Text Comprehension 55
Text Comprehension
Figure 1. Graphical organizer for implicit main ideas and irrelevant or redundant details.
He#took#some#
slow#deep#
breaths.# HHe He#unclenched#
his#fists.#
Mr.#Brown#said#
gently,#“I’m#not#
mad#anymore.”#
Mr.#Brown#
chose#eggs#for#
breakfast.#Mr.#Brown#said,#
“You#tell#me#your#
side#of#the#story.”!
He#inhaled#
and#exhaled#
deeply.#
Mr.#Brown#
looked#quietly#at#
each#one#of#us.#
His!yelling!
got!louder!
and!louder.!
Mr. Brown calmed
down and listened
to us.
Summarizing Disciplinary Document Text
• Extract main idea from images, headings, bulleted lists, and isolated statements
• Shanahan and Shanahan (2008) – Chemistry: Chart of substances, properties, and
reactions – Math: Chart listing one column as “big idea,” next
as formal definition, followed by formula, and example.
– History: Chart of who, what, where, when, how, and why for each event + relationship bet events
Text Comprehension 56
Text Selection for Strategy Tx
1. Narrative text: iding characters or motivations 2. Informational text: Iding main idea of paragraphs 3. Sets of passages: Repeated, equivalent
opportunities for learning and practice 4. Excerpted passages: From social studies and
science texts or source papers for class projects 5. Trade sources: Books, magazines, and websites
selected to match classroom topics or individual student interests
6. Modify texts: Systematic changes to simplify or to add confusing or missing elements
Text Comprehension 57
Managing Text Difficulty Challenging enough to need strategies but not for struggle with basic comprehension • Avoid decoding issues
– Independent decoding level of student – Shared reading – Familiar texts – Listening to texts
• Shared vision – Underlining and marginalia – Multiple copies – Enlarged text on computer monitor – Sit on same side of table with student
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Being Strategic about Strategy Tx
1. Choose a few simple strategies with obvious benefits easily learned and used
2. Observe lessons, examine assignments, and talk with teachers to id strategies that make sense
3. Give learning and practice opps in structured activities separate from classroom lessons
4. Move from short, well-structured texts to passages with more varied structure excerpted frm classroom texts
5. Focus on strategy use without pressure to demo mastery of new curricular material
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Flying From the SLP Nest 6. When sts at minimal support, move into collaborative,
sheltered content learning situations (e.g., Resource) 7. Collaborations move to subject area teachers with
repeated opps, previews and checkups during reading ! Habits of mindful reading
– Match purpose to way of reading – Stop to ask selves qns (and answer) – Paraphrase and summarize – Monitor and seek repair for comprehension
Text Comprehension 60
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 11
Progress Data on Product & Process Student may improve on no. correct responses
– From independent use of tx strategy – From topic knowledge thru other experiences – From increased general awareness – From own different compreh strategy
Seek data on use, level of support, and effectiveness:
1. Text comprehension scores 2. Observe st’s actions & notes during reading 3. Student think-alouds during reaidng 4. Interview student after reading
Text Comprehension 61
The + Part of RISE+ Motivated, attentive, and engaged
Noticeable relevant improvements
Guthrie et al. (2013) statistical path for rdg instruct, motiv, engagement, ach for 1,000 gr7 in CORI and trad instruct
Confidence in capacity to succeed, interest in science reading, and tools for success (e.g., strategies & accessible texts) ! reading ach ! attitudes toward academic learning and challenging rdg ! reading ach !…
Text Comprehension 62
Involvement or “Buy-in” 1. Attention: Arousal and alertness; orient and respond;
search and spotlight; select, sustain, and allocate Looking for action, for learning, for liking (Hogarth et al. 2010)
2. Motivation; Reasons and attitudes toward skill, activity, and effort involved in learning (Guthrie, Klauda, & Ho, 2013; Wigfield et al., 2008)
I enjoy reading. This task is hard but it is important. I believe I can succeed. I hate reading. This reading task is too hard. Why am I doing this? How can get out of this?
3. Engagement: Participation in activity; behaviors during and attitude after; being “in the flow”, “in the zone”
The key to life satisfaction ☺ Text Comprehension 63
Topic Effect on Reading Achievement
• Domain expertise can trump reading skill (Recht & Leslie, 1988; Yekovich et al., 1990) • Poor readers on general comprehension tests (e.g,
SAT) = Can achieve as well as good readers – On recall, but also analysis, synthesis, and
inferencing qns – Tested on passages about high-knowledge topics
(e.g., baseball or football)
/.. Need to strengthen academic domain interest and thus expertise through whatever modalities and ways possible
Text Comprehension 64
Situational Interest
• Stimulating situational interest in academic topics that do not interest students
• Oakhill and Petrides (2007) compared fifth grade boys and girls on passages they had rated as higher and lower interest – Boys preferred piece on spiders – Girls preferred piece on child evacuation during war – Boys: 60% correct on the high-interest-passage qns
and 38% for the low-interest ones – Girls: 62% for both high- and low-interest passages
Text Comprehension 65
Guidance & Ownership • To increase sts effort for text recall & compreh (Graham &
Golan, 1991; Grolnick & Ryan, 1987)
1. Explain effort for good outcome and allow to decide effort > emphasis on working hard and good grades
2. Errors treated as growth opps > Errors as failure 3. Informational feedback > Controlling feedback
• Having some say in tx: – Identify learning goals – Select tx topics and materials – Identify obstacles and supports – Determine outcome measures – Collect data and evaluate own progress – Judge what is “good enough”
Text Comprehension 66
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 12
Putting It All Together: Strategies, Content, and
Engagement – and Tx
Comprehension skills & strategies, cognitive modeling, multimodal texts,
cooperative learning, connecting strategy to subjects, extended literature discussions, inquiry-based and
experiential learning… Text Comprehension 67
Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction
• Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction (CORI) (http://www.cori.umd.edu) (Guthrie and colleagues)
• Systematically organized around 1. Student motivation and engagement 2. Scientific concepts and inquiry skills 3. Reading strategies taught within content reading 4. With differentiated learning support
Text Comprehension 68
CORI Motivational and Concept Features
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Choices Students given some control over texts, subtopics, and writing activities
Relevance Hands-on activities and connection of texts to theme and experiences
Collaboration Students collaborate in pairs on strategy selection and practice
Thematic Units Overarching theme linked all reading and writing activities for deep, interconnected knowledge
Success Students read trade books related to theme at their level
Diverse Texts Concepts learned and linked through science, poetry, novel, and legend books
CORI Learning Strategies
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Word Fix-Ups Re-read Use a picture Chunk word Discuss with partner Draw it Look it up Read ahead Read aloud
Sentence Fix-Ups Fix-up strategies applied to confusing sentences
Passage Analysis ID main idea versus details ID how details link to the main idea
CORI Features for Low Achievers
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Texts Informational and narrative trade books at a range of reading levels
Concepts Fewer concepts taught at a time, with more graphics and less print
Writing Student charts and reports required less writing
Fluency Extra guided practice in fluency and decoding skills
Strategies Fix-up strategies taught at a slower pace with more modeling Taught inferencing conclusions from stated information in text
CORI Investigation Guthrie et al. (2009), six gr5 classes • 12 wks of 90 min daily, plus more for low achievers • Theme of animal-plant interactions in eco communities • Comparison: 3 gr5 classes, disconnected lessons,
decoding, fluency, basal readers, story writing, and independent reading on diverse topics
• Results: Tx > Compare for typical and low-ach – Attitude toward learning – Reading comprehension – Content knowledge – Word recognition students – Improvements in later reading and learning activities
Text Comprehension 72
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 13
The SLP Version of CORI: Tx thru Units & Projects
Embed tx skill goals in meaningful activities thru whole-part and RISE+ Start with purposeful, complex whole activity with several tx objectives 1. Move to contrived part tasks for explicit
focus, systematic support, and repeated opps for each tx skill
2. Back to purposeful activity to integrate tx skills learned in parts into a whole
3. Then do it again… Catherine Ross, MS, CCC-SLP, [email protected])
Text Comprehension 73
“Staying on Topic” in Tx
• To increase reading comprehension (Common Core, 2010; Adams, 2011)
– Go narrow and deep, not broad and superficial – Plus linking topic learning between grades
• Lots of reading advanced texts on common topic – Drive concept and vocabulary learning – Including never-seen-before new words
• Thematic instruction ! knowledge, vocab, and compreh ! students handle more difficult texts, ! improve knowledge, vocab, & compreh ! raise SATs ! ☺!
So use curricular links, projects, and thematic units in tx Text Comprehension 74
Text Comprehension 75
RISE+ and Projects
R: Repeated opps for main ideas and details in a meaningful activity
I: Intensively practice summarizing goal while note-taking in small tx groups
S: Scaffolding reading of sources and building presentation with aim of increased student independence
E: Explicit skills of whatever SLP selects to highlight and systematically scaffolded in repeated opps
+: Motivation and engagement through ownership of project and skills
Debating Dogs in Trucks
Text Comprehension 76
Comprehension strategy tx goals, e.g., summarizing, qning, and clarifying… Features
– Extended text comprehension & analysis project – Specific skills in meaningful, motivating product – Suited to groups & collaboration with resource teacher
Text Comprehension 77
Oral Debate Tx Project 1. Determine the main points from texts provide 2. Evaluate and agree on main points 3. Develop a position statement 4. Locate and list points that support position 5. Evaluate arguments on fact versus opinion, credible
versus doubtful, relevant versus tangential 6. Set debate etiquette 7. Prepare the scripts 8. Practice the presentation 9. Carry out debate 10. Reflect on debate and skill performance
For more info, see Ukrainetz & Ross (2006)
Text Comprehension 78
Student Research Projects
Purposeful activity with explicit skills taught and learned in the composition process • 8-12 sessions • Small groups of a range of grades • Bulleted notes involve minimal writing • Oral language in composition process and presentation • Strategy practice embedded in reading sources • Media possibilities: Research poster, podcast, Wiki report • Setup: Give short list of research topics around theme • ID sources in advance: websites, books, magazines • Make timeline and project guide for “What do I do next?” • Remember to keep focus on tx skills thru RISE+
Text Comprehension: Facilita4ng Ac4ve & Strategic Engagement
Teresa A. Ukrainetz, Ph.D. Unversity of Wyoming
California Speech & Hearing Associa4on Long Beach, CA March, 2015 14
Text Comprehension 79
Research Project: Method Students will…
1. Identify a topic 2. Determine what is known and not known 3. Use K-W-L+ to develop concept map 4. Use concept map to identify questions
– What do I already know about my topic? – What else do I need to know? – What do I want to find out? – What else am I wondering about?
5. Generate keywords for information search 6. Determine location and how to access
predetermined, limited number of sources Text Comprehension 80
Research Project: Students Will… 7. Skim reference material to determine relevance and
quality – Use targeted comprehension strategies – Notice author, relevance, authenticity (rabbits
+eat=?) 8. Read for understanding of main idea and relevant
details, using tx compreh strategies 9. Make paraphrased notes, linked to tx compreh
strategies 10. Organize and synthesize material in a sketch 11. Create final text, make graphics, complete poster 12. Practice and present oral presentation 13. Review performance on whole and embedded tx skills
Comprehension Tx – In Sum • Active, purposeful engagement with meaningful texts • Teaching comprehension strategies for before,
during, and after reading • Supported toward independent, habitual use • Systematic procedures and cognitive modeling • Connections with the classroom and student interest • Using RISE+ in Whole-Part tx units and projects $
! Engaged learners who habitually apply comprehension strategies to achieve educational success and enjoy their reading more
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References Adams, M.J. (2011). Advancing sts’ lang & lit. Amer Educator, 34(4), 3–11, 53. Alvermann, D.E. & Wilson, A.A. (2011). Compreh strategy instruct multimodal texts in science. Theory Into Pract, 50, 116–124. Armbruster, B. B. et al. (1991). Improving content-area rdg using instruct graphics. RRQ, 26, 393–416. August, D.L. et al. (1984). Comparison compreh monitoring of skilled & less skilled readers. RRQ, 20, 39–53. Bazerman, C. (1985). Physicists reading physics. Written Communication, 2, 3–23. Chan, L.K.S., & Cole, P.G. (1986). Effects of compreh monitoring training on rdg competence of LD & reg sts. Remed & Sp Ed, 7, 33–40. Calkins, L et al. (2012). Pathways to Common Core: Acceleratg ach. NH: Heinemann. Crabtree, T. et al. (2010). Effects of self-monitoring of story elements on rdg compreh of HS seniors w/ LD. Ed & Tx of Ch, 22, 187–203. Garner, R., & Reis, R. (1981). Monitoring & resolving compreh obstacles: Investig of spont text lookbacks upper-gr good & poor readers’ compreh. RRQ, 16, 569–582. Gersten, R. et al. (2001). Tchg rdg compreh strategies to sts w/ LD: Review of research. Rev Educ Res, 71, 279–320. Guthrie, J.T. et al. (2013). Model rdg instruct, motiv, engage, ach. RRQ, 48, 9–26. Guthrie, J.T. et al. (2009). Comprehensive rdg instruct on low- & high-ach readers. J Learn Dis, 42, 195–214.
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Kamil, M.L. et al. (2008). Improving adoles lit: Effective class & interv practices: Prac Guide (NCEE #2008-4027). DC: IES. Kutner, M., Greenberg, E., & Baer, J. (2006). Nat’l assess adult literacy (NCES 2006-470). Nat’l Ctr Ed Stats. Mason, L.H. (2004). Explicit self-reg strategy dev vs reciproc qning: Effects on exposit rdg compreh struggling readers. J Ed Psyc, 96, 283–296. McKeown, M.G. et al. (2009). Rethinking rdg comprehen instruct: Comparison instruct strategies & content approaches. RRQ, 44, 218–253. NGACBP & CCSSO (2010). Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy. DC: Author. http://www.corestandards.org/ Nat’l Rdg Panel. (2000). Teaching ch to read: Evid-based assess of scientific res literature on rdg & its implications for rdg instruct (NIH 00-4769). DC: NICHHD. http://www.nationalreadingpanel.org/ Oakhill, J.V., & Petrides, A. (2007). Sex diffs in interest on boys’ & girls’ rdg compreh. British Psyc Society, 98, 223–235. Palincsar, A.S., & Brown, A.L. (1984). Reciproc tchg of compreh-fostering & monitoring. Cog & Instruct, 1, 117–175. Palincsar, A.S. et al. (1987). Peer interac rdg compreh monitor. Ed Psyc, 22, 231-253. Paris, S. G. et al. (1991). Develop of strategic readers. In Barr et al. (Eds.), Hdbk rdg research, Vol. II. NY: Longman. RAND Reading Study Group. (2002). Rdg for understanding: Toward res & develop prog in rdg compreh. CA: RAND. http://www.rand.org/pubs/monograph_reports/
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Recht, D.R. & Leslie, L. (1988). Prior knowledge on good & poor readers’ memory of text. J Ed Psyc, 80, 16–20. Rosenshine, B., & Meister, C. (1994). Reciproc tchg. Rev Ed Res, 64, 479–530. Scanlon, D. et al. (1996). Can strategy be taught & learned in secondary inclusive class? Learn Dis Res & Pract, 11, 41–57. Sencibaugh, J.M. (2007). Meta-anal rdg compreh interv LD sts. Rdg Improv, 44, 6–22. Shanahan, T. et al. (2010). Improving rdg compreh K-3rd gr: Prac guide (NCEE 2010-4038). DC: IES. Shanahan, T., & Shanahan, C. (2008). Tchg disciplinary lit to adoles. Harvard Ed Review, 78, 40–59. Swanson, H.L. & Hoskyn, M. (1998). Exp’tal interv res on sts w/ LD: A meta-analysis of tx outcomes. Review Ed Research, 68, 277–321. Ukrainetz, T.A. (2015). Improving rdg compreh. In T.A. Ukrainetz (Ed.), Schlage lang interv: EBPs. TX: Pro-Ed. Ukrainetz, T.A. (2015). Improving text compreh: Scaffolding adoles into strategic rdg. Seminars Spch Lang, 36, 17-30. Wigfield, A. et al. (2008). Role of rdg engagement in mediating effects of rdg compreh instruct on rdg outcomes. Psyc in Schls, 45, 432–445. Wong, B.Y.L. et al. (1986). Efficacy of self-qng summariz strategy underach & LD adoles soc studies. Learn Dis Focus, 2, 20–35. Yekovich, F.R. et al. (1990). Domain knowl on inferencing in low-aptitude individ. Psyc of Learn & Motiv, 25, 259–278.
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