Professional Documents
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Developmental Reading
Developmental Reading
Developmental Reading
Reading
Group work:
X J L W V R O
E D C S A U Q
P H S W T I E
Read
Kwaa maana jinsi hii Mungu
aliupenda ulimwengu, hata
akamtoa Mwanawe pekee, ili kila
mtu amwaminiye asipotee; bali
awe na uzima wa milele.
Read
For God so loved the world and
He gave his only begotten Son
that whoever believes in Him
should not perish but have
everlasting life.
Reader’s Knowledge
1. Knowledge of the language
2. Knowledge of the world /
knowledge of the topic /
knowledge of the subject
matter
3. Knowledge of the text
structure
Theoretical Models of
Reading
1. Bottom-up / Outside-in Model
3. Interactive / Interactive
Compensatory Model
Bottom-up Model
Phonemes
Every letter Blending Meaning
Print and Pronunciation
discriminated graphemes
Figure 1. Information Processing in Bottom-up Models of Reading
Vacca, Vacca & Gove(1991)
Top-Down Model
Goodman (1967), in attacking the bottom-up model
of reading, refuted that:
Intellectual Correlates of an
Effective or Strategic Reader
– Intelligence
• Intelligence Quotient
• Multiple Intelligences
Linguistic Correlates of an
Effective or Strategic Reader
Physiological Correlates of an
Effective or Strategic Reader
– Saccades
– Return sweeps
– Clustering
– Regression
– Fixation
– Subvocalization
Scarcell and Oxford (1992) have described
the listening and reading processes in terms
of Canale and Swains’s (1980) model of
communicative competence. According to
this model, listeners and readers draw upon
four types of competencies as they attempt
to comprehend an oral or a written message.
Telephone!
Okay.
Thanks
A newspaper is better than a
magazine. A seashore is better
place than the street. At first it is
better to run than to walk. You may
have to try several times. It takes
some skill but it’s easy to learn.
Even young children can enjoy it.
Once successful, complications are
minimal. Birds seldom get too
close. Rain, however, soaks in very
fast. Too many people doing the
same thing can also cause
problems. One needs a lot of room.
If there are no complications, it can
be very peaceful. A rock will serve
as an anchor. If things break loose,
however, you will not get a second
chance.
Domain of the Text
• Cohesion
– The relationship between the
structure of the words, phrases
and sentences to fit a logical
whole.
• Coherence
– The relationship of ideas to other
ideas in a given text to form a
meaningful whole.
Reading and Text
• A text is the verbal record of a
communicative act (Brown and
Yule, 1983: 6).
• Text is a language that is functional,
that is which is ‘doing some job’
such as persuading us to buy a
product or conveying New Year’s
greetings (Halliday in Halliday and
Hasan, 1985: 10).
• Text is any chunk of written
language which carries a whole
meaning and is describable by
some term such as ‘warning’,
‘novel’, or ‘letter’ (Wallace, 1992).
Features of Connected Text
• It is possible to look at texts in three
different ways:
• in terms of their formal features, that
is, at ways features of the
grammatical system are used to link
sentences or paragraphs
• in terms of their propositional
meaning, that is how ideas or
concepts are expressed and related
to each other, and
• in terms of their communicative
function, both the ways in which
sections of a text can be interpreted
in relation to other sections and of
the function of any text as a whole
Stages of Reading
Development
This is a picture of a
a) school.
b) house.
c) church.
Case 4:
Mary heard the ice cream truck
coming down the street. She
remembered her birthday
money and rushed into the
house.
Think and
Inferential Rdg. between Search
the lines
Author and
Applied Me
Rdg beyond
the lines On My Own
The Butterfly and the Caterpillar
Retold by Joseph Lauren
On my own
Applied C
Levels of Comprehension
(Herber, 1978)
Literal Comprehension
• “Meaning is derived from ‘reading
the lines’, in which the reader
constructs the meaning that
accurately reflects the author’s
intended message. Literal
comprehension is text-explicit;
that is, answers to literal questions
require reader understanding of
ideas stated directly in the text.”
Interpretive Comprehension
• “Meaning is derived by ‘reading
between the lines’, in which the
reader perceives author’s intent or
understands relationships
between text elements that are
not stated directly. Interpretive
comprehension is text-implicit;
answers to interpretive questions
require the reader to draw
conclusions in response to
unstated cause-effect
relationships or comparisons,
perception of nuance, and/or
symbolic use of language and
ideas.”
Applied Comprehension
• “Meaning derived by ‘reading
beyond the lines’, in which the
reader understands unstated
relationships between information
in text and information in his/her
previous knowledge base.
Applied comprehension is
schema-implicit or experience-
based; answers to questions at
this level require integration of
new information into the reader’s
previous fund of knowledge, from
which new relationships emerge.”
• The Question and Answer
Relationship (QAR) developed by
Raphael (1982) can be a good
tool in assessing the
comprehension of the readers
towards texts. The QAR strategy
recognizes the claim that levels
of comprehension is determined
by the source of the information
used by the reader while
attempting to make sense from
the text. The following is a
graphical representation of the
QAR strategy.
Right There – The answer is in the
Right Author text, usually easy to find. The words
There and You used to make up the question and
words used to answer the question are
right there in the same sentence.
Think and Search – The answer is in
Think On my the story, but you need to put together
and Own different story parts to find it. Words for
Search the question and words for the answer
are not found in the same sentence.
They come from different parts of the
text.
Author and You – The answer is not in the story.
You need to think what you already know, what the
author tells you in the text, and how it fits together.
On my Own – The answer is not in the story. You
need to use your own experience.
Anticipation Guide
Agree Disagree Statement
_____ _____ 1. A reading teacher
should ask higher-
order questions to
students to develop
their critical thinking.
Agree Disagree Statement
_____ _____ 2. Juan answered all
the comprehension
questions of the
teacher after the
reading instruction.
Therefore, he has
higher-order thinking
skills.
Agree Disagree Statement
_____ _____ 3. When a reader
answers a
comprehension
question, his or her level
of thinking depends
upon the question
asked by the
teacher.
Agree Disagree Statement
_____ _____ 4. Maria answered
HOW and WHY
questions with
minimum effort,
much more when she
was asked with
questions that start from
WHO, WHAT, WHERE,
and WHEN. Maria really
possesses the HOTS.
Agree Disagree Statement
_____ _____ 5. Teachers should
abandon
developing lower-
order thinking
skills. Instead, they
should focus on
developing higher-order
thinking skills so that
readers will comprehend
better.
The level of thinking of a reader
depends not on the question
markers the teachers used but
upon the source/s of
information the reader used to
answer the question regarding
the text.
Recreatory Reading
• Reader’s Theater
• Chamber Theater
• Dramatization / Conventional
plays
• Storytelling
• Reading and the Visual Arts
Assessment Tools and
Procedures
• Standardized tests
• Teacher-made tests
• Cloze tests
• Think-aloud / verbal protocol
analysis
• Informal reading inventory
• Miscue analysis
Preparing Reading Lesson
Plans
Lesson Plans
• are systematic records of a teacher’s
thoughts about what will be covered during a
lesson (Farell, 2002).
• Richards (1998) suggests that lesson plans
help the teacher think about the lesson in
advance and “resolve problems and
difficulties, to provide a structure for a lesson,
to provide a ‘map’ for the teacher to follow,
and to provide a record of what has been
taught” (p.103).
• Planning for language lessons may be
different than other content lessons because
the same concepts may need to be reinforced
time and again using different methods,
especially for beginning and intermediate
level students.
• Generally speaking, the format of a
language lesson (such as reading) can
be in five parts or phases:
– The perspective or opening phase where
the teacher gives a preview of the new
reading lesson that he/she will teach.
– The simulation is where the teacher poses
a question (or questions) to get the students
thinking about the coming activity. This is
used as a lead into the main activity.
– The instruction/participation phase
introduces the main activity of the reading
lesson.
– The closure phase is where the teacher
attempts to get the students’ input regarding
what they have learned in the lesson that
was just presented.
– The follow-up and final phase has the
teacher using other activities to reinforce the
same concepts and introduce new ones.
The instructional objectives for a
second/foreign language reading
program are as follows:
– To develop an awareness of reading
strategies necessary for successful
reading comprehension.
– To expand vocabulary and develop
techniques for continued increase of
vocabulary.
– To develop an awareness of linguistic
and rhetorical structures found in
reading texts.
– To increase reading speed and fluency.
– To promote an interest in different types
of reading materials.
– To provide individual feedback on
progress in improving reading skills.
– To provide practice in extensive reading
skills.
“To be an effective teacher in
reading, one has to have a
comprehensive theory of the
nature of reading in a
second/foreign language and
referred to this in planning
his/her teaching of reading
(Richards, 1990).”
Other aspects of planning to be
considered:
• Objectives should be stated in terms of
what students will do. The objectives
should be statements of what you want
the students to gain from the lesson.
• Action words should be used to state
these objectives.
• Avoid vague or immeasurable
expressions.
– Students will practice reading skills; Students
will learn vocabulary.
• Avoid trying to accomplish too much in
one lesson.
– Students will underline the topic sentence in
each paragraph.
Principles for Designing Effective
and Interesting Reading Lessons