Reading Reflection
#1: Strategic Reading Comprehension and Motivating Contexts For Developing
Offline Reading Comprehension
Based on the texts:
Guthrie,
J.,Wigfield, A., & You, W. (2012). Instructional contexts for engagement
and achievement in reading. In S.L. Christenson, A. L., Reschly, & C. Wylie
(Eds.), Handbook of Research on Student Engagement (pp. 601-634). New York, NY:
Springer Science.
Paris, S., B.
Wasik, & Turner (1996). The development of strategic readers. R. Barr, M.
Kamil, P. Mosenthal and P. D. Pearson. Handbook of reading research, Volume 2,
(pp. 609-640). New York: Longman.
Swan, E. A.
(2003). Why is the north pole always cold? In Concept-Oriented Reading
Instruction: Engaging Classrooms, Lifelong Learners (pp. 1-13). New York, NY:
Guilford Publications. Available at: http://www.cori.umd.edu/professional-development/modules/
An attempt to answer to the following questions proposed by Prof. Julie Coiro:
STRATEGIC READERS
·
What makes a reader strategic?
·
How do more strategic readers differ from less
strategic readers?
·
What does development have to do with strategic
reading and comprehension?
·
What appears to be some of the key research that
informs how we currently define reading comprehension and how to teach it to
learners of various ages?
FACTORS INFLUENCING
READING COMPREHENSION
·
What does age
have to do with development of reading comprehension?
·
What role does motivation play in strategic reading comprehension?
·
What role do dialogue and discussion
play in strategic reading comprehension?
CONNECTIONS/IMPLICATIONS/QUESTIONS/CRITIQUES
·
What connections do you see across the texts and
ideas?
·
What connections do you see between these ideas
and things happening in your teaching/learning context? Teaching practices? Student behaviors? Classroom climates?
·
What implications do these ideas have for your
work in education?
·
What questions do you have? (e.g., clarifying
terms, broader applications, extended wonderings, critiques)
Do these ideas spark any interests for your
final project?
oo0oo
According to the texts readers should be able to use efficient ways to approach texts and build
meaning from them. Using efficient reading strategies is the best way to do that.
Guthrie, Wigfied & You, 2012 define strategy as “students’
multiple cognitive processes of comprehending, self-monitoring, and
constructing their understanding and beliefs during reading.” (p. 603).
According to Paris, Wasik, & Turner, (p. 611) “strategic readers are
note characterized by the volume of tactics they use but rather by the
selection of appropriate strategies that fit the particular text, purpose and
occasion.”
Reading
in these texts is considered as a cognitively demanding activity that involves
many different cognitive skills. “These range from processing individual words
to generating meaning from complex texts” (Guthrie, Wigfied & You,
2012, p.602). Reading requires
deep as well as superficial strategies. “Deep processing strategies consist of
making inferences, forming summaries, integrating diverse elements, and
monitoring one’s comprehension during reading. Superficial strategies are typified
by underlining, memorizing, and seeking to complete tasks rather than comprehending
fully.” (p. 615)
Strategic readers usually decode
fast, have a “large vocabulary, phonemic awareness, knowledge about the text
features and a variety of strategies to aid comprehension and memory” (Paris,
Wasik & Turner p.609). “Novice readers, in contrast, often focus on
decoding single words, fail to adjust their reading to different texts of
purposed, and seldom look ahead or back in text to monitor and improve
comprehension” (Paris, Wasik, & Turner, p.609)
As readers get more experience on
reading they tend to develop strategies that help them to become better
readers, but in many cases, explicit instruction will make the students
understand all the work involved in text comprehension.
According to the texts, we
reading comprehension involves identifying main ideas, making inferences,
connecting ideas, making and answering questions, synthesizing, communicating
(socializing). In order to do that, the reader must be motivated and engaged.
Guthrie, Wigfied, & You, 2012
define engagement “as
involvement, participation, and commitment to some set of activities.” (p.601),
so engaged readers are “motivated to read, strategic in their approaches to
comprehending what they read, knowledgeable in their construction of meaning
from text, and socially interactive while reading” (p. 602)
Engagement is the result of many aspects that
work together. If the student is engaged, it is because there are some aspects
that are contributing to it: previous knowledge, reading skills, interest,
motivation, aim, the text is meaningful, and this lead to engagement and
consequently to success.
There is a cycle here: motivation leads to
engagement that leads to good reading behaviors. One aspect retro feed the
other. When one of these aspects is missing, the others might fail too. There
is also a negative cycle
– if reading is a struggle, it lacks pleasure,
meaning, and consequently, efficacy, motivation and engagement. This will lead the student to
avoid reading or giving up on reading. So, one very important aspect in teaching
reading comprehension: is to promote the reader motivation and engagement,
generation the positive cycle that will make him wanting to read more.
Teaching reading comprehension
involves helping the students to be good decoders and good meaning builders. They also need to be
critical readers. Teaching to read involves teaching reading strategies that
the students can use before, during and after reading. A very important one is
monitoring the processes of reading, that is why metacognitive instruction is
pointed by Paris, Wasik, & Turner (1996) as an essential way to promote
strategic reading.
The three texts complement each
other.
Paris, Wasik, & Turner (1996)
explain in details what are the main strategies that readers need to develop,
showing that there are strategies that can be used before, during and after
reading and how important it is for the student to select well which one to use
in each circumstance. They also discuss how the teacher can help the students to
develop reading strategies by direct explaining them to the students by
describing them, explaining the benefits of using them, how to use them, when
they should be used as well as evaluating their use of the strategies. They
also discuss the importance of peer interactions and the classroom climate,
defending a multidimensional classroom that “avoid normative evaluations and
stratification of students by abilities” and that “provide meaningful literacy
tasks, employ a variety of instructional methods, apply multiple performance
standards, and afford all students opportunities for success” (p.629)
In defending a multidimensional
classroom, they weave a criticism on the traditional educational approach,
curricula and assessments, proposing a new agenda for reading instruction that
would emphasize teaching strategies for constructing meaning, the use of
Socratic methods to promote cognitive and motivational aspects of learning.
It is a text written in 1996, and
today, almost 20 years later, we still do not see those changes in school, that
still do work with a curricula that is “disjointed and incompatible with
strategic, metacognitive and motivated aspects of reading” (p. 632). There are many aspects mentioned
in this text, and reinforced by Guthrie, Wigfied, & You, (2012), that are still not included in
school routines, practices or beliefs.
Guthrie, Wigfied, & You,
(2012) review research on
students’ engagement in reading activities and how classroom instructional
practices influence engagement in reading and other academic activities.They show very clearly a cycle,
also mentioned by Paris,
Wasik, & Turner (1996), that relates instruction, motivation, engagement
and achievement. “Behavioral engagement in reading impacts reading compentence,
and motivation to read impact behavioral engagement in reading” (p.604)
They present many classroom practices that impact students’
motivations as autonomy support, relevance, quality of teacher-student
relationships, the kind of Feedback, the adequacy of the material used, and we
can summarize those practices in an idea of a student centered approach that
indeed respect and value the students.
A
presentation and discussion of CORI closes this chapter. “CORI includes the
classroom practices of providing relevance, choices, collaboration, leveled
texts, and thematic units. This cluster of practices is designed to increase intrinsic
motivation, self-efficacy, social motivation, and valuing for reading” (p.628)
Swan’s
text is all about CORI, that is to say, it shows how CORI would work in a real
class situation, and how it foster students engagement, development of
strategies and mainly raising questions.
We
can see very clearly, once again, the cycle formed by motivation, engagement,
strategy use and reading. And how important is the role that the teacher plays,
not only by making questions but by having the students raise and answers their
own questions as a regular activity of the daily life.
It seems
the formula is simple: treat the students with the respect they deserve, making
a student-centered environment, develop deep reading skills in a context that
is meaningful for the students and deal with some metacognition to make them
aware of what reading/learning is.
It
was very good to read these texts, because, as a follower of Socrates,
Vygstsky, Paulo Freire, Emilia Ferreiro, among others, I believe that the
student needs to build his knowledge, and that we learn better what is
meaningful to us and what relates to our lives and interests.
Unfortunately,
the school have a tight agenda, a closed curriculum, and many mistaken beliefs
that do not enable the teacher and the students work to build meaning in a
reasonable, intelligent, interactive, interdisciplinary way. This is not
respectful to the students and nor either to the teachers, that could work in
more pleasant and productive environment.
This
sad reality of the majority of the schools, at least in Brazil, sometimes make
me think that I might be wrong, or that this is not a kind of work that can be
applied for many different reasons. Texts like the ones we read, reviewing so
much research, the aspects of Finish education we had the chance to hear Pasi
talking about, added to the work of a few teachers and schools in Brazil that
believe learning is an active and pleasant process, make me believe that school
could and should be different.
I
try my best to work this way, although I have to struggle to convince my
students that they are not at school to get a good grade, but to learn a lot
about subjects that they will fall in love with and have many questions about. I
try to promote a climate of friendship, partnership, trust, respect, autonomy,
and I hope that by the end of the semester, they are convinced that studying hard and
learning a lot can be fun.
I
always considered reading strategies as important, but I think I have to find a
way to teach them more explicitly to the students or work with a metacognitive
approach, having them think more about the strategies they use or should use.
Those
texts are closely related to my project, because I need to think about other
strategies that reading and learning online require from the reader.