Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Chapter 9: Vocabulary

Vocabulary is so important to learn and teach but it can be such a pain for both teacher and student. Most teachers rely on simply giving lists of words and definitions to student for them to memorize and this is most likely the worse way to do it. Instead, we should encourage students to learn vocab by introducing different ways. This chapter discusses a few different strategies or tips for teaching vocab, such as word tree, Words Across Contexts, or even how to use context clues (something we've all learned about) in a different way

I liked the Words Across Contexts strategy the best and feel like it could also be used for homophones. I think this is also something that could really make a student interested in learning vocab because if they are coming up with their own examples, then they will most likely remember the word better.

Chapter 8: Extending Meaning

One of the strategies I really liked in this chapter was retelling. I never thought about it before, but it would be easier for some students to understand a text if it is in a different form. I guess this is what I do when I'm faced with a difficult poem that I know I will have to be able to discuss. Usually, the first time I'm reading that poem, I get so involved in how the line breaks effect the poem that I miss the point. So I start over and read the poem as if I'm reading prose to get the overall meaning first. And then I go back and look at line breaks or capitalization, or whatever. I also liked the strategy "Most Important Word." This was sort of like what we did in class where we picked one word to describe our book and then connected that word to images and themes.

Overall, this chapter was about how to help student keep thinking about the text, even when they are done reading it. The chapter gave a few different strategies, such as retelling, Most Important Word, and repeated a few from previous chapters.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Chapter 7: Constructing Meaning

Again, this chapter is about how independent readers actively construct meaning from a text while dependent readers don't. In order to help dependent students learn how to do this, the book introduces many reading strategies. Some of the strategies are common ones that pretty much everyone knows: rereading, questioning the text, etc. A few many people have probably done but didn't know the name of the strategy, such as "Say Something" or "Think Aloud." I hadn't actually heard of "Say Something" before, but after reading the description, I've realized that use this strategy a lot, especially when I get lost in a text.

As with other strategies discussed either in the book or in class, we need to model often how to use these strategies and how to use them effectively. If you tell a student to reread, he or she may do it. However, if the teacher doesn't explain why to reread or give a prompt such as Mr. Bell does in the example, then the student is most likely just wasting time by moving their eyes back and forth.

I also agree with the book on the idea that some of the texts we read in school should be reread in a later grade. As we grow and mature, we start to view the world differently and this can also change how we read the book. We're doing something similar in my English Studies class. My professor had us chose one text to use for the entire semester, forcing us to read the text through different criticisms and with each new paper I write, I find something I didn't notice before. Or I think about a character differently. I definitely think that rereading is one of the most important strategies because it can be so effective...if you use it correctly.

Chapter 5: Learning to Make an Inference

The title of this chapter pretty much sums up what the chapter is about: making inferences and how we can help our students learn how to do this. I guess on some level I knew that inferring was something we had learned at some point in our educational lives, but I never thought about it like that. To me it was something that I just happened to pick up and kept doing, so this chapter helped me really realize that some student can't do this.

The example in the book really illustrated this. The one class who didn't struggle with comprehension made plenty of inferences that came directly from the text. However, the other students who do struggle with comprehension weren't able to make inferences about the text as quickly and when they did get around to it, they modified their answers with phrases like "I don't know" or "this is stupid." It almost seemed to me like the second group of students probably could have made the inferences but they were afraid of being wrong.

This says to me that not only do we need to show student how to make inference by modeling the process for them, but to also show our students that whatever inference they do make might not be wrong, so long as they can support what they are saying with examples from the text.