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Reading
The term 'reading' means a complex system of deriving meaning from print that requires all
of the following:
(A) The skills and knowledge to understand how phonemes, or speech sounds, are
connected to print.
(B) The ability to decode unfamiliar words.
(C) The ability to read fluently.
(D) Sufficient background information and vocabulary to foster reading comprehension.
(E) The development of appropriate active strategies to construct meaning from print.
(F) The development and maintenance of a motivation to read.
2. Essential components of reading instruction
The term 'essential components of reading instruction' means explicit and systematic
instruction in(A) phonemic awareness;
(B) phonics;
(C) vocabulary development;
(D) reading fluency, including oral reading skills; and
(E) reading comprehension strategies.
3. Scientifically based reading research
The term 'scientifically based reading research' means research that(A) applies rigorous, systematic, and objective procedures to obtain valid knowledge
relevant to reading development, reading instruction, and reading difficulties;
and
(B) includes research that(i) employs systematic, empirical methods that draw on observation or experiment;
(ii) involves rigorous data analyses that are adequate to test the stated hypotheses and
justify the general conclusions drawn;
(iii) relies on measurements or observational methods that provide valid data across
evaluators and observers and across multiple measurements and observations; and
(iv) has been accepted by a peer-reviewed journal or approved by a panel of independent
experts through a comparably rigorous, objective, and scientific review.
4. Diagnostic reading assessment
The term 'diagnostic reading assessment' means an assessment that is(i) valid, reliable, and based on scientifically based reading research; and
(ii) used for the purpose of(I) identifying a child's specific areas of strengths and weaknesses so that the child has
learned to read by the end of grade 3;
(II) determining any difficulties that a child may have in learning to read and the potential
cause of such difficulties; and
(III) helping to determine possible reading intervention strategies and related special needs.
Re a d i n g Pro c e s s
Content
Wiki
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Prereading
Reading
Responding
Exploring
Applying
Throughout the reading process readers use a variety of strategies, sometimes multiple strategies at once, to
help them make meaning from a text. (Interview with Lynn Marsden).
Reading Strategies
Predicting
Visualizing
Questioning
Drawing inferences
Summarizing
Synthesizing
Monitoring comprehension
Evaluating
Stage 1: Prereading
Pre-Reading Strategies Include:
Shared reading
Guided reading
Independent reading
During reading a number of strategies are used to help students develop comprehension skills. By way of
example, view the guided reading video clips and observe how a variety of strategies are employed at various
stages of the reading process by both the teacher and student.
Making Connections
Students relate to what they read by making connections to their own lives, to other texts they have read and to
the things or events that occur in the world. They compare themselves with the characters in the text and recall
similar situations or experiences.
Encouraging students to make connections helps the reader to stay engaged and to see the connections
between reading and everyday life. Capable readers use previous personal experiences, prior knowledge, and
opinions to make sense of what they have read. Capable readers make text-to-self, text-to-text, and text-toworld connections. In the guided reading clip, the child makes text-to-self and text-to-text connections. Notice
that the teacher prompts her to make connections at certain points, but the child also offers connections without
being prompted.
To encourage students to make connections you can provide them with some prompts:
I remember when
Predicting
Making predictions or best guesses about what will happen in a text is an important literacy strategy and skill.
Students predictions are based on their prior knowledge and experiences about the topic, the genre, and what
has happened so far in the text (using both the print text and illustrations). Having students make predictions
engages them in the reading task and encourages them to become active participants in the learning.
Ask the learner to make predictions at the following points:
Before reading:
o
Examine the cover illustration and read the title of the book. Ask the student to predict what it
might be about based on the cover illustration, the title, or both. Sometimes the cover is not very helpful
in giving students clues about what the story might be about so you may have to provide a brief
summary of the book.
You might say: Look at the picture on the book and read the title. What do you think this book
is about?
During reading:
o
Students make predictions at several key points throughout the text and as they read, they
confirm or revise their predictions. In the guided reading clip, the teacher uses post-it notes to mark
places in the text where the student might make a prediction.
You might say: What do you think [main character] is going to do?
After reading:
o
The student compares the predictions to what the text says. Students can record their
predictions on a chart as they read and they can see how accurate they were when they finish reading.
Answering questions
Quality childrens literature that might not be accessible to the children at their stage of reading
development, can be used, even with very young students
The teacher models reading at the same time that students practice their reading
Allowing students to become familiar with the texts language patterns through multiple readings
promotes word-recognition skills and builds students confidence as readers
All of the students experience success because less skilled readers still have the support of the
teacher and their classmates, while more advanced readers can enjoy the challenge of reading high quality
literature
Based on careful observation of students, the teacher selects books that are supportive, predictable,
and closely matched to the students' needs, abilities, and interests. The chosen texts should support the
objective, but be readable enough for students to proceed with minimal assistance. (Approximately 90-94%
accuracy)
The guided reading lesson provides the opportunity for the teacher to interact with small groups of
students as they read books that present a successful challenge for them.
The assessment provides information for the homogeneous groupings which are necessary for guided
reading. This allows the teacher to tailor instruction to suit students' changing instructional needs.
The teacher acts as a facilitator who sets the scene, arouses interest, and engages students in
discussion that will enable them to unfold the story line and feel confident and capable of reading the text
themselves.
Guided reading is reading by students. The students are responsible for the first reading of the text,
although the teacher might read a page or two to begin the session, particularly at the primary level.
Approximations and predictions are encouraged and praised. The teacher closely observes, monitors,
and evaluates ways in which individual students process print utilizing reading strategies such as checking
meaning and self-correcting.
Examining each of these elements, we find a collection of interrelated cognitive elements that must be well
developed to be successful at either comprehending language or decoding. This text will examine both
language comprehension and decoding, along with the subordinate cognitive elements that underlie each. All
of these underlying knowledge domains will be described as discrete and distinct cognitive elements, but
only for the benefit of this examination. It is important for reading teachers to understand what these
elements are and how they fit in the "big picture" of reading acquisition, but it is also important for teachers
to understand that these elements are all interdependent and interrelated in a childs head.
Let us begin this examination of the cognitive processes involved in reading acquisition where the child
begins with Language Comprehension.
Language comprehension generally refers to one's ability to understand speech (there are other forms of
language, but for the sake of the current conversation, we will only consider speech). It is important to
remember that language is not at all generic. There are different "levels" of language. Adults do not speak
to children the way they speak to other adults; stories for adults are aimed at a "higher level" than stories
for children.
Further, there are different types of language. Language can be informal, as it often is in
routine discourse among friends and family, or it can be formal, as it often is in classroom
environments. Informal language for young children is usually very context dependent; the
conversation typically focuses on information that is immediately relevant and often
concrete. Formal language, on the other hand, is often decontextualized and abstract (e.g., asking a child to
retell a story or to consider the perspective of a character in a story). Some children have more experience
with formal language than others, and naturally, this gives them an advantage in formal classroom learning
environments.
It is also worth noting that there are different types and levels of language comprehension. The most
mundane form is explicit comprehensionthe listener merely understands what is explicitly stated. The
listener may not draw any inferences or elaborate on what is said, but at least the listener understands what
is specifically stated.
A more elaborate form of language comprehension builds inferential understanding on top of explicit
comprehension. Sometimes, in order to truly understand language, the listener must consider the context in
which communication is taking place. Sometimes, one needs to "read between the lines" and draw
inferences. Sometimes, these inferences are context dependent, meaning that it is necessary to consider the
speaker and the audience. Consider the following statements out of context: "My car broke down the other
day, and its going to cost $2000 to fix! This couldnt have come at a worse time, either. Bob Junior needs
braces, and Mary hasnt been able to work very many hours recently."
Out of context, this person seems only to be seeking sympathy. However, what would you think about these
statements if you knew that this person was speaking to his boss? He never says it explicitly, but it is
obvious that he is asking for a raise. In real communication, sometimes the true message is never explicitly
statedthe listener must deduce the speakers intent behind the message.
For language to work, it is assumed that both the speaker and the listener are cooperating in their
communication: The speaker is attempting to convey only the information that is relevant and interesting for
the listener; the listener is trying to ascertain the important and relevant message that the speaker is
conveying.
The context, the nature of the discourse, the speakers underlying intent these and many other factors
are important to comprehension. Often, what is not said is as important to the communication as what is
said. Consider these quotes taken from actual performance evaluations used by the military to determine
qualifications for promotion:
"His performance under my command has never once dropped below average."
Are there hidden messages in these evaluations? None of these evaluations are particularly negative or
derogatory, but the very fact that they are not laudatory speaks volumes. In these evaluations, the speaker
is trying not to explicitly say something, and hopefully, the listener will hear what the speaker is trying so
hard not to say.
More than just an appreciation for the social context of communication and the ability to draw inferences,
language comprehension involves a general awareness that the purpose of communication is to coherently
convey information. Children need to develop an understanding of different genres, voices, perspectives,
and styles. Children also need to understand how those elements may reflect the intent of the speaker,
author, or storyteller, and how those elements affect the underlying meaning of communication. Young
children typically do not have a well-developed appreciation of the pragmatics of speech, and teachers must
often draw their attention to these comprehension skills explicitly.
It is also relevant to note that, particularly in the Southwest United States, sometimes there are crosslanguage issues related to language comprehension. A childs native language may be Spanish, and she may
have high levels of understanding in Spanish, but if she is in a classroom in the United States, her language
comprehension is most likely being assessed in English.
Language comprehension in this context, then, refers to the childs ability to understand and draw inferences
from speech that is in a language the child understands, and that is at a level the child should be able to
understand. If a child is expected to read English text, the child must understand spoken English adequately.
If the child does not speak English, the text will be more meaningful if it is written in the language the child
does speak and at a level she understands.
The importance of connecting the child's spoken language to the text is paramount, but it is frequently
overlooked when assessing the reading instruction needs of children. This is not just a concern when
addressing the needs of students who are learning English as a second language, or addressing the needs of
children who speak a non-standard dialect of English. This is a concern that every reading teacher of every
child should be aware of. Some childrenEnglish speaking childrengrow up in an impoverished linguistic
environment. Despite the fact that English is their native language, their language comprehension skills are
underdeveloped. Furthermore, explicit instruction aimed at developing linguistic comprehension usually
takes a back seat to explicit instruction of text-awareness or decoding skills in the classroom. The balance is
important, and reading teachers need to consciously maintain that balance.
Assessment Techniques
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Related Research
The second important element underlying reading comprehension is decoding, which generically refers to
the childs ability to recognize and process written information. While that may sound straightforward, it
should be noted that children may try many different, often inappropriate decoding strategies before they
become skilled decoders.
Initially, children learn that certain symbols "stand for" concepts, but these symbols are
highly contextualized. For example, many children recognize the golden arches of
McDonalds restaurantsthese children recognize that the golden arches represent a
concept, which, in this case is food that they would like to eat. This is sometimes called
"environmental print reading," and, although it signals that the child is on the road to literacy, it is not the
same as "decoding." In this case, the symbols and words the child recognizes depend upon their context for
recognition. The child may recognize the word "milk" when it is written on the milk carton, but does not
recognize that same word when it is in a storybook. Similarly, a child may recognize the word, "McDonalds"
when it is accompanied by the golden arches, but may be unable to recognize it out of that context.
Farther along the road to decoding, children typically develop the ability to recognize certain high-frequency
and familiar words. This is sometimes called "sight-word reading." It involves the child memorizing the
shape of each whole word, or some unique feature in each word, and recognizing it when it comes up in
print. This approach works only for a very short timechildren can only memorize so many words, and as
their "sight vocabulary" grows, their capacity for learning new words diminishes. They tend to confuse words
and forget words. Sight-word readers are limited to the words that they have memorizedthey can not
make sense of unfamiliar words, and can not read text that is comprised of words outside of their sight
vocabulary.
As emergent readers become more advanced, they learn how to use the conventions of written English to
"sound out" or "decipher" words. This approach is generative, which means there is no limit to the number
of words that can be created or read by those with this ability. Consequently, young readers who can
decipher words can make sense of words they have never encountered before in print.
Unfortunately, in English, there is more to decoding than using the conventions of written English to
decipher words. In English, virtually every spelling-sound convention has exceptionsEnglish would make
more sense if "one" sounded like "own" and if "too" did not sound like "two," but in English, there are a host
of words whose correct pronunciations violate the conventions of English spelling-sound relationships in
some way. To become an expert decoder, a child needs to learn to decipher words, but further, the child
needs to begin learning how to correctly identify irregular or exception words.
It is important to note that learning irregular words is a process that develops throughout a reader's life.
Even adult readers come across new words that are not pronounced the way they are spelled. (How do you
pronounce "calliope"?) However, it is reasonable to say that readers are decoding text appropriately if they
are correctly recognizing irregular or exception words within their vocabulary and pronouncing unfamiliar
words in a way consistent with the conventions of written English.
The elements that support language comprehension and decoding
We have described reading comprehension as the product of decoding skills and language comprehension
skillsboth of which depend upon more fundamental cognitive elements. Each of these elements is worth
examining in some detail.
Language comprehension and the cognitive elements that support it
Children learn their native language relatively easilythey do not need much in the way of explicit
instruction to learn basic communication skills. Unless they are severely deprived of opportunities to
experience their language, almost all children develop those functional communication skills long before they
enter school. This process of language acquisition starts very earlyin fact, there is evidence that children
begin learning about certain aspects of language while still in the womb. After they are born, children
naturally practice and experiment very actively with language.
Despite childrens natural tendencies to actively learn their native language, language skill instruction should
not be neglected in the classroom. Some children need to be taught some aspects of language formally and
explicitly. Children may need little formal instruction to be able to communicate basic needs, but for
academic success in a formal learning environment, children need to be versed in certain aspects of formal
language, decontextualized language, and metalinguistic knowledge.
It is rare to find children whose language experiences are so impoverished that their language development
is inadequate for basic communication, but it is not uncommon to find children who are not prepared to deal
with the formal, decontextualized language used in classrooms. Some children are raised in homes where
more formal, decontextualized language is common, and their early experiences with formal language
prepare them for the more formal learning environment of a classroom. However, other children do not
benefit from such rich and diverse language experience. While their language experience is typically
adequate for basic expression and typical discourse, they are at a disadvantage when trying to function in
academic settings.
Teachers should make no assumptions about their students language comprehension skills. They should
know that the children in their classes do not necessarily come from similar linguistic environments and may
not have approximately equal language development. Every childs language skills need to be assessed, and
areas of need should be addressed.
Assessment Techniques
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Related Research
To have strong language comprehension skills, children must know about the world in which they live, and
must have elaborate background knowledge that is relevant to what they are trying to understand. This
knowledge is more sophisticated than mere facts or word definitionsit is a reference base for personal
experiences, scripts, and schemas that help those children understand how the world
works.
To really understand and appreciate a story, children need to know more than the
definitions of words in the story; they need to have a frame of reference so they can make
sense of the plot.
Children learn by comparing new information against information they already have in their headsand that
information must be relevant to the story they are listening to. "Casey at the bat," for instance, makes more
sense to people who are familiar with baseball, and teaching children about baseball will help them to
appreciate "Casey at the bat." This point seems trivially obvious, but the issue is raised here to emphasize a
non-trivial pointnot all children have the same background knowledge. Children can not understand what
is being said to them if they do not share some background knowledge with the speaker. Likewise, they
cannot understand a story if they do not have some background knowledge related to the topic of the story.
Similarly, children depend on life experiences to develop schemas and scripts about how the world should
work. Certain events are more likely to happen at a baseball game than at a restaurant, and events typically
take place in a certain order or sequence. We depend on our internal schemas and scripts to help us
organize and anticipate events in a story.
Instruction tip: Typically, the problem that children have with comprehension is not that they lack knowledge in a
general sensethe problem is that the knowledge that they do have is not relevant to what they are trying to
understand. You can either provide background knowledge relevant to activities (e.g., before telling stories about a
zoo, the class could take a field trip to the zoo), or you can search for stories that are relevant to the knowledge you
know the children already have (making the classroom materials relevant to the backgrounds and cultures of the
students).
Assessment tip: It is safe to assume that all children have knowledge, but it is not safe to assume that the
knowledge they have is relevant to a particular activity. Before starting an activity, sample the children's knowledge
about the content of the activity with some informal questions.
Assessment Techniques
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Languages are composed of sounds that are assembled to form words, which are combined to form
sentences, which are arranged to convey ideas. Each of these processes is constrained and governed by
linguistic rules. An implicit knowledge of their structure and their integration is essential to language
comprehension. Three basic elements come together to support linguistic knowledge:
To understand language, one must be able to hear, distinguish and categorize the
sounds in speech (phonology).
One needs to be implicitly familiar with the structure that constrains the way words
fit together to make phrases and sentences (syntax).
One must be able to understand the meaning of individual words and sentences being spoken and
the meaningful relations between them (semantics).
Linguistic knowledge depends upon all three elements being synthesized rapidly and fluently. Each of these
elements can be examined in some detail.
Assessment Techniques
Instructional Activities
To understand spoken language, a child must be able to hear and distinguish the sounds that make up the
language. Virtually every child raised in a normal linguistic environment has the ability to distinguish
between different speech sounds in her native language. Almost all native English speakers can therefore
hear the difference between similar English words like "grow" and "glow." When children produce these
words themselves, however, they may not be able to articulate distinctly enough for others to hear the
distinction. Difficulty with articulation does not imply difficulty with perception.
Hearing the difference between similar sounding words such as "grow" and "glow" is easy
for most children, but not for all children. Some children are raised in homes where English
is not spoken, or where non-standard dialects of English are spoken. Likewise, some
children suffer auditory trauma or ear infections that affect their ability to hear speech. Any
child who is not consistently exposed to English phonology may have difficulty perceiving the subtle
differences between English phonemes. Obviously, children who are not able to hear the difference between
similar-sounding words like "grow" and "glow" will be confused when these words appear in context, and
their comprehension skills will suffer dramatically.
Instruction tip: Children usually have problems articulating certain sounds, but even though they may say the words
inappropriately, they can usually hear the differences when somebody else speaks. In other words, they do not have a
problem with phonology; they have a problem with articulation. You can address this problem when a child says a
word incorrectly by parroting what the child said back to the child in the form of a question. If the child says, "I want
to go pray outside," ask the child, "You want to go pray outside?" The child with normal phonologic skills will repeat
herself, emphasizing the indistinct word, and try to make you understand what she is trying to say.
Assessment tip: Play the "same or different" game. Generate pairs of words that are either identical or that differ in
a subtle way. Say them out loud and ask the child if they are the same or different. Children should rarely miss the
ones that are different. If the child misses more than just a few, consult with a speech therapist or an audiologist.
Assessment Techniques
Instructional Activities
Related Research
In German, the main verb typically comes at the end of a clause. In Romance languages, adjectives typically
follow the noun. Different languages have different rules of syntax that constrain the way words and phrases
can be arranged. In another language, the sentence, "Billy has a black dog" might be written, "A dog black
Billy has." However, the rules of English syntax prohibit us from rearranging the words in sentences
haphazardly. The way that words are arranged in English sentences has a fairly stringent structure, and one
does not need to be able to formally diagram sentences to understand that structure
implicitly.
The stringent structure of English syntax is not accidental. Syntax provides some meaning
and helps minimize ambiguity. Consider these actual newspaper headlines:
All of the words make sense, but the poor syntax makes the sentences ambiguous. People who have a
limited appreciation for English syntax may not understand why these sentences are confusing.
Syntax can also help people figure out meanings for unfamiliar words. For example, consider the sentence,
"I fell asleep while waiting for Mary to return from the tembal." Your knowledge of English syntax helps you
to develop some ideas about what "tembal" might mean, but if you were not familiar with English syntax,
you might not even know that "tembal" is a noun.
The fact that the rules of syntax change from language to language can confuse people learning English as a
second language. However, again, this is not exclusively a problem for second language learners. Children
who come from impoverished linguistic environments are usually comfortable only with very simple syntactic
structure. Unfortunately, without a moderately sophisticated implicit understanding of the rules of syntax,
language comprehension is severely limited for these children, especially when they are expected to work in
more formal linguistic settings like schools.
Instruction tip: Invite the class to sit outside in a circle on the grass. Ask them to close their eyes and listen. Remain
silent. After a few seconds, ask students what they heard. The activity may need to be repeated several times for
children to become comfortable with the activity. Initially, ask students to tell you what they heard in simple
sentences. Example: "I heard a bird." "I hear a dog barking." Later, ask students to describe what they heard in more
complex syntax ("First I heard a bird, then I heard a dog barking, and the whole time, I could hear the wind
blowing.").
Assessment tip: A cloze assessment can be modified to assess syntax. Give students sentences with selected words
missing, and ask them to supply syntactically appropriate words. Remember, there is no single correct answer in this
type of assessment: The child's response may not make sense, yet still may be syntactically correct. For example, the
sentence, "Mark lifted a _____ over his head" can be completed with any noun or noun phrase "train" "pillow" or
"dream" could all fit there. For young children, this test should be presented orally.
Assessment Techniques
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The ultimate goal of language is to convey meaning. While phonology carries information that makes spoken
words distinct, and syntax constrains the arrangement of words in language, semantics refers to the
information contained within the language. Semantics is a global term that collectively describes meaning at
three different levels of language; the discourse / sentence level, the vocabulary level, and the morphology
level.
Semantics at the discourse / sentence level
The celebrated linguist, Noam Chomsky, coined the sentence, "Colorless green ideas sleep
furiously," to illustrate the fact that phonology and syntax can be preserved even in the
absence of semantics. The words in the sentence are composed of speech sounds found in English
(otherwise, the words themselves would not make sense), and the sentence is syntactically correct (the
words sound right together), but the sentence is not semantically acceptable.
Artificial, meaningless sentences like Chomskys do not come up often in typical conversation, but children
often face real sentences that do not make sense to them. To understand or gain meaning from speech, a
listener must examine meaning at several different levels simultaneously. At the more global level, meaning
can be examined at the level of discourse, sentences, and phrases. As Chomskys sentence illustrates, it is
possible to combine meaningful words in meaningless ways, but this is not typically a problem. People do
not make a habit of producing meaningless sentences deliberately. More typically, when meaning breaks
down at this global level, it is because a sentence has meaning for one person but not for another. (Or the
sentence may mean something different for another person.) Similarly, meaning may break down at the
global levels because certain statements or sentences do not fit appropriately in the discourse. If two people
are discussing literature, and one of them interjects a non sequitur about baseball, the other may wonder if
she has missed some part of the conversation.
Semantics at the vocabulary level
Meaning can also be examined at the level of the individual word (vocabulary). If you were learning a
foreign language, and you knew only the most basic words for communication, you would certainly have
difficulty understanding a native speaker. If you have studied the language, you might understand a few of
the words, and you might try to piece the words you know together to get the gist of the communication.
You would be attempting to assemble meaning at the sentence or phrase level, but you really would not
have much confidence in your understanding. You would probably perform poorly if you were tested on your
comprehension, especially if you did not understand some of the words in the test. To understand speech,
you have to understand most of the words that are spoken. (It is worth noting that while you can infer the
meaning of a few words from context, you must understand most of the words in order to build that
context.)
Children face this bewildering problem every daypeople are constantly using words around them that they
do not understand. New vocabulary is introduced on a daily basis. The average student learns about eight
new words per day (3,000 words per year) for the first few years of formal education.
Semantics at the morphology level
The third and most basic level of meaning analysis is morphology, or the meaning of word parts. A
morpheme is the smallest meaningful unit of speech, so a single word may contain more than one
morpheme (e.g., the word "smallest" has two morphemes, "small" and "est"each part has meaning). A
childs vocabulary is greatly enriched when the child learns to examine the structure of wordsto examine
words at the morpheme level. The child learns that words with common roots have common meanings, and
that affixes influence the meaning of a word in specific ways. Children use their understanding of
morphology to learn new words, and when they learn to read, a good understanding of morphology helps
children spell and pronounce words correctly (helping them understand why "doing" does not rhyme with
"boing").
Instruction tip: The ultimate goal with semantics is to have children pay attention to meaning at the sentence or
discourse level. This requires a strong vocabulary and an appreciation for morphology, but semantics goes beyond
simply "knowing words." As you work with children, ask them to focus on meaning at different levels. Ask them to
break words down and examine the meanings of the morphemes. Ask them to provide synonyms and definitions for
words in context. But, further, teach them to examine the meaning of sentences embedded in stories. Teach them to
use context to guess the meanings of unknown words and to look for the logical structure of stories.
Assessment tip: Like all of the elements under Language Comprehension, assessments in semantics are more valid if
they are given orally. One way to test semantics is to ask children to look for logical inconsistencies in stories. Create
sentences and stories that contain logical flaws (e.g., Mark liked to go for walks with Mary because he enjoyed being
alone.) Then ask them to detect the logical inconsistencies.
Assessment Techniques
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Related Research
The problem of learning to read, as stated previously, is made up of two equally important components:
language comprehension and decoding. Even among children who have adequate language comprehension
skills, there are children who have difficulty reading because they have only mastered one of the two
components. Just as some children are fortunate to be raised in environments rich in language experiences,
some children are fortunate to be raised in homes surrounded by literature and text. Usually, these
environments are one in the samebut not always. Some children, for example, come from cultures with
rich storytelling traditions, but with limited use of text and writing. There are many children who are only
rarely exposed to text in their householdthese children may enter school with only scant appreciation for
what text is. To be a good reader, a child will need to understand what text is, how it works, and what it is
used for. Unfortunately, as every teacher of young children knows, not all children have the same
foundations for literacy. The appreciation for text that children have when they come to school varies
tremendously, and this variability needs to be addressed as early as possible. Each childs text-related skills
must be assessed, and focused instruction in appropriate reading and writing skills should start as soon as
the child comes to school, be that in first grade, kindergarten, or pre-kindergarten.
Researchers have found that a child's ability to decode words in the first grade is an
excellent predictor of the childs reading comprehension skill in the fourth grade. Many
organizations, such as the International Reading Association (IRA) and the National
Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), have published position
statements saying it is never too early to begin literacy instruction, and that literacy
instruction should be the concern of anybody working with young children (preschool,
daycare, etc.). The assessment and instruction provided in these vital first years of formal education should
focus on the cognitive elements that research has shown to be crucial to the process of developing decoding
skills. These areas include cipher knowledge, lexical knowledge, an awareness of phonemes, knowledge of
the alphabetic principle, knowledge of letters, and understanding concepts about print. Each of these
cognitive elements can be examined in turn.
Assessment Techniques
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Cipher knowledge basically refers to the underlying knowledge that allows children to read and pronounce
regular words correctly. The term "cipher knowledge" may not be a familiar term, but it is a technically
precise term, and if teachers are to become experts, they should become familiar with the correct
terminology. The technically precise term, "cipher knowledge," is used here to distinguish it from "decoding."
Again, if teachers are to become experts, they should understand how a "cipher" differs
from a "code."
While a cipher refers to a regular and consistent relationship, a code refers to a more
arbitrary and nonsystematic relationship. If you were to replace every letter in written
English with a number (e.g., a=1, b=2, c=3, etc.), then you would have developed a cipher,
and "deciphering" it would be a matter of following basic rules of translation. On the other hand, if you were
to replace whole words with arbitrary numbers (e.g., "the"=11, "of"=21, "and"=13, etc.), then you would
have created a code, and a codebook would be required for translation. Thus, when we talk about
"deciphering" text, we are talking about the ability to "sound out" regular words (sometimes called "word
attack" skills). Cipher knowledge, then, is demonstrated when a person appropriately sounds out words she
has never seen before.
Early in the development of cipher knowledge, children learn that certain letter combinations are valid and
others are invalid. Young children who are gaining cipher knowledge, despite limited vocabularies, are able
to tell that "pem" could be a word, but that "pvm" could not possibly be.
As children continue to develop cipher knowledge, they begin to understand that the English writing system
is, for the most part, regular and consistent. They understand, at least implicitly, that words with similar
spellings are usually pronounced similarly. Children quickly start to recognize common letter groups in
words, and they begin to "read by analogy." Thus, when a child who has realized that words with similar
spellings are pronounced similarly comes across a word she has never seen before, such as "pone," she can
pronounce it correctly based on her knowledge of other similar words that she is familiar with, such as
"lone," "prone," "bone," "tone," "phone," "zone," or "cone." There is some small possibility that her
pronunciation will be incorrect ("pone" might rhyme with "done" or "gone"), but chances are the new word
will follow the same pattern as known words with similar spellings.
This ability to decipher words is critically important to decoding, and its usefulness can not be overstated.
This ability, like the English language itself, is generative, and the foundation of decoding rests upon the
ability to decipher.
Instruction tip: Deciphering and decoding are not the same thingusing the spelling-sound knowledge about letters
in the English language to "sound out" words is deciphering. Pronouncing words correctly regardless of whether they
are regular or irregular is decoding. If a child pronounced "steak" so it rhymed with "beak," the child would be
deciphering the word, but not decoding it. When teaching children cipher knowledge, it is best to take the emphasis off
of correct pronunciation, and reward children for correctly sounding-out words (or, if possible, avoid using irregular
words in that lesson).
Assessment tip: For younger children, make up simple nonsense words, and ask them to name them. Children who
can decipher words have no trouble reading words like "hin" "vab" or "lat." For older children, either make up
nonsense words that are more appropriate for older children (e.g., "porviate"), or make up a list of people's names
that can be deciphered (e.g., "Marty Fendrick"). Tell the children you'd like them to pretend they are a teacher calling
roll.
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Again, a technically precise, although probably unfamiliar term is used here: Lexical knowledge simply refers
to the knowledge that enables a child to correctly recognize and pronounce familiar, irregular words. As
discussed earlier, the English writing system is fairly structured with some fairly consistent spelling-sound
relationships. Some have attempted to formally identify a set of "rules" that capture English spelling-sound
relationships, but these attempts have always been somewhat unsatisfactory there are always many
exceptions to any rule. For example, in a phonics lesson, the teacher may tell the children, "Words that end
in silent-e have long vowels," but that is only true 60 percent of the time. Children seem to be much better
at recognizing patterns and making generalizations based upon observed patterns than at applying explicit
rules when decoding words.
The consistent patterns that exist in the English writing system would be described as the
"cipher" (see Cipher Knowledge). As children try to identify patterns, however, they are
faced with potentially confusing information because many words in English are "exception"
or "irregular" words. The pronunciations of these irregular words are not consistent with
other words that are spelled similarly: "Colonel" really should not sound like "kernel," and "tongue" ought to
be spelled T-U-N-G. Unfortunately, in order to become proficient readers of English, children must be able to
fluently and correctly identify both regular and irregular words.
Fortunately, even for irregular words, most of the word can be accurately deciphered or "sounded out." The
irregular word, "friend," for example, is only irregular because of the vowel soundthe rest of the word is
regular. Deciphering the word results in a pronunciation that is nearly correctclose enough that the young
reader can usually figure it out. (Extremely irregular words like "colonel" and "aisle" are actually rare in
English.) When a child encounters a regular word, deciphering it is enough, but when she encounters an
irregular word, after attempting to decipher it, the child may need to mentally compare that word against
other known words. To do this, the child needs an internal representation of all of the words she knows that
includes information about spelling, pronunciation, conjugation, meaning, and other relevant details.
Reading specialists call this internal representation of all of the words we know our "lexicon"basically, it is
the dictionary in your head. To correctly pronounce irregular words, young readers depend upon their lexical
knowledge, which develops with practice, feedback, and exposure to text.
Lexical knowledge develops throughout a reader's life. (Even adults are constantly learning new words
you, for example, might have just learned the word "lexicon.") But the development of lexical knowledge is
most visible in children. Young readers start out as sight-word readers: They memorize words as wholes, or
they look for some salient feature in a word. Sight-word reading is extremely inefficient and very limited,
but the few words the young reader is familiar with are all pronounced correctly. (Whether the word is
regular or irregular is not relevant at this point.)
When the child realizes the limitations of memorizing whole words and starts learning to decipher words, she
may appear to be taking a step backwards. She might struggle to recognize and correctly pronounce
irregular words that she seemed to know previously. Eventually, through experience with the words and with
feedback from the teacher, she will begin to learn correct pronunciations for irregular words. The more the
child reads, and the more feedback she gets, the more irregular words she will be able to identify correctly.
Instruction tip: Sit with a child (preferably a child who has learned to "sound out" words already) and a book. On
each page of the book, ask the child to search for irregular words that you say aloud. ("Can you find the
wordsword on this page?") Be sure to use words that are within the child's speaking vocabulary.
Assessment tip: Ask the child to find five words in a book or a list that are "not spelled the way they sound." Further,
ask the child how each word would be pronounced if you just "sounded it out."
Assessment Techniques
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Spoken words are made up of sounds. This is obvious to adults, but it is surprisingly obscure for young
children who perceive spoken words as wholes. Within a word, there may be other words (as in the case of
compound words). There may also be multiple syllables. And, of course, every spoken word is comprised of
phonemes.
As important as it is, however, it is possible to go overboard teaching phoneme awareness. English contains
many confusing phonemes such as diphthongs and glides that even mature, experienced readers can have
trouble identifying. (How many phonemes do you hear in "play" or "cube"?) Furthermore, certain phonemes
are not universally defined. (What are the phonemes in "wring" or "fur"?)
It is important for the teacher to remember that a child does not need to be an Olympic champion at
phoneme manipulation; she just needs to demonstrate knowledge of the fact that spoken words are made
up of phonemes and that phonemes can be rearranged and manipulated to make different words. That level
of awareness is all a child needs to understand the alphabetic principle (more on that later), which is
the only reason that phoneme awareness is important in learning to decode text. An appropriate level of
phoneme awareness can be instilled and supported with a select subset of phonemes. Phoneme awareness
can be taught using words that do not contain consonant clusters or glides, and that have phonemes which
are easy to pronounce in isolation. (The phoneme /b/, for example, is often avoided in phoneme awareness
lessons because it can not be pronounced without a subsequent vowel sound. Pronouncing /b/ so that it
sounds like /buh/ is confusing to a child trying to develop phoneme awareness.)
Instruction tip: One game that children like to play is "I spy with my little eye." You can use this game to enhance
phoneme awareness by having children look for objects whose names begin with certain sounds. (Dont use letters in
this game; use sounds.) To make it more challenging, have the children look for objects whose names end with certain
sounds.
Assessment tip: Use the "Turtle Talk" game to assess the childs phoneme segmentation ability. Sit one-on-one with a
child; tell her that, in addition to walking slowly, turtles talk slowly. Ask her to take a breath after every sound she
makes. Demonstrate for the child how a turtle would say the word "man" (/m/ /a/ /n/ taking a clear breath between
each sound). Try to use words that have phonemes that are easy to say in isolation, such as /t/ /m/ and /f/. Avoid
words that contain phonemes like the hard /g/ and /b/ because they can not be said without adding a vowel to the end
(so they sound like /guh/ and /buh/). Also, start with simple words, and build up to more difficult words.
Assessment Techniques
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Not every language has an alphabet. In Japanese, the symbols in text represent syllables; in the traditional
Chinese writing system, each symbol represents a whole word. In most western languages, however, the
symbols in text represent phonemes. Knowledge of the alphabetic principle refers to an understanding that
spoken words are made up of phonemes (phoneme awareness) and that those phonemes are represented in
text as letters. An understanding of the alphabetic principle is the cornerstone on which English literacy is
built. Unfortunately, it is a concept that children often fail to grasp (usually because they lack phoneme
awareness, and therefore, do not understand what letters in text represent).
To master decoding, and to make sense of letter-sound relationships, a child must first
make the connection between the symbols on the page and the sounds in speech.
Specifically, she needs to understand that the letters in written words correspond to the
phonemes in spoken words. A child who is "sight reading" can see a symbol on a page and
know that it stands for a spoken word, but the symbol that she is seeing is the whole word.
Teachers need to focus the childs attention on the letters that make up written words and
the phonemes that make up spoken words.
Similarly, some children are able to demonstrate a knowledge of letter-sound relationships without actually
understanding the alphabetic principle. Such children are able to report that the letter "s" makes an /s/
sound, but they really do not understand that "fast" and "seat" both have an /s/ sound in them, and that the
/s/ sound is represented by a letter when you write the word.
Instruction tip: Role reversal sometimes helps children grasp the alphabetic principle. Encourage your student to
make up vocabulary words for you to write down. They should not be real words, but should be nonsense words that
the child creates. Show the child that you are faithfully recording the sounds she is making; ask her to clearly
enunciate each sound so you can write it down accurately.
Assessment tip: Pay attention to how the child writes. For the purposes of assessing the child's understanding of the
alphabetic principle, it does not matter whether the child writes accurately. What matters is that she writes one symbol
per sound. The symbols do not even have to be letters, as long as words with three phonemes are represented in her
writing by three symbols.
Assessment Techniques
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The letter is the basic unit of reading and writing, and letter knowledge has consistently been shown to be
one of the best predictors of later reading success. A child beginning to read should be familiar with these
elements of text, but simple knowledge of the alphabet is not enough. For a child, the alphabet is an
arbitrary poem or song filled with meaningless babble. (Most people are familiar with the fact that children
often think that "lmno" is a single unit.) The alphabet song does not necessarily have any more meaning to
a child than any other song, and many children learn to recite the alphabet without any understanding of
what they are reciting.
Before they can read, children must be comfortable and familiar with the letters of the
alphabet. They should be able to identify the letters in different fonts and type case, and
they should be comfortable with handwritten letters as well as letters embedded within
words (as opposed to presented in isolation). Most importantly, they should be able to
discriminate one letter from the other letters of the alphabet (e.g., what features of the letter p makes it
different from the letter q).
A variety of approaches are used for teaching children the letters of the alphabet, and some approaches are
more effective for some children than for others. When learning about letters, some children find it easier to
learn the letter sounds rather than the letter names. (This approach for teaching letter-knowledge is often
associated with the Montessori approach.) Some children are already familiar with the letter sounds, and
learning to match the symbol or symbols that could be used to represent each sound may be less confusing
for those children.
Similarly, some children find it easier to learn about the shapes of the letters first, before learning letter
names. Once they are able to sort the letters into different categories (letters with curved parts, letters with
straight parts, letters that stick up, letters than hang down, etc.), then they are able to attach names to the
different letters. As with anything else, when learning something new, it is always easier to build onto
familiar information.
Instruction tip: For young children who are just learning the letters, rather than just teaching them the letter names,
have the children sort the letters into groups by their features letters with curves, letters with straight lines, letters
with both, etc. This helps children see that some letters are similar, but still different (such as the uand n or
the n and h). Once they see these differences, they will be less likely to confuse them later.
Assessment tip: Present letters to the child in both uppercase and lowercase and in random order. Ask the child to
"tell you about each letter." Have her give the name, or a sound that it represents, or a word that begins with that
letter. Make note of hesitation or confusion.
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Many young children are unaware of text, and have no understanding of what it is or how it works. Often,
these children think that the pictures in books contain all of the information, and that when people "read,"
they are using the pictures as the source of information. It has been often documented that when children
first engage in play-reading behavior, they typically focus their attention on the pages with pictures.
However, as children mature and gain more text experience, their attention moves to the pages containing
the text. Children who are developing healthy concepts about print flip through books from beginning to end
(holding them right-side-up), and they point to the text they are "reading" (even though they may be telling
a story unrelated to the actual text). As they point, they may even demonstrate the understanding that text
is read from top to bottom in sweeps from left to right, and they may point at the individual words in the
passage (as opposed to pointing at random locations in the line).
Also, a childs early attempts at writing can give many insights into her concepts about
print. Even though the child's writing is not recognizable as anything more than scribbles,
an observant teacher may notice that the child is scribbling in lines starting at the top of the
page one above another and each line is scribbled from left to right with spaces
between scribbles on a line. These outward behaviors, to the trained eye, are demonstrations of the childs
understanding of the mechanics of text.
As they learn more about text and the rules that govern text construction, children very quickly develop
concepts about the way text is "supposed" to be. They may even go through a period where they do not
want to write any more because they are not able to do it "right." This can be discouraging for a teacher, but
this behavior is a sign that the child is developing healthy concepts about print. For children who grow up
with rich text experiences, print concepts often develop without any explicit instruction, but for children who
grow up in a text-poor environment, understanding the mechanics of print may require explicit instruction.
Instruction tip: When sharing a book with a child, it is always a good idea to explain what you are doing as a reader.
Point to the words as you read, show her what the punctuation is for, and encourage her to take part in the reading
activity (pointing to the words, or turning the pages).
Assessment tip: Hand a book, closed and face down, to the child and ask her to open it and to point to the words so
that you can read. Read each word as the child points. The child should move from word to word as you do. Ask older
children to find uppercase and lowercase letters in the text, and to describe the function of the punctuation.
Assessment Techniques
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We have described many elements that support good reading comprehension here. We have said that
reading comprehension depends upon two equally important skills (language comprehension and decoding),
and that each of those skills depends upon more fundamental skills. This suggests that a teacher should first
teach the fundamental skills before teaching the more advanced skills, but that is certainly not our
recommendation. The cognitive elements we have described here tend to develop congruently in a young
readers mind, and the elements, as they develop, serve to reinforce each other. Further, the development of
these elements is not very predictableit varies from child to child. The message that we are trying to
convey with this framework is that all of these elements are important, and that teachers need to be mindful
of each child's individual literacy development.
The structure of the framework suggests a strategy for diagnostic reading assessment. If a
child can not read grade-appropriate text, the first two areas a teacher should examine are
the childs language comprehension skill (could the child understand the text if it was read
aloud to her), and the childs decoding skill. If problems are uncovered at that gross level,
the rest of the framework suggests a strategy for examining more fundamental reading skills.
The structure of the framework is not meant to suggest that reading comprehension can not occur until all of
the more fundamental cognitive elements are fully developed. Reading comprehension is like the motor in a
car if every part functions well and the motor is put together properly, the motor as a whole will function
well, but even when some of the parts are not functioning very well, the motor sometimes still runs, albeit
poorly.
It is unclear when reading comprehension begins. It could be argued that reading comprehension in its most
fundamental form begins when a child first makes the connection between symbol and concept. For some
children, that may come from environmental print; for others, that may come from recognizing their own
printed name. A child who has not developed the knowledge necessary to "sound out" words but who can
recognize a few hundred "sight words" is able to "read" and understand certain basic text, as long as the
words in the text are within her sight-word vocabulary. The motor runs, it just does not run well, and it only
runs when conditions are right.
Stretching the motor analogy further, all of the parts of a motor may be independently functional, but the
motor will not run if the motor itself is not assembled correctly. The cognitive elements that give rise to good
reading comprehension are not isolated from each other. We have presented them in this framework as if
they were fractured and modular, but we did so only to describe them, and to see how they relate to each
other. Our presentation should by no means be taken as an indication that readinginstruction should be
fractured and modular. Children sometimes have trouble putting the pieces together and understanding how
these basic skills relate to reading. It is common for children to be comfortable and competent with drills
from phonics lessons but to be unaware that they should apply that knowledge to unfamiliar words in text.
Likewise, it is common for children to not recognize that the sounds they hear in their phonics lesson are the
same sounds they hear in speech. A good reading teacher does not merely teach the basic skills, but also
teaches how those basic skills relate to each other and helps children integrate these various elements to
support their reading development.
Reading comprehension is a skill with a knowledge base just like all of the elements that support it, and as
such, it can and should be taught explicitly. The teacher can help the student develop an appreciation for the
different types of reading comprehension (literal comprehension, inferential comprehension, and evaluative
comprehension), and the different types of text (expository, narrative, formal, informal) and can introduce
the child to the differences in literary genres. The child can be encouraged to move from a mastery of oral
reading to a mastery of more efficient and mature silent reading, and along with teaching explicit strategies
to improve comprehension, the teacher can help the child learn to monitor her own comprehension of text
as she reads.
Assessment Techniques
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Related Research
Click here to
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What Is Reading?
Reading is described in many ways by different people. Some
describe it as a thinking (cognitive) process. Others say it is
the reconstruction and interpretation of meanings behind
printed symbols. Still others say it is the process of
understanding written language. All these explanations of
reading are accurate. Despite continuing disagreement about
the precise nature of the reading process, there are some
points of general agreement among reading
authorities.
One such point is that comprehension of written material is
the purpose of reading. In fact, we consider reading
comprehension and reading to be synonymous because when
understanding breaks down reading actually has not
occurred. Perhaps more than any other, the word "meaning"
appears in definitions of reading. Readers are involved in
constructing meaning from text.
What is fluent reading?
During the reading process, there is an interplay between
the reader's preexisting knowledge and the written content.
Fluent reading is an active process in which the reader calls
on experience, language, and prior knowledge to anticipate
and understand the author's written language. Thus, readers
both bring meaning to print and take meaning from print.
called schemata. This term is often used in its singular form schema - that refers to an organized chunk of knowledge or
experience, often accompanied by feelings or emotions
associated with experience at the time the information was
stored. For example, when someone mentions the word
"exams," your mind begins searching all the related
information stored in memory. That information may include
specific information you learned for exams, feelings
associated with exams, or even sounds associated with
taking an exam.
When students have little or no schema (background
knowledge or prior experience) for a subject, comprehension
is greatly impaired. Sometimes referred to as the filing
system your brain uses to catalog information, schema is
also often compared with the files on a computer and the
storage system by which those files are organized in the
computer's memory. This theoretical construct of cognitive
structure again argues for reading as a meaning making
activity that is unique to the individual - idiosyncratic.
Comprehension does not proceed independently of a reader's
fund of related experiences and background knowledge or
schemata.
To understand the importance of your schema to your
comprehension, read the following paragraph and try to
determine (comprehend) what is being described.
The procedure is actually quite simple. First you arrange
things into different groups. Of course one pile may be
sufficient depending on how much there is to do. If you have
to go somewhere else due to lack of facilities that is the next
step, otherwise you are pretty well set. It is important not to
overdo things. That is, it is better to do too few things at
once than too many. In the short run this may not seem
important, but complications can easily arise. A mistake can
be expensive as well. At first the whole procedure will seem
complicated. Soon, however, it will become just another
facet of life. It is difficult to foresee any end to the necessity
for this task in the immediate future, but then one never can
tell. After the procedure is completed one arranges the
materials into different groups again. Then they can be put
into their appropriate places. Eventually they will be used
once more, and the whole cycle will then have to be
repeated. However, this is a part of life. (Bransford and
McCarrell, "A Sketch of a Cognitive Approach to
Comprehension" 1974)
Pre-reading
THEORY / TERMS
Schema Theory
STRATEGIES
Preview
Activate schemata
Set purpose for reading
What do I know?
What do I want to know?
Active Reading
Post-reading
Influence of
Schemata on
Comprehension
Construct meaning
Evaluate comprehension
Employ fix-up strategies as needed
Metacognition
Am I understanding?
If not, what should I do about it?
Am I fulfilling my purpose?
Reflection
Review
Evaluate understanding
Evaluate reading process
What have I learned?
In this module you will explore techniques to help you determine your purpose f
reading and efficiently fulfill that purpose. In addition you will begin to
understand the important role that familiarity and interest in the material play in
your success as a fluent reader. Read 110 is designed to give you the training an
practice you need to reach your goals.
What are the six modes of reading flexibility I will practice in this course?
MODE
DESCRIPTION
TYPICAL PURPOSES
APPROPRIATE RATE
reach the "end copy here". Now, select Copy from the Edit menu on
your web browser to copy the selected text into your computer's
clipboard (temporary memory).
Go back to the email message you created in the first step above.
With your cursor in the body of the message, select Paste from the
Edit menu on your web browser to paste the selected text from your
computer's clipboard (temporary memory) into the message.
Now, in the body of the message, type in your choice of reading
mode/approach and your reason for that choice. When you have
completed all the items in the activity, email the message to me and
return to Mod. 1.2.
BEGIN COPY HERE
TYPE/DIFFICULTY OF MATERIAL
YOUR PURPOSE
WHY?
WHY?
WHY?
WHY?
5. A Newsweek article
WHY?
WHY?
WHY?
WHY?
current events.
WHICH MODE(S) WOULD YOU USE?
WHY?
WHY?
In Preventing Reading Difficulties in Young Children, Snow, Burns, & Griffin (1998)
presented a synthesis of research on the conditions that contribute to successful
reading. The authors identified the following factors as predictors of success and failure
in reading:
Physical and
Clinical Factors
Predictors
of
School
Entry
Acquired
Knowledge
of Literacy
Cognitive
Acquired
Reading
deficiencies
proficiency in
readiness
language
Hearing problems
of reading
Low performing
Letter
Early language
schools
Home literacy
environment
Lexical and
Concepts of
syntactic skills
deficit/hyperactivity
Overall
Phonemic
disorders
language
awareness
Attention
Opportunities
Low expectations
Lack of resources
for verbal
interaction
Home
Vision problems
Neighborhood,
Community,
and Schoolbased Factors
difficulties
Familybased
Risk
Factors
Phonological
awareness
Oral
Vocabulary
Conflicting
community values
Negative peer
language other
than English
Use of a
nonstandard
dialect of
English in the
home
Socioeconomic
status
pressure
Emergent Reader
Early Reader
makes predictions
identifies setting
reads phrases
Fluent Reader
reads smoothly
confident
enjoys challenges
pretend reading
retells story from
pictures
can understand
thousands of words
they hear by age 6, but
can read few if any of
them
be read
being exposed to
unfamiliar vocabulary
and syntax
systematic study of
words
reacting to text through
discussions and writing
reading of more complex
fiction, non-fiction,
etc.
Stage 4: Multiple
Viewpoints - High School,
grades 10-12 (ages 15-17)
new knowledge
From birth until the beginning of formal education, children living in a literate culture with an alphabetic writing system
accumulate a fund of knowledge about letters, words, and books. The children grow in their control over various
aspects of languagesyntax and words. And they gain some insights into the nature of words: that some sound the
same at their ends or beginnings (rhyme and alliteration), that they can be broken into parts, and that the parts can
be put together (synthesized, blended) to form whole words.
Stage 1. Initial Reading, or Decoding, Stage: Grades 1-2, Ages 6-7. The essential aspect of Stage 1 is learning
the arbitrary set of letters and associating these with the corresponding parts of spoken words. In this stage, children
and adults interiorize cognitive knowledge about reading, such as what the letters are for, how to know that bun is not
bug, and how to know when a mistake is made. This stage has been referred to pejoratively as a guessing and
memory game, or as grunting and groaning, mumbling and bumbling, or barking at print, depending on whether
the prevailing methodology for beginning reading instruction is a sight or a phonic approach. The qualitative change
that occurs at the end of this stage is the insight gained about the nature of the spelling system of the particular
alphabetic language used.
Stage 2. Confirmation, Fluency, Ungluing from Print: Grades 2-3, Ages 7-8.6. Essentially, reading in Stage 2
consolidates what was learned in Stage 1. Reading stories previously heard increases fluency. Stage 2 reading is not
for gaining new information, but for confirming what is already known to the reader. Because the content of what is
read is basically familiar, the reader can concentrate attention on the printed words, usually the most common, highfrequency words. And with the basic decoding skills and insights interiorized in Stage 1, the reader can take
advantage of what is said in the story and book, matching it to his or her knowledge and language. Although some
additional, more complex phonic elements and generalizations are learned during Stage 2 and even later, it appears
that what most children learn in Stage 2 is to use their decoding language, and the redundancies of the stories read.
They gain courage and skill in using context and thus gain fluency and speed.
Stage 3. Reading for Learning the New: A First Step. When readers enter Stage 3, they start on the long course of
reading to learn the newnew knowledge, information, thoughts and experiences. Because their background
(world) knowledge, vocabulary, and cognitive abilities are still limited at this stage, the first steps of Stage 3 reading
are usually best developed with materials and purposes that are clear, within one viewpoint, and limited in technical
complexities. This is in contrast to Stage 4 where multiplicity of views, complexity of language and ideas, as well as
subtleties of interpretation are the expected.
Stage 4. Multiple Viewpoints: High School, Ages 1418. The essential characteristic of reading in Stage 4 is that
it involves dealing with more than one point of view. For example, in contrast to an elementary school textbook on
American history, which presupposes Stage 3 reading, the textbook at the high-school level requires dealing with a
variety of viewpoints. Compared to the textbooks in the lower grades, the increased weight and length of high-school
texts no doubt can be accounted for by greater depth of treatment and greater variety in points of view. Stage 4
reading may essentially involve an ability to deal with layers of facts and concepts added on to those acquired earlier.
These other viewpoints can be acquired, however, because the necessary knowledge was learned earlier. Without
the basic knowledge acquired in Stage 3, reading materials with multiple viewpoints would be difficult.
Stage 5. Construction and ReconstructionA World View: College, Age 18 and Above. When Stage 5 is
reached, one has learned to read certain books and articles in the degree of detail and completeness that one needs
for ones purpose, starting at the end, the middle, or the beginning. A reader at Stage 5 knows what not to read, as
well as what to read. To reach this stage is to be able to use selectively the printed material in those areas of
knowledge central to ones concern. Whether all people can reach Stage 5 reading, even at the end of four years of
college, is open to study.