The School Librarian's Role in Promoting Reading Comprehension
The School Librarian's Role in Promoting Reading Comprehension
keene, 2003
The School Librarian’s Role in
Promoting Reading Comprehension
Teachers Children
• Work with teachers to • Help children focus on
understand what is a few concepts of
essential to children’s great import for a long
literacy learning – period of time in a
encourage focus on variety of text.
what matters most.
What’s Essential?
• Cognitive Strategies are the moves a reader and writer
makes in his mind in order to read, write, speak, and listen.
Teachers Children
• Assist teachers in • Assist children in
identifying text and selecting texts that
multi-media sources will challenge them to
that are particularly comprehend deeply
conducive to the and consider important
comprehension issues.
strategy they are
studying.
The School Librarian’s Role in
Promoting Reading Comprehension
Teachers Children
• Work with teachers to • Introduce children to a
build a collection that wide range of genres,
matches students’ media and texts – help
needs and interests in them understand the
comprehension. distinctions between
genres.
A Variety of Genres
• Biography
• Historical fiction
• Textbooks/Reference Text
• Persuasion
• Realistic fiction
• Poetry
• Memoir/Autobiography
• Science fiction
• Mystery
• Journalism Opinion/Editorial
• Tests
• Expository text (narrative or didactic)
• Picture Book
• Photo essay
• Promotional Materials and Advertising
• Fantasy
A Variety of Text Levels
• Work in instructional level text for:
• Practice in decoding
• Practice word recognition
• Practice oral reading fluency
• Practice in word work such as recognizing prefixes and
suffixes, word analysis
A Variety of Text Levels
• Work in challenging text (that may have been read to
children) for:
Application of comprehension strategies
Book Club discussion
Reading with a partner
• Reading to learn new content (especially when there are
charts, graphs, pictures available)
Reading Comprehension is
Thinking – thinking is hard – It’s
supposed to be hard