Research and the Common Core: Can the Romance Survive

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Research and the Common Core: Can the Romance Survive. P. David Pearson UC Berkeley. Goals for Today. Review what is in and what underlies the CCSS when it comes to research foundations, especially for comprehension - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Research and the Common Core: Can the Romance Survive

Research and the Common Core: Can the Romance Survive

P. David PearsonUC Berkeley

Goals for Today

• Review what is in and what underlies the CCSS when it comes to research foundations, especially for comprehension

• Examine some emerging evidence about what comprehension in the Common Core might look like – Publisher’s Criteria– Brand new publication by the Aspen Institute:

• Close Reading in the Common Core

• Discuss some defensible positions to take on curriculum and pedagogy, particularly for reading comprehension instruction.

Parallels with Sharon• Strong Content Knowledge? Both cause and

consequence of comprehension. • Diamond-Gold and werewolf examples: Close

reading in the service of inference drawing: – Close reading ≠ literal comprehension

• Just plain reading…Becoming a nation of readers (1984)… – Every day, read some easy text and some challenging

text• Consolidate your skills, strategies, and confidence• Stretch yourself with a little help from your friends…

Parallels with Camille

• Live in San Francisco (not Chicago) for a better experience with Sports Words

• One activity maps onto many standards• One standard can map onto many activities• Also true for assessment, especially performance

assessment• Close reading in the service of identifying

character traits.– Close reading ≠ literal comprehension

Sharon is right…Vowels are important

• Please excuse Johnny from school last Friday.• He had loose vowels.• Signed, Mrs. Jackson

SurveyElementary?Secondary?College?What’s the difference

Elementary Teachers LoveTheir kids

Secondary Teachers LoveTheir subjects

College Teachers Love

Themselves

What sold me on the standards

What they said about reading• Students who meet the Standards readily undertake the

close, attentive, reading that is at the heart of understanding and enjoying complex works of literature. They habitually perform the critical reading necessary to pick carefully through the staggering amount of information available today in print and digitally. They actively seek the wide, deep, and thoughtful engagement with high-quality literary and informational texts that builds knowledge, enlarges experience, and broadens world views. They reflexively demonstrate the cogent reasoning and use of evidence essential to both private deliberation and responsible citizenship in a democratic republic. (CCSSO/NGA, 2010, p. 3)

Why I want these standards in place--grandchildren

What they said about teacher choice

• By emphasizing required achievements, the Standards leave room for teachers, curriculum developers, and states to determine how those goals should be reached and what additional topics should be addressed. Thus, the Standards do not mandate such things as a particular writing process or the full range of metacognitive strategies that students may need to monitor and direct their thinking and learning. Teachers are thus free to provide students with whatever tools and knowledge their professional judgment and experience identify as most helpful for meeting the goals set out in the Standards. (CCSSO/NGA, 2010, p. 4).

Research Assumptions of the CCSS

1. We know how reading develops across levels of expertise.

2. Literacy is best developed and enacted in the service acquiring disciplinary expertise.

3. Standards establish ends or goals; teachers and schools control the means

4. Students read better and learn more when they experience adequate challenge in the texts they encounter.

5. Comprehension involves building models of what a text says, what it means, and how it can be used.

Claims without evidence: what I won’t talk about today..

• Assessment: The stuff coming out of SBAC and PARCC is pretty encouraging

• Text complexity– Read Freddy’s stuff (go to Textproject.org to see her text complexity

modules)– With greater challenge comes greater responsibility for scaffolding

access (beyond doing the reading for the students)– Will the three sides of the triangle be equitably represented?

• Progressions: Will stand in need of revision based upon experience over the next two years

• Prerogative: Will we really deliver? Or will we take away with curriculum the degrees of freedom we offer with the standards?

• Disciplinary Perspective: Here to stay for assessment and maybe instruction.

Comprehension:How we got to where we are…

• The historical pathway to our current operative model of READING COMPREHENSION

• The one underlying the Common Core

Text

Reader

Context

Reading Comprehension

Most models of reading have tried to explain how reader factors, text factors and context factors interact when readers make meaning.

Text

Reader

Context

The bottom up cognitive models of the 60s were very text centric, as was the “new criticism” model of literature from the 40s and 50s (I.A. Richards)

Reading Comprehension

Bottom up and New Criticism: Text-centric

Pedagogy for Bottom up and New Criticism: Text-centric

• Since the meaning is in the text, we need to go dig it out…

• Leads to Questions that – Interrogate the facts of the text– Get to the “right” interpretation

• Textual readings--exegisis

Text

Reader

Context

The schema based cognitive models of the 70s and the reader response models (Rosenblatt) of the 80s focused more on reader factors--knowledge or interpretation mattered most

Reading Comprehension

Schema and Reader Response: Reader-centric

Pedagogy for Reader-centric

• Since the meaning is largely in the reader, we need to go dig it out…

• Spend a lot of time on– Building background knowledge– Inferences needed to build a coherent model

of meaning– Readers’ impressions, expressions, unbridled

response

• Readerly readings

A few clarifications of schema theory…

• Variation along a continuum of top-down vs bottom-up– Kohlers (1967): Reading is only incidentially

textual– Anderson (1977): specific words/ideas instantiate

general schemata: the text is the trigger to our knowledge stores

• Not completely top down process

Text

Reader

Context

The sociocultural and critical literacy models of the 90s focused on the central role of context (purpose, situation, discourse community)

Reading Comprehension

Critical literacy models: Context-centric

• Since the meaning is largely in the context, we need to go dig it out…

• Questions that get at the social, political and economic underbelly of the text– Whose interests are served by this text?– What is the author trying to get us to

believe?– What features of the text contribute to the

interpretation that money is evil?

Pedagogy for Critical literacy models

Text

Reader

Context

In Kintsch’s model, Reader and Text factors are balanced, and context plays a “background” role--in purpose and motivation.

Reading Comprehension

CI: Balance Reader and Text: little c for context

• Since the meaning is in this reader text interface, we need to go dig it out…

• Query the accuracy of the text base.– What is going on in this part here where it

says…– What does it mean when it says…– I was confused by this part…

• Ascertain the situation model.– So what is going on here? – What do you know that we didn’t know

before?

Pedagogical implications for CI

Kintchian Model

3Knowledge Base Text

1Text Base

2Situation Model

Inside the head Out in the world

Experience

Says

Means

Does>>>>>>>>>

The vision of comprehension in the CCSS maps on to important theoretical and curricular research

• National Assessment of Educational Progress• Four Resources Model of Freebody and Luke• Kintsch’s Construction-Integration Model

• Key Ideas and Details• 1. Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from

it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.

• 2. Determine central ideas or themes of a text and analyze their development; summarize the key supporting details and ideas.

• 3. Analyze how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and interact over the course of a text.

• Craft and Structure• 4. Interpret words and phrases as they are used in a text, including determining technical,

connotative, and figurative meanings, and analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone.

• 5. Analyze the structure of texts, including how specific sentences, paragraphs, and larger portions of the text (e.g., a section, chapter, scene, or stanza) relate to each other and the whole.

• 6. Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text.

• Integration of Knowledge and Ideas• 7. Integrate and evaluate content presented in diverse media and formats, including visually

and quantitatively, as well as in words.* • 8. Delineate and evaluate the argument and specific claims in a text, including the validity of

the reasoning as well as the relevance and sufficiency of the evidence. • 9. Analyze how two or more texts address similar themes or topics in order to build

knowledge or to compare the approaches the authors take.

Common Core

• Standards 1-3: Key ideas and details• Standards 4-6: Craft and structure• Standards 7-9: Integration of knowledge and

ideas

NAEP

• Locate and Recall• Interpret and Integrate• Critique and Evaluate

• Key ideas and details• Craft and structure• Integration of

knowledge and ideas

• Locate and Recall• Interpret and Integrate• Critique and Evaluate

CCSS NAEP

Kintsch’s Construction-Integration Model

• As you read, for each unit, you– Construct a Textbase– Integrate the Text and Knowledge Base to create a

Situation Model– Incorporate information from the Situation Model

back into your knowledge base– Use your knowledge to interact with the world.– Start all over again with the next bit of reading– C-I-C-I, anon anon

SaysSays

MeansMeans

DoesDoes

Freebody and Luke’s 4 Resources

• Reader as Decoder: Get the message: • Reader as Meaning Maker: Integrate with

knowledge:• Reader as Text Analyst: What’s the real

message and how is it crafted• Reader as Text Critic: What’s the subtext?

The hidden agenda:

SAYS

MEANS

DOES

Consistent with Cognitive Views of Reading

• Kintsch’s Construction-Integration Model• Build a text base• Construct a “situation” model• Put the knowledge gained to work by applying it

to novel situations.

What the text saysWhat the text meansWhat the text does

Locate and RecallIntegrate and Interpret

Critique and Evaluate

Decoder

Meaning Maker

User/Analyst/Critic

Key Ideas and DetailsKey Ideas and Details

Integration of Knowledge and IdeasIntegration of Knowledge and Ideas

Craft and StructureCraft and Structure

Pearson Kintsch 4 Resources NAEP CCSS

Says Text Base Decoder Locate and Recall

Key Ideas and Details

Means Situation Model Meaning Maker Interpret and Integrate

Integration of Knowledge and Ideas

Does Put Knowledge to Work

Text Analyst Critique and Evaluate

Craft and Structure

Kintchian Model

3Knowledge Base Text

1Text Base

2Situation Model

Inside the head Out in the world

Experience

Says

Means

Does>>>>>>>>>

Reader as Decoder

Reader as Meaning Maker

Reader as Text User/Analyst/Critic

New and different

• Most important: A new model of the comprehension process– Text (what the author left on the page)– Text base (the version a reader creates on a

veridical reading)– Knowledge (what the reader brings from prior

experience)– Model of meaning for a text

• Dubbed the Situation Model (mental model)• A model that accounts for all the facts and

resources available in the current situation

What’s inside the Knowledge box?

• World knowledge (everyday stuff, including social and cultural norms)

• Topical knowledge (dogs and canines)• Disciplinary knowledge (how history or astronomy

works)• Linguistic knowledge

– Phonology– Lexical and morphological– Syntax– Genre– Pragmatics (how language works in the world): Discourse,

register, academic language, intention– Orthography (how print relates to speech)

How does a reader build a text base?

Excerpt from Chapter 8 of Hatchet

“Some of the quills were driven in deeper than others and they tore when they came out. He breathed deeply twice, let half of the breath out, and went back to work. Jerk, pause, jerk — and three more times before he lay back in the darkness, done. The pain filled his leg now, and with it came new waves of self-pity. Sitting alone in the dark, his leg aching, some mosquitoes finding him again, he started crying. It was all too much, just too much, and he couldn’t take it. Not the way it was.

“I can’t take it this way, alone with no fire and in the dark, and next time it might be something worse, maybe a bear, and it wouldn’t be just quills in the leg, it would be worse. I can’t do this, he thought, again and again. I can’t. Brian pulled himself up until he was sitting upright back in the corner of the cave. He put his head down on his arms across his knees, with stiffness taking his left leg, and cried until he was cried out.”

Building a Text Base

• “Some of the quills were driven in (into what? His leg) deeper than others (other what? Quills) and they (the quills that were driven in deeper) tore when they (the deeper-in quills) came out (of his leg). He (Brian) breathed deeply twice, let half the breath out, and went back to work (work on what? Don’t know yet. Suspense. Expect to find out in next sentence). Jerk, pause, jerk (the work is jerking quills out) — and three more times (jerking quills out) he (Brian) lay back in the darkness, done (all the quills jerked out).

• The pain filled his (Brian’s) leg now, and with it (the pain) came new waves (what were the old waves?) of self-pity. (Brian) Sitting alone in the dark, his (Brian’s) leg aching, some mosquitoes finding him (Brian) again, he (Brian) started crying. It (the whole situation Brian was in) was all too much, just too much, and he (Brian) couldn’t take it (the situation). Not the way it (the situation) was. (What way was the situation? Don’t know yet. Suspense. Expect to find out in the next paragraph.)

• “I (Brian) can’t take it (the situation) this way (what way? Still don’t know. Suspense), alone with no fire and in the dark (now we know “this way” means “alone with no fire and in the dark”), and next time it (the next situation) might be something worse (than this situation), maybe a bear, and it (the problem that will define the situation) wouldn’t be just quills in the leg, it (the problem) would be worse (than quills in the leg). I (Brian) can’t do this (deal with the problem situation), he (Brian) thought, again and again. I (Brian) can’t “do this (deal with the problem situation).” Brian pulled himself (Brian) up until he (Brian) was sitting upright back in the corner of the cave. He (Brian) put his (Brian’s) head down on his (Brian’s) arms across his (Brian’s) knees, with stiffness taking his (Brian’s) left leg, and cried until he (Brian) was cried out.”

Some key moves in building a text base…

• Processing words and attaching meaning to them• Using syntax to solidify key relations among ideas

– Microstructure—phrase by phrase, sentence by sentence, connections

– Macrostructure—Genre and purpose• Resolving reference--things that stand for other things

(mainly pronouns and nouns)• Using logical connectives (before, after, because, so, then,

when, while, but) to figure out the relations among ideas• Inferring omitted connectives (e.g., figuring out that A is the

cause of B) based on PK about the world• Posing questions for short term resolution• Identifying ambiguities for later resolution (wait and see)

So how about building a situation model?

• The knowledge-comprehension relationship• We use our knowledge to build a situation

model for a text• The information in the situation model is now

available to become part of our long term memory and store of knowledge

• To assist in processing the next bit.

Situation Model for Hatchet Passage

• Integrate– Text base– Knowledge Base

• We have the text base• What might be in the knowledge for a 10-

year-old?

The blurb from the jacket of Hatchet gives a preview of the book:

Thirteen-year old Brian Robeson is on his way to visit his father when the single engine plane in which he is flying crashes. Suddenly, Brian finds himself alone in the Canadian wilderness with nothing but his clothing, a tattered windbreaker and the hatchet his mother has given him as a present — and the dreadful secret that has been tearing him apart since his parents’ divorce. But now Brian has no time for anger, self-pity or despair — it will take all his know-how and determination, and more courage than he knew he possessed, to survive.

What a reader knows by Chapter 8

Brian is stranded in the Canadian wilderness with a hatchet and his wits as his only tools for survival. He already has overcome several obstacles, including surviving the plane crash, building a small shelter and finding food.

In chapter eight, Brian awakens in the night to realize that there is an animal in his shelter. He throws his hatchet at the animal but misses. The hatchet makes sparks when it hits the wall of the cave. Brian then feels a pain in his leg. He sees the creature scuttle out of his shelter. Brian figures out that the animal was a porcupine because there are quills in his leg.

Some prior knowledge that a 5th grader might bring

• What sparks look like• How it feels to be scared by an animal• How big porcupines are• To survive you have to have food, water and

shelter• To survive you have to be strong

An actual retelling of key parts of chapter 8 from Sam, a 5th grade reader

• The same text for which we just examined the text base…

Why is this model of iteratively constructing and integrating so important?

• The mental (situation) model is central to knowledge construction

• Building a mental model transforms new ideas and information into a form that can be added to memory, where they endure as knowledge that can be retrieved in the future. Unless readers build a mental model, the information they derive from the text is not likely to connect to their stored knowledge. The new information will be forgotten or lost.

• Key role of knowledge:– Knowledge involved in even the most literal of processing– Knowledge begets comprehension begets knowledge…– Knowledge is available immediately: dynamic store…

How can we help students build solid text bases and rich and accurate situation models?

• Do a good job of teaching subject matter in social studies, science, mathematics, and literature

• Don’t let reading remain our curricular bully!

• Assist students in selecting appropriate knowledge frameworks to guide their construction process

• Do everything possible to build as many connections as possible with other texts, experiences, knowledge domains– Do lots of “what does this remind you of?” – What is this like? How is it different from what it’s like?

How can we help students build rich and accurate mental models?

• A different model of guided reading• Stop every once in a while and give the kids a

chance to construct/revise their current mental model– Research study:

• interview protocol proved to be very “instructive”

How can we help students build rich and accurate mental models?

Begin with very general probes before getting specific

• So what’s going on in this part?• What do we know now that we didn’t know

before?• What’s new?• What was the author trying to get us to

understand here?• Well!…say something!

Invite and support clarifications of tricky parts

• Anyone want to share something that was tricky or confusing?

• How about this part here…where it says…?• I got confused by… What do you think about

this part? What was the author trying to get us to think.

Follow up general probes and invitations for clarification with specific probes.

• So which of these things happened first? Why is that important?

• In this paragraph, they use a lot of pronouns. Let’s check out our understanding of who or what they refer to..

• Typical discussion questions are OK too--just to make sure are the tricky parts get clarified.– View questions as a scaffold for understanding the big

picture not as a quiz.

The general model for guided reading

• A set for “stock-taking”• A set for using facts (details) in the service of

concepts (main ideas)• More specific probes to scaffold the

construction of the text base and situation model

• Results in a pretty good summary of the selection--story, article, etc.

Developing Text Bases and Mental Models

• Ensure that students have a full “tool” box (set of strategies) to haul out when things don’t just happen automatically…for – Connecting the known to the new– Connecting texts and parts of texts– Working toward coherence among potentially

unconnected ideas– Recognizing and resolving ambiguities.

MONITORING FOR MEANING…

• For a model of meaning to survive, it must – Be consistent with the current text base (square

with the “facts of the case” thus far revealed)– Be consistent with the current knowledge base

(square with what a reader knows to be true about the world)

The Vulnerabilities

• Clumsiness with motivation– A nod to interest and an assumption that readers

are motivated

• Gloss over critical reading– Assumes a liberal humanist “critical thinking”

perspective, not a post-modern critical theoretical stance

Kintchian Model

3Knowledge Base Text

1Text Base

2Situation Model

Inside the head Out in the world

Experience

Says

Means

Does>>>>>>>>>

Reader as Decoder

Reader as Meaning Maker

Reader as Text User/Analyst/Critic

These consistencies provide…

• Credibility• Stretch• Research “patina”

And now… for something completely different

Text dependency of questions

• “A significant percentage of tasks and questions are text dependent…Rigorous text-dependent questions require students to demonstrate that they not only can follow the details of what is explicitly stated but also are able to make valid claims that square with all the evidence in the text. Text-dependent questions do not require information or evidence from outside the text or texts; they establish what follows and what does not follow from the text itself.” (page 6)

Where does this concern come from?

• One too many 45 minute prior knowledge activations followed by 3 minutes of eyes on print.

• One too many 30 minute picture walks• One too many seductive experience swapping

sessions– Kids seduce the teacher into believing (s)he is a

great discussion leader

Stay close to the text

• Staying close to the text. “Materials make the text the focus of instruction by avoiding features that distract from the text. Teachers’ guides or students’ editions of curriculum materials should highlight the reading selections…Given the focus of the Common Core State Standards, publishers should be extremely sparing in offering activities that are not text based.”

My concern

• We will operationally define text dependent as literal, factual questions

• Lots of other questions are also text-reliant• Compare

– What were two reasons pioneers moved west?– What does the author believe about the causes of

westward expansion in the United States?– How valid is the claim that author X writes from

an ideology of manifest destiny?

A short history lesson• Pearson and Johnson, 1978, Teaching Reading

Comprehension.• Question-answer relationships

– Text explicit (both the Q and A come from the text and the relationship between Q and A is explicitly signalled).

– Text implicit (both the Q and A come from the text but the relationship has to be inferred)

– Script implicit (Q from text, A from prior knowledge script, relationship has to be inferred)

– TEXT is implicated in all three QARs.

Text before all else

“The Common Core State Standards call for students to demonstrate a careful understanding of what they read before engaging their opinions, appraisals, or interpretations. Aligned materials should therefore require students to demonstrate that they have followed the details and logic of an author’s argument before they are asked to evaluate the thesis or compare the thesis to others.” (page 9)

My concern

• We will view literal comprehension as a prerequisite to inferential or critical comprehension.

• Compare– Read X, Read Y, then ask for a comparison on criterion

Z– Conduct a comparative reading of X and Y on how

they stand on Z.• Sometimes the comparison or critique question

better rationalizes the close reading

Close reading

• The Common Core State Standards place a high priority on the close, sustained reading of complex text, beginning with Reading Standard 1. Such reading emphasizes the particular over the general and strives to focus on what lies within the four corners of the text.

Aspen Institute Report

• Close Reading of text involves an investigation of a short piece of text, with multiple readings done over multiple instructional lessons.

• Through text-based questions and discussion, students are guided to deeply analyze and appreciate various aspects of the text, such as – key vocabulary and how its meaning is shaped by context; – attention to form, tone, imagery and/or rhetorical devices; – the significance of word choice and syntax; and – the discovery of different levels of meaning as passages

are read multiple times.

Steps in the new Aspen Institute, Brown & Kappes report

1. Selection of a brief, high-quality, complex text.

2. Individual reading of the text.3. Group reading aloud.4. Text-based questions and discussion that

focus on discrete elements of the text.5. Discussion among students.6. Writing about the text.

How does this square with Standards 2 and 3?How does this square with Standards 2 and 3?

My concern• Lots of things lie within the four corners of the text—some

general and some specific.• Ignores other readings of close reading

– Which parts of the text justify an• Inference??• Interpretation??• Critique???

• The text drags prior knowledge along even if you don’t want it to.

• Ideas that don’t connect don’t last long enough to allow learning (assimilation or acccommodation) to occur– They drop out of memory pretty fast

My recipe for close reading…

• What do you think?– Text detail

• What couldn’t Brian take any more?• What made Brian cry?

– Inference• Between text parts: Why did Henry work so hard?• To prior knowledge: Why did Henry want a new glove?

– Critique• Does this author know much about X?

• What makes you think so?

Monitoring• How do we know that our understanding is good

enough?• Two standards…

– Does is jive with the model of meaning I have built for the text thus far in the reading?

– Does is square with what I know to be true about the world?

• What are these?– Text base and knowledge base combne to create the

situation model– The situation model determines what I put into long term

memory

Minimizing the role of prior knowledge

• Can we do it?• Should we do it?

Can we do it?The End of Elegance

• Business had been slow since the oil crisis• Nobody seemed to want anything elegant anymore.• Suddenly a well-dressed man burst through the

showroom door,• and headed straight for the most expensive model

on the floor.

• John Ingham peered over the rims of his horn-rimmed glasses,

• over the top of the want ad section of the newspaper,

• adjusted his loose-fitting jacket to hide the frayed sleeves of his shirt,

• and rose to meet the man whose rhinestone stickpin and alligator boots (but were they?) seemed incongruous amidst the dazzling array of steel-gray

• Mercedes sedans.

• “I’ll take this one,” he said confidently, pointing to most expensive model on the floor…

• “cash on the line!”• Later, the paperwork complete, John

muttered to himself, “I’m glad I didn’t blow this one.”

• He added, “What does he know about elegance? What does anyone know about elegance anymore?

• Then he smiled wryly as he returned to his newfound pastime.

Back to Main Presentation

Suspense• If John had known just how awful it would turn

out to be, he would not have been so anxious to open the door to the room he had been told held the treasure that would change his life. If he suspected that the giant tarantula who guarded the treasure was bigger than an elephant, uglier than a troll, and deadlier than a cobra, he might never have turned that knob. But slowly, methodically, and purposely, he shoved, nudged, and wiggled it till it started to open an inch at a time.

• It was furry and warm to the touch. Its eyes lay in deep sockets above a protruding snout that was itself dwarfed by the two buck teeth that hung suspended from that protuberance.

• And when the rest of the kids in room 225 laughed at it,

• Amy picked up her drawing of her favorite mastadon and huffed out into the hall.

So what about Prior Knowledge

• Maybe we have overindulged– Too much Know, not enough Want to Learn and

Learn– Too much time on the picture walk– Too much story swapping about our experiences

with roadrunners• Let’s right the wrongs• Need a mid course correction not a pendulum

swing

But asking kids to hold their prior knowledge at bay…

• Is like• Asking dogs not to bark or • Leaves not to fall.• It’s in the nature of things• Dogs bark.• Leaves fall.• Readers use their prior knowledge to render text

sensible and figure out what to retain for later.

So what’s a body to do?

• Embrace the construct of close reading – But make sure that it applies to several purposes for

reading• Reading to get the flow of ideas in the piece• Reading to enhance our knowledge base!!!!• Reading to compare (with another text or body of

experience or knowledge• Reading to critique

– how good is the argument or the craft or – what is his bias/slant/perspective)

• All of these approaches interrogate the text as an eviidentiary base.

More a body can do…

• Stay closer to the standards than to the interpretations of the standards we have seen thus far.

• Pay more attention to the anchor standards than to the grade level instantiations of them.

• Why? – I’m not convinced that they got the sequencing

right.– But that’s another story (see the paper I gave you)

Inadequate examination

• Vocabulary– Between Reading Standard #4 and Language

Standards #4-#6, we can continue to emphasize all of the good stuff we have learned to do in vocabulary development

– Conceptually based vocabulary development• Where do words fit in the big “schema” things?

– Contextually driven vocabulary development• Between word and within word contexts

Words are Concepts

Habitat

Habitat: the place where an organism gets the food, water, light, and shelter that it needs to survive

A habitat has everything an animal needs to survive. The grassland habitat is windy with few trees.

Shelter Water

Food Light

Desert Forest

Shoreline

Habitat

All living things exist within habitats and have adaptations that allow them to survive in those habitats. No one habitat can support all living habitats.

If we wish to maintain a terrarium in our classrooms, we should establish conditions that are consistent with the organisms’ natural habitats.Morphology

HabitHabituate

Inadequate examination• What do we do about strategy instruction?• In one sense, the CCSS are moot on the topic:

– Thus, the Standards do not mandate such things as a particular writing process or the full range of metacognitive strategies that students may need to monitor and direct their thinking and learning. (p. 4)

• Silence PLUS the post standards emphasis on close reading and the primacy of the text and text-based questions this inference:– Champion talk over explicit instruction as a way of

enhancing comprehension and metacognitive strategy instruction

What to do about strategies?

• We need to take the explicit and implicit critiques of strategy instruction seriously.– McKeown, Beck, & Blake (RRQ, 2008)– Wilkinson & Sun, HRR-4 (2011)

Current Critique

• Not sure when it starts… circa 2002-now

• Strategies have become rigid and reified

• Like phonics skills, rigid (i.e., curricularized) strategy instruction has become– An end unto itself,– Rather than– A means to an end…

Possible remedies…• Post explicit strategies approach

– Questioning the author– Rich talk about text– Close reading

• Encounter opportunities to apply strategies on the fly– Name it when it happens

• Make understanding the text at hand the real goal– Invoke the strategies when we need them; when we

can’t build a textbase or a situation model with ease• Avoid decontextualized enactment of strategies• But do NOT fail to teach them…

– Equity issue– Some kids get them for free– Others require us to share our metacognitive secrets.

• Make our thinking public

My hope for the strategies

• Something in between explicit lessons, opportunistic teaching, and mini-lessons

• Examples should ALWAYS be authentic• Lots of group problem solving with

genuinely puzzling examples– Sharon’s examples from this morning

• Don’t know how to do this yet, but we need to help students distinguish between – Nike Reading

• Just do it!– Sherlock Holmes Reading

• Deliberate puzzle resolution• Reading Like a Detective—Blachowicz then Coleman

What do I want for readers in terms of their comprehension dossier

• Flexible Thoughtful Readers• Direct their attention to

– Text qua text: textual readings – Text-knowledge: readerly readings– Text-using knowledge: worldly readings

• Many ways to do close reading…• Teach

– Rich talk about text– Strategies– Vocabulary

SaysSaysMeansMeans

DoesDoes

Hopes for the CCSS…

• I’m hangin’ in there for the near term.• They are still the best game in town• They are moving in the right direction in terms

of reading theory and research• Hoping they prove to be a living document

– Regularly revised with advances in• our knowledge of reading• research on their “consequences”