Proficient Reader Research

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Proficient Reader Research Lindsey M. Cunningham EE 526 University of West Alabama

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Proficient Reader Research. Lindsey M. Cunningham EE 526 University of West Alabama. Ice Breaker: Marooned. Are We Collaborating? . Research-Based Best Practices. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Proficient Reader Research

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Proficient Reader ResearchLindsey M. CunninghamEE 526University of West Alabama

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ICE BREAKER:MAROONED

Are We Collaborating?

.

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“The ultimate beneficiaries of education research must be children, not the researchers themselves. Enlightened educators look to education research for well-founded evidence to help them do a better job with the children they serve” (Slavin, 2004).

Research-Based Best Practices

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Reading ability can be defined as the efficiency to draw meaning from the printed page and interpret this information appropriately.

How Can We Define Reading Ability?

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What do we know about Reading Proficiency?

Proficient Readers use the following strategies:

1. Inferring 2. Questioning3. Picturing4. Recalling prior

knowledge5. Synthesizing6. Flexing

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*We give them many chances to interpret material where they must create an answer by considering the clues or evidence provided.

*We lead them through the thought process.

*We ask them to practice with pictures, reading passages, and numbers.

Inferring: How do we teach our students to find

what is missing?

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*We introduce them to question types.

*We give them practice using each question type.

*We confront them with challenges that require question combinations.

*We surprise them with challenges they have never seen before.

Questioning:How do we teach our students to be successful

questioners?

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Questioning: continued*We make wonder and surprise a daily event.

*We teach them persistence, resourcefulness, and inventiveness.

*We give them practice mapping out questions before they actually gather information or read passages.

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*We give them practice describing images.

*We read stories with vivid description aloud and ask students to picture what they have heard.

*We show students how to map out their own ideas and searches.

*We ask students to convert passages by other writers into mind maps.

*We show students how to view long articles as clusters of ideas.

Picturing:How do we teach our students to make powerful

use of their mind’s eye?

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*Beading

*Puzzling

*Cooking

*Fabricating or Manufacturing

*Inventing

*Weaving

Synthesizing:How do we teach our students to mix, match, combine, and

weave ideas into something new?

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We can also teach our students strategies for synthesizing by using the word SCAMPER!

S=substituteC=combineA=adjustM=modify or magnifyP=put to other usesE=erase or eliminateR=reverse

Synthesizing—continued

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*We teach our students that frustration is a natural and common phase in the creative process.

*We give our students perplexing predicaments and dilemmas as well as puzzles and mysteries instead of restricting them to one-sided problems.

*We make sure students understand the value of thinking!

Flexing:How do we teach our students to try lots of different strategies

and approaches when facing a thinking challenge?

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*Make reading for meaning a priority.

*Make time, daily, for these kinds of reading challenges.

*Present challenges in oral and written format.

*Time management

How do we make these challenges enjoyable on a daily basis?

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References

(2001) Read Strong: Nurturing Love of Literacy. Retrieved from http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://myweb.stedwards.edu/mikekb/ReadStrong/images/motivation.jpg&imgrefurl=http://myweb.stedwards.edu/mikekb/ReadStrong/nutureloveparents.html

Allington, Richard L. (2011). What Really Matter For Struggling Readers: Designing Research-Based Programs. University of Tennessee, Knoxville: Allyn and Bacon Publishers

Armbruster, B.B., Lehr, F., Osborn. (2001) Put Reading First: The Research Building Blocks for Teaching Children to Read. Retrieved from http://www.mifl.gov Glaeser, Patricia. (2012). Ice Breaker Activities for Teacher Professional Development. Retrieved from http://www.ehow.com/info_8254687_ice-activities-teacher-professional-development.html

Harvey, Stephanie. (2004). Powerful Questioning, Good Intelligence, and Right Thinking,. Retrieved from http://questioning.org/tests/beating.html

Miller, D. (2002). Reading with meaning: Teaching comprehension in the primary grades. Portland, ME: Stenhouse Publishers