What do good readers do?
I think as readers, and as teachers there are behaviors we do naturally but it is important that we understand what we are doing and why we are doing it so that we can model and accentuate this behavior for our students. She reminds us that good readers are active readers, are constantly evaluating themselves, set clear goals for themselves, look over the text before they begin, construct questions, try to construct meaning of concepts and integrate prior knowledge and activate it. Good readers also engage in different types of texts differently. For instance, with narratives the reader may pay close attention to setting and character.
What can teachers do to develop comprehension? I think this is in important aspect of the video because we know what good readers are but as future teachers, learning how to develop comprehension is trickier. Duke tells us to create a supportive classroom and not to just offer good instruction. What I got from this is that one major thing is that a good chunk of time must be spent reading!
Yes, instruction is important but one thing your mom used to tell you is still true, practice makes perfect. You cannot expect your students to improve in short periods of time. I think I took away from this video that you have to consistently spend large amounts of dedicated class time to this, and be dedicated to it as a teacher. Also just reading for reading sake is not good enough. We have to model that reading "real texts for real reasons" is important. To become strong readers the student has to read beyond the reading program and relate to the text. Also Teacher modeling and think aloud sessions is key with a do as I do formula.
What can teachers do to help struggling readers?
I think something i have encountered to be a struggle aside from obvious student issues is motivation. I think keeping students motivated is very important. I think keeping students engaged by allowing choice and having conversation about the text is the way to engage the average struggling reader.
The true struggler reader is another story. This why the assessments we have been learning about is so important. Theses ongoing assessment is important because we can diagnose and form an intervention as soon as possible and work this in to our classroom strategy. Duke talks about effective comprehension routines, and I think creating one for a struggling reader is important. I think an intervention in combination with a comprehension routine and ongoing assessment is the scaffolding struggling readers need.
Which ideas from the video struck you as most relevant to your teaching of comprehension?
For me I think the use of predicating, and thinking aloud before the text. I think this gets the students brains working and gets them engaged in the txt. It gets them interested and helps you spot any motivation issues right from the start.
What new instructional practices will you implement in your classroom?
I hope to be able to implement them all lol! I think Modeling and think aloud is invaluable. Showing the students how I read, then how I think and process the information will be the most important thing I take with me. This way the student has a model. It is somewhat met cognitive, but it is basic really. I think it is how I learned to read from my mother when I was young!