Lesson 3 Teaching Reading: Objectives
Lesson 3 Teaching Reading: Objectives
LESSON 3
TEACHING READING
INTRODUCTION
Making every child a competent reader and a functional learner is the ultimate
goal of teaching children to learn to read. To become a competent reader, one should
be able to construct meaning from print using appropriate active strategies to relate
what one reads with his background knowledge and experience. Through continuous
practice, fuency and skill are enhanced and the child’s motivation to read increases.
Naturally his constant engagement with different texts exposes him to varied learnings
and insights which enable him to cope better with life situations.
In this lesson, you will learn about the five critical areas that serve as foundation
of reading development, the components of a reading lesson, and overview on some
successful intervention programs to mitigate illiteracy.
Objectives
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
1. Comprehension resides in the text; so the students should be able to get the
meaning of what he reads.
3. The best technique for vocabulary development is through the use of context
clues.
5. Students who know more about a topic remember more from a related reading
than students who have limited knowledge.
How did you find the activity? Were you able to answer them
independently or you had to seek help from others or search for
answers in the net? Whichever strategy you used is acceptable as long
as you were able to use these as references in answering the
questions.
Let us check your understanding on some key concepts on the five areas of reading
instruction. Match the terms to their definition by writing the letter of the correct answer.
________1. It is the ability to identify and manipulate individual sounds in spoken words.
________3. It is a type of instruction that focuses on building knowledge of the meaning and
pronunciation of words that a person can actively use to listen, speak, read or write.
________4. This is the ability to read with speed, accuracy, and proper expression.
________5. It is the ability to process text, understand its mening, and to integrate with what the
reader already knows.
________6. it is the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely
connected words.
________7. It is a repetition of similar sounding words occurring at the end of lines in poems or
songs.
________9. It is the process of translating print into speech by rapidly matching a letter or
combination of letters to their sounds and recogninzing the patterns that make syllables
and words.
These questions will guide you as you read the study notes provided below.
Read and understand them well.
I. Phonemic Awareness
Phonemic awareness is the ability to notice, think about, and work with the
individual sounds in spoken words. Before children are able to read printed materials,
they first have to become aware of how the sounds in words work. They need to
understand that words are made up of phonemes or speech sounds.
Level 1: Rhymes and Alliteration – Children develop “ear” language as they identify and
make oral rhymes.
Assonance: The leaf, the bean, the peach – all were within my reach.
Level 2: Parts of a Word – Children listen to sounds within words. They identify and
work with onsets and rimes in spoken syllables or one-syllable words.
Level 4: Blending of Sounds – At this stage, children have gained a good sense of
phonemic awareness and are ready to divide words into separate sounds or phonemes
or blend them to form recognizable sound.
Example: What word is /l/ /æ/ /p/? - lap
What word is /s/ /m/ /Ɛ/ /l/? - smell
Level 6: Transition into Written Language – Children manipuate sounds within words by
matching sounds to letters, syllable splitting, phoneme blending, phoneme substitution,
phoneme isolation and phoneme deletion.
Example: What becomes of goat if /g/ is replaced with a /b/? – boat
What is top with /s/ at the beginning? – stop
3. Vocabulary Instruction
Vocabulary knolwedge is among the best predictors of reading achievement
(Daneman, 1991). It plays a vital role in every aspect of reading from understanding the
plot or gist of a simple text to interpreting and appreciating the most complex text.
According to Robbins and Ehri (1994) as cited by Flojo, the most effective
methods of vocabulary development are those instruction methods where students are
given both the definition of the word as well as examples of usage and practice with
usage. The use of graphic organizers, semantic webs, and word maps can assist
students in creating relationships that provide a memory link to help build vocabulary.
Each of these components play important roles in helping students overcome the
major obstacles to vocabulary growth.
4. Fluency
This is the ability to read a text acurately, smoothly quickly and with expression.
To be termed “Fluent reader” with a particular text, an individual must be able to read
effortlessly, use expression, and read and recognize words qquickly. The reader must
develop automaticity and must understand how to group words quickly to gain
meaning from the text.
The following activities can improve fluency:
1. Reading with a model reader. The model reader can be a teacher, another adult,
or an older student.
2. Choral reading. In choral reading, students read along as a group with the
teacher. Students follow along as teacher reads from a book. In choosing the
literary piece for choral reading, choose a text that is not too long and that can
be read independently by most students.
3. Tape-assisted reading. In tape-assisted reading, students read along in their
books as they hear a fluent reader read the book on an audiotape.
4. Reader’s theater. This is rehearsing and performing before an audience of a
dialogue-rich script derived from a book. The critical aspect of the exercise is
that students read the text repeatedly until they can recite it fluently and with
prosody.
5. Partner reading. In partner reading, paired students take turns reading aloud to
each other. For partner reading, more fluent readers can be paired with less
fluent readers. The stronger reader reads a paragraph or page first providing a
model of fluent reading.
5. Comprehension –
The notion of “something happening” while we read is the sense of
comprehension. The “something happening” is the interactive construction of meaning
inside our heads which creates understaning. Unfortunately, this does not naturally
occur inside all readers and so there is a felt need to teach them how to use their
experience and their knowledge to make sense of what they are reading (Gear, 2006).
According to Harvey and Goudvis (2000), reading demands cracking the
alphabetic code to determine the words and thinking about those words to construct
meaning. The diagram below helps illustrate this point:
READING
Decoding Thinking
Phonemic Awareness Comprehension
Spelling Constructing Meaning
Vocabulary Vocabulary
Fluency Fluency
(Source: Reading Power: Teaching Students to Think While They Read, Adrieene Gear, 2006)
The skills on the left are those skills essential to mastering the code and are
considered the basics of beginning reading instruction. The skills listed on the right
point to comprehension as a separate aspect of reading that requires the same amount
of direct instruction and teaching time as the decoding skills.
6. Analyze and synthesize. A good reader is able to break down information and to
draw conclusions based on both the text and his or her thinking.
7. Monitor comprehension. A good reader is able to stop, go back and reread in order
for understanding to occur.
These strategies are what research has found good readers do to understand
text. As teachers, this is what you need to be teaching your not-so-good readers to do.
The seven strategies can be trimmed down to five: connect, questions, visulize, infer,
and synthesize or transform. These five are considered the ones that students could
best learn and that teachers could most easily implement in order to create a language
of thinking in the classroom.
A reading lesson has three phases or stages: prereading, during reading, and
post reading.
Motivation question: When you are very hungry, what foods do you eat?
Motive Question : What did the hungry caterpillar eat?
B. During reading – In this phase, the reader interacts with and makes connections with
the text in the process of understanding or constructing meaning. Reading aloud is
considered the best way to give all students equal access to good literature.
Read Aloud
5. Read another section of the story and have students predict. Ask students again;
“What do you think will happen next?”
C. After reading – Post reading is the last phase of the reading lesson. It is after reading
when reaers want to share and discuss ideas with others. Ppost reading activities
might include the following: discussion, engagement activities, and reading-writing
link.
Discussion
Engagement Activities
at the end of Grade 4 (Juel, 1998). It has been noted that 20% of students have
significant reading problems.
Who then are the students at risk? At risk students are those who are not
experiencing success in school and are potential dropouts. They are usually low
academic achievers who exhibit low self-esteem. They tend not to participate in school
activities and have a minimal identification with the school.
In general, the techniques that work with achieving readers also work with students
who are at risk. The chief difference in working with achieving and at-risk students is
making appropriate adoptions and modifications.
Let’s apply what you have learned from the Lesson Notes provided. Do the following
activities.
A. Vocabulary Development.
3. a harrowing experience
4. a minute or tiny object
5. peace
C. On-Line Safari
Instruction: There are varieties of elaboration or engagement activities for students
that may be used to reinforce, heighten, and develop ownership of the reading
experience. Search the internet about the following engagement activities and
provide examples or illustrations to explain how these are used.
a. Venn diagram
b. Story Mapping
c. Cued Retelling
d. Reader Response Journal
e. Discussion Web
How well did you understand Lesson 3? Make a summary of the salient points about
the lesson on teaching reading. Use the outline below as guide in developing your
summary. (40 pts.)
IV. Conclusion (As future teacher, state your role in making every student a
reader.)