"Our school has actually developed a reading/writing continuum for EAL students 
which helps guide the teacher in knowing what skills need to be built upon 
whilst identifying what is being used by the student on s regular basis."

Are you able to share this information?  We have very little assistance in how 
to help our ELL students.  They are beautifully fluent readers and often have 
literal understanding of the text.  However, inferential thinking and 
reflection elude them and our language/vocabulary is so difficult to learn and 
understand!

Leslie 
Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and 
those who matter don't mind.”
  ~ Dr. Seuss


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of suzie herb
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2009 4:22 PM
To: Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] How to teach comprehension to fluent reader

I wonder what you are using to test her reading comprehension.  If you are 
using the DRA you will find her just right reading level.  It will be at a low 
level yes, but the starting point for building comprehension.  The test will 
also enable you to see very clearly just what it is this child needs in terms 
of what her strengths are and what the focus for her should be.  You might find 
for example that she does have a good 'literal' understanding but is unable to 
use context clues to build on 'inference'.  It's really a matter of pin 
pointing just what aspect of comprehension is the difficulty or working on what 
the priority will be and going from there in your support of her.  It might be 
as simple as her not being able to make connections at all.  How much of what 
you are really saying to her in class is understood I wonder? There is a huge 
amount of literature on what EAL learners need to develop reading comprehension 
skills and the difference
 in approach that is needed.  The comprehension of EAL learners is not based on 
their inability to understand what they have read but an understanding of 
language.  If you think about your own language learning experiences, or if you 
have not learnt a language, try reading something in Indonesian for example.  
Even with no understanding it is easy to read and there are enough words for 
you to get a really good idea of what the text might be about.  But, how much 
you understand is not based on your ability to read, that is the easy part.  
The issue is that so many of our EAL kids blitz the 'reading' part and parents 
jump up and down with joy saying, 'they can read English'..But they are not 
reading as such.  Our school has actually developed a reading/writing continuum 
for EAL students which helps guide the teacher in knowing what skills need to 
be built upon whilst identifying what is being used by the student on s regular 
basis.  It has long been
 established through research by Cummins (1996) and others that an ESL student 
starting primary school with little or no English can take from 5–7 years to 
reach the same level of English as his or her age-equivalent peers. Adolescent 
students are generally able to make more rapid progress in language development 
in the initial stages than young children....all factors that need to be 
considered when teaching reading.
--- On Thu, 28/5/09, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] How to teach comprehension to fluent reader
To: [email protected]
Received: Thursday, 28 May, 2009, 12:57 AM

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