I would definitely be interested in reading and discussing this article. 
Carol 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: [email protected] 
To: [email protected] 
Cc: [email protected] 
Sent: Sunday, August 16, 2009 8:14:57 AM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central 
Subject: [MOSAIC] Does strategy instruction inhibit comprehension?/Cross 
posting 


_Click here: Reading Research Quarterly : July/August/September 2009 : 
Abstract of Rethinking Reading Comprehension Instruction_ 
(http://www.reading.org/Publish.aspx?page=/publications/journals/rrq/v44/i3/abstracts/rrq-44-3-mc
 
keown.html&mode=redirect) 

I am more than one listserv. Within the past month, on one of the 
listservs, someone posted the link to this recent article from Reading Research 
Quarterly. I read the abstract, sent the link to my students and printed out 
the article. It is 37 pages long so it got set aside. Recently, I woke up at 
2:30 and couldn't get back to sleep. I decided that reading something on 
the "dry" side might help me nod off. However, when I started reading this, I 
was hooked. Although this is a small study, the repercussions of this 
research project caused me some disequilibrium. I can't find the email with 
the link that originally prompted me to investigate this, even though I've 
searched the archives. It really doesn't matter. What I was hoping is that 
others of you would take the time to read it in the next couple of days, and 
then we could have an online conversation about it. Unfortunately, I believe 
one has to be a member of IRA or have access to a university library in 
order to get the complete article. You can read the abstract at the link 
above. 

One more thing, in the notes at the end of the article, Tim Shanahan is 
thanked for being "instrumental in the conception and design of the study." 
Tim has chatted with us on the Mosaic list before, and I know some have 
strong feelings about his beliefs in regard to literacy. If we decide to talk 
about this research study, maybe someone could draw him, or one of the 
authors, into our conversation. 

Just to cause a little provocation, as they say in Reggio, the research 
that the article was written about suggests that strategy instruction is 
possibly the least effective in helping children understand content area 
reading as compared to a basal, or discussion with questioning, about the 
content. The authors also suggest that strategy instruction might inhibit 
comprehension because students ( 5th graders in this case) are thinking about 
the 
strategy rather than the content. 

Let me know if anyone is interested in having an online conversation 
about this. 

Nancy 

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