One summer during a summer school for at risk students, we only focused on 
determining importance for 6 weeks. As the professional development provider 
for the district, students would benefit from determining importance in a 
variety of text using graphic organizers and strategies to figure out text. 

Several years later, I worked in a district with students who scored well on 
the state tests. I tried to encourage teachers to help students understand the 
different paragraph types of expository text--cause effect, chronological, etc. 
By the time students were in 5th grade, they had practiced the text features 
(bold face, headings, vocabulary, italics) since K. But some teachers still 
complained that students didn't know those features. My response: how do you 
know? And, we need to move to a different level for those many who do know. It 
was a hard sell, but one that I really believed in. 

Carol 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: [email protected] 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 21, 2010 1:43:37 PM 
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Fw: Comprehension in Content Areas 

Recently I had a conversation with some colleagues about determing 
importance and finding the main idea. Many struggling kids give equal 
weight to all info contained in text no matter what genre. If kids 
can't find what important, how can they solve a math word problem, take 
notes, maintain a focus idea in their writing, or even study for a 
test? Many can't so they struggle in every content area. I'm not saying 
this is the only reason they might struggle but it can answer a lot of 
questions. 
Sue 


-----Original Message----- 
From: C McLoughlin <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wed, Jul 21, 2010 1:25 pm 
Subject: [MOSAIC] Fw: Comprehension in Content Areas 


My favorite approach to reading in the content areas is SQ3R. It 
incorporates 
previewing, questioning, monitoring for comprehension, and 
summarizing. It 
gives students a method with which to break down difficult texts. It 
does need 
to be directly and explicitly taught and reviewed a few times before 
students 
can apply it independently, but that is true for all strategies. It 
can be very 

effective for expository text, and I've used it successfully in 
teaching social 
studies and science. A graphic organizer that leads them through the 
steps can 
be helpful for students who find it difficult to assimilate the 
process. 


Also very important - and this is more a teaching strategy than a 
reading 
strategy per se - is explicitly teaching key vocabulary upfront, with 
pictorial 
support where possible, so that the students have the best opportunity 
to 
comprehend the major concepts, which are assumedly associated with the 
vocabulary. 


Carol Mc 
Reading Specialist/ESL Teacher 


----- Forwarded Message ---- 
From: Lascelia Cadienne Dacres <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wed, July 21, 2010 10:30:12 AM 
Subject: [MOSAIC] Comprehension in Content Areas 

Hello Everyone, 
I am a Learning Team Facilitator (curriculum specialist) and I work 
with other 
teachers in the various content areas such as social studies, math, and 
science 
etc. At my middle school, we want our students to use the same 
strategies in 
their different classes.We believe it will be easier for students to 
see how 
reading strategies are relevant outside of their reading class. As 
Reading 
Specialists, teachers with a reading background, your suggestions are 
very 
important. What are some comprehension strategies that you think will 
work well 
in the content areas described above? and why? 
Thank you in Advance for your Responses, 
Lascelia Dacres 

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To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to 
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