I was sharing what Allington was shared at Michigan Reading Association.  I
did not know that this group was so narrow that only Keene's comprehension
instruction is allowed.  I thought, "WOW" neat idea to share.  I was not
saying, "Don't do Keene"  I was saying, "NEAT idea that Allington shared at
the conference."  I never said that KEENE does not have great ideas.  I have
personally endorsed her ideas so many times.  My grad class I teach is
reading MOT2 and To Understand right now.  


Cc: Carrie Cahill wrote:  


I'm responding to the following posted by Ellin Keene: 
In terms of the developmental appropriateness of strategies like 
synthesis, 
I believe that we wouldn't even be asking questions like that if we had 
a 
different way of thinking about comprehension. I also wish those who 
are 
concerned about developmental appropriateness could observe, not only 
Debbie 
Miller's former first graders, but thousands of other very young 
children 
(including some I worked with this week in Northbrook and Midlothian IL) 
use 
strategies such as synthesis and inference to dramatically enhance their 
understanding. Why on earth would we withhold that kind of intellectual 
engagement from them?"

I work in Midlothian, IL and had the extreme privilege to watch Ellin work
with our 1st graders last week.  The focus was on inferencing, and I have no
doubt that these strategies are perfectly appropriate for the younger
grades.  They not only can, but NEED, to know that there is more meaning in
a text other than what the author & illustrator put into it.  They need to
know that the true understanding of a text lies within their own minds.
Young children also can, and need, to know that their thoughts, their
beliefs, their feelings, and their opinions change as they read and
understand - the very heart of synthesizing.  
If we're not asking them to create their own understanding through inferring
and synthesizing - then what ARE we expecting from them?  I just don't
believe that these strategies are developmentally inappropriate for them to
use.  I do know that their ability to use them grows more complex and
sophisticated as their minds develop.  But I agree wholeheartedly with Ellin
- why would we want to withhold from them the great joy of uncovering
meaning in a book?  Why would we want to withhold from them the ability to
truly understand why Solomon Singer kept visiting that cafe (An Angel for
Solomon Singer), even when the author doesn't tell us??

She said 
instruction in those strategies should be brief through modeling and 
not 
something we need to do over and over again. 

I'm curious about the context of the above notes taken from the speaker at
the reading conference in Michigan.  It has been my experience that the more
I model and return to the strategies, the more my students and I become
adept at using them as the tools they are intended to be.  I'm unsure as to
what would the benefit of only brief modeling and few exposures?  My only
guess would be to make room for "other stuff" in the teaching of reading?  I
think this decision returns to Ellin's central question of: what are we
really wanting our students to achieve when we teach for understanding.

Dana Williams
5th grade
Midlothian, IL
_______________________________________________
Understand mailing list
[email protected]
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/listinfo/understand_literacyworkshop.org


_______________________________________________
Understand mailing list
[email protected]
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/listinfo/understand_literacyworkshop.org

Reply via email to