Teaching reading strategies and reading comprehension
3rd session reading strategies
1. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE ARGEMIRO AMAYA BUELVAS Especialista en ELT C. Magister in Education
2. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE Chapter Three REASEARCH INTO THE ASSESSMENT OF READING Alderson, J.C. (2000) Assessing reading. (pp. 85-115). C.U.P.
3. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE Chapter Three This chapter will address the question: How do we know what affects the assessment of reading?
4. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE Reading comprehensioninvolvedmultiplecomponentsthatwouldappeardependingon: Theformatsusedtopresentthe material toberead Themanner in whichthepersonwasaskedtoindicatetheirunderstanding of the material thatwasread. Pearsonand Hamm (2005)
13. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE it appears to be extremely difficult if not impossible to isolate strategies and skills as well for the sake of testing or research and it seems to be due to the fact that the reading process is normally silent, internal, and private, though… How can we feasibly isolate strategies and skills in order to turn this internal process into an external one?
14. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE We can, to some extend, isolate strategies and skills as well for the sake of testing or research as a way to make evident the reading process which is normally silent, internal, and private through two protocols: The writing down protocol The speaking aloud protocol
15. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE “Texts located in familiar settings, on everyday topics, are likely to be easier to process than those that are not” (p. 62) “the most silent psychological benefit which is students attitude, interaction, interest and motivation” as stated by (Burger, 1989; Ponder & Powell, 1989; Short, 1991a; Snow & Brinton, 1988; Snow, Met & Genesee, 1989). Pally, M. (1997).
16. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE Textually Explicit Questions Textually Implicit Questions Script-based Questions Pearson and Johnson (1978) cited in Alderson (2000, p.87) TYPES OF QUESTIONS
17. A MODELING OF READING STRATEGIES INTO THE READING PROCESS FROM A METACOGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE TYPES OF QUESTIONS What do you think textually explicit questions are about? Textually Explicit Questions are those where both the question information and the correct answer are found in the same sentence. What do you think textually implicit questions are about? Textually Implicit Questions, on the other hand, require responders to combine information across sentences. What do you think Scrip-based questions are about? Scrip-based Questions requires readers to integrate text information with their background knowledge since correct responses to the questions cannot be found in the text itself.