Reading Comprehension: Making Sense of Literature
Close reading
A careful reading that is attentive to organization, figurative language, sentence structure, vocabulary, and other literary and structural elements of a text; concerned with meaning of text not reader resposne
True or False: According to reader response theory, understanding a text consists of determining what the author was trying to say
False
True or False: Close reading almost always requires reading a text six times.
False
True or False: Effective readers use the same comprehension processes no matter how a text is structured.
False
True or False: Good comprehension of any text occurs naturally if readers recognize the words accurately.
False
True or False: In a Directed Reading-Thinking Activity, the teacher guides students to correctly predict the next event before they read on.
False
True or False: Instruction in reading comprehension strategies is more common than word recognition instruction.
False
True or False: Only older readers can make inferences when reading a story.
False
True or False: Schemas are comprehension strategies.
False
True or False: Skilled readers can understand any text equally well irrespective of their familiarity with the topic.
False
True or False: The ABC model is a theory of reading comprehension.
False
True or False: The best questions for a shared inquiry discussion are those with a single correct answer.
False
True or False: "Story grammar" is another term for "story structure."
True
True or False: A story map is an example of a scaffolding tool.
True
True or False: Good readers reread parts of the text when the text is not making sense.
True
True or False: If students do not have the prior knowledge needed to understand a text, the teacher should provide it.
True
True or False: In a literature circle, students read and discuss the same text, and often each participant assumes a different role in the group.
True
True or False: It is possible to understand a text without knowing all the words in it.
True
True or False: Reading comprehension is an active process of constructing meaning.
True
True or False: Student self-assessment of reading comprehension is a valuable complement to teacher observation and quantitative assessment.
True
True or False: Vocabulary size affects reading comprehension.
True
An activity during which readers engage in predicting and reading to confirm predictions is ________. A. a directed reading-thinking activity B. a think/pair/share C. a literature circle D. an anticipation guide
a, a directed reading-thinking activity
A comprehension activity in which each participant in a group is assigned a different role is ________. A. a literature circle B. a shared inquiry C. a directed reading-thinking activity D. a think/pair/share
a, a literature circle
When readers understand information that is implicit in the text, they do so by ________. A. making inferences B. using structured opposites C. making predictions D. making transactions
a, making inferences
Focusing questions aim to steer students' thinking towards ________. A. the main ideas of the texts to be read B. details in the text C. key vocab D. correct answers
a, the main ideas of the texts to be read
Reader response theory
an approach to understanding literature that focuses on the role of the reader in interpreting a story rather than just relying upon the author's version
Self-assessment
ask students to observe/critique their own use of comprehension strategies. Advantage of teaching students to be mindful of reading strategies and be deliberate about their use when reading
An activity in which students discuss interpretive questions about a text they have read is called ________. A. reading for structured opposites B. a shared inquiry discussion C. a discussion web D. a debate
b, a shared inquiry discussion
In the ________ phase of a lesson, teachers should help students use prior knowledge while reading a text. A. anticipation B. building knowledge C. consolidation D. developmental
b, building knowledge
The directed reading activity should be used in the ________ phase of the lesson. A. anticipation B. building knowledge C. consolidation D. developmental
b, building knowledge
Comprehension instruction should ________. A. focus primarily on word recognition B. include explicit strategy instruction C. focus on the literal meaning of texts D. consist mostly of activities for developing reading fluency
b, include explicit strategy instruction
Mental frameworks or categories of prior knowledge stored in memory are called ________. A. taxonomies B. schemas C. hierarchies D. concatenations
b, schemas
A set of questions that students answer before and after reading a text is ________. A. a graphic organizer B. a structured overview C. a dual-entry diary D. an anticipation guide
c, a dual-entry diary
Students summarize, compare, and apply information after reading a text in the________ phase of a lesson. A. anticipation B. building knowledge C. consolidation D. developmental
c, consolidation
A model of reading comprehension suggesting that readers use prior knowledge to make sense of what they read is called ________. A. activation theory B. cognitive theory C. schema theory D. transitional theory
c, schema theory
Predictable patterns or structures of fictional texts are called ________. A. themes B. concatenated structures C. story grammars D. genres
c, story grammars
Rereading parts of the text to repair comprehension breakdowns is a behavior associated with the strategy of ________. A. engaging prior knowledge B. imaging C. making inferences D. monitoring comprehension
d, monitoring comprehension
According to reader response theory, each reader creates an individualized meaning of a text, referred to by Louise Rosenblatt as the ________. A. schema B. narrative C. gist D. poem
d, poem
Individual aspects of comprehension can be developed by:
developing skill in context of global activity, engaging in game that exercises the skill, using graphic organizer
Textual side of reading comprehension
focusing on ways texts convey meaning
Constructivist role of reading comprehension
focusing on what reader already knows about topic of text
Quantitative assessment
gather data allowing for comparison between students' performance against some standard, like grade-level expectations
Anticipation phase
immediately before reading a text, students are reminded of prior knowledge, taught pre-vocabulary, and prepared to make sense of text
ABC model
instructional choices for guiding reading comprehension; anticipation, building knowledge, consolidation
Reader response criticism
literary version of schema theory; readers create understanding of texts through interaction of textual cues + prior knowledge
Observational assessment
observe/assess comprehension as students demonstrate them in real reading time
Consolidation phase
phase immediately after reading, when readers reflect
Building knowledge phase
phase of reading text for comprehension & inquiry and thinking occurring during reading
Schema theory in reading comprehension
readers understand by finding cues in text that lead reader to summon prior knowledge
Infomral reading inventories
tests consisting of text samples and word lists with comprehension questions and measures of fluency and word recognition
Reading comprehension
using knowledge we already have to understand new information we find in text