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Harriett Janetos's avatar

"At the same time, the brief seems to offer no role at all for comprehension skill or strategy instruction. That could provide fodder for the misconception that teachers need to choose between that kind of instruction and knowledge-building. Rather, it’s a question of what they put in the foreground."

This is EXTREMELY concerning. If you've got any sway with Fordham, I would urge an immediate rethink before we replace one set of misconceptions for another set. As someone who has taught comprehension to every grade-level K-12 (and has recently published an instructional guide to reading, From Sound to Summary: Braiding the Reading Rope to Make Words Make Sense), I recommend Tiffany Peltier's recent article, "The Science of Teaching Reading Comprehension". https://www.nwea.org/blog/2024/the-science-of-teaching-reading-comprehension/

She writes:

"Comprehension is a metacognitive skill, one that is developed through purposely choosing text sets to build knowledge and leveraging specific reading comprehension strategies to help students acquire this knowledge and apply these metacognitive skills on their own.

So how do we go about building knowledge?

Reading strategies should not be the focus of teaching reading comprehension. Instead, they should be used in service of teaching students new content. The most recent research suggests we use three strategies to help students learn the content of the texts they are reading. Specifically, when combined with instruction in vocabulary and background knowledge, these strategies are most helpful in building student knowledge and understanding. We can teach students to:

Identify the text structure

Using the text structure, identify the main idea

Summarize a text by expanding on the main idea

If students can summarize a text, they now have a situation model to work from. Think of it like helping them build a web of Velcro that all the details in the text can stick to. Teaching students to use these steps will help them build the metacognitive muscles they’ll need to do this type of understanding on their own. By helping students arrive at a coherent understanding, teachers position readers to do the deep work of making inferences, generating questions, and making connections."

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P.S. Sonora's avatar

I often wonder, how did I manage to graduate from an elite college with a degree in literature and Russian language, without ever having to identify text-to-text and text-to-self connections, or to enumerate the many strategies, such as the six traits of writing. Perhaps these are helpful for struggling readers, but they absolutely bore me to tears.

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