Categorieën: Alle - strategies - responsibility - roles - approaches

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Reading Comprehension

Effective reading comprehension involves a variety of strategies that help readers understand and engage with the text. These include activities like inferring, synthesizing, visualizing, and asking questions.

Reading Comprehension

Reading Comprehension

Bloom's Taxonomy and the "3R's" to enhance reading comprehension and higher order thinking (e.g. Activities associated to retelling correspond with the Knowledge and Comprehension categories of Bloom's Taxonomy)

The 3 R's
Retelling

Relating

Bloom's Taxonomy
Knowledge and comprehension

Application and analysis

Synthesis and evaluation

Instructional Approaches

Thinking aloud
Modelling
Guiding
Reflecting
Coaching
Scaffolding

Roles and Responsibilities in Reading Comprehension

Students
listens to responses and ideas from peers and incorporating it into their own thinking about the text
Use fix up strategies (e.g. rereading, reading ahead, asking a peer)
identify difficult areas in the text (e.g. using stickies)
Make predictions about the text
Teacher
monitors students' successes and needs and uses this information to set goals
use graphic organizers to help students highlight key information
relate prior knowledge to new reading text
model strategies

Gradual Release of Responsibility Model

1. Teacher models and explains it to students
2. Teacher guides students in using strategies to gradually move responsibility to students

3. Students practise applying the strategies learnt while the teacher provides feedback

4. Students apply the strategies learnt independently

Strategies

"Fix up" strategies to repair comprehension (e.g. reread, use context clues, ask questions etc.)
Synthesizing
Inferring
Visualizing and creating other sensory images
Asking questions (of themselves, author and text)
Determining the most important ideas
Activating prior knowledge