Without
a strong background in basic skills like decoding and
vocabulary-building, reading comprehension is impossible. This article
offers research-based strategies for building on these and other skills
to increase student understanding of what is read.
Reading is often thought of as a hierarchy of skills, from processing
of individual letters and their associated sounds to word recognition
to text-processing competencies. Skilled comprehension requires fluid
articulation of all these processes, beginning with the sounding out
and recognition of individual words to the understanding of sentences
in paragraphs as part of much longer texts. There is instruction at all
of these levels that can be carried out so as to increase student
understanding of what is read.
Based on research, a strong case can be made for doing the following in order to improve reading comprehension in students:
- Teach decoding skills
- Teach vocabulary
- Word knowledge: Encourage
students to build world knowledge through reading and to relate what
they know to what they read (e.g., by asking "Why?" questions about
factual knowledge in text).
- Active comprehension strategies:
Teach students to use a repertoire of active comprehension strategies,
including prediction, analyzing stories with respect to story grammar
elements, question asking, image construction, and summarizing.
- Monitoring: Encourage
students to monitor their comprehension, noting explicitly whether
decoded words make sense and whether the text itself makes sense. When
problems are detected, students should know that they need to reprocess
(e.g., by attempting to sound out problematic words again or rereading).
Such instruction must be long term, for there is much to teach and much
for young readers to practice. Even so, there is little doubt that
instruction that develops these interrelated skills should improve
comprehension.
Decoding
Perhaps it is a truism, but students cannot understand texts if they
cannot read the words. Before they can read the words, they have to be
aware of the letters and the sounds represented by letters so that
sounding out and blending of sounds can occur to pronounce words (see,
e.g., Nicholson, 1991). Once pronounced, the good reader notices
whether the word as recognized makes sense in the sentence and the text
context being read and, if it does not, takes another look at the word
to check if it might have been misread (e.g., Gough, 1983, 1984). Of
course, reading educators have paid enormous attention to the
development of children's word-recognition skills because they
recognize that such skills are critical to the development of skilled
comprehenders.
As part of such work, LaBerge and Samuels (1974) made a fundamental
discovery. Being able to sound out a word does not guarantee that the
word will be understood as the child reads. When children are first
learning to sound out words, it requires real mental effort. The more
effort required, the less consciousness left over for other cognitive
operations, including comprehension of the words being sounded out.
Thus, LaBerge and Samuels' analyses made clear that it was critical for
children to develop fluency in word recognition. Fluent (i.e.,
automatic) word recognition consumes little cognitive capacity, freeing
up the child's cognitive capacity for understanding what is read.
Anyone who has ever taught elementary children and witnessed
round-robin reading can recall students who could sound out a story
with great effort but at the end had no idea of what had been read.
Tan and Nicholson (1997) carried out a study that emphasized the
importance of word-recognition instruction to the point of fluency. In
their study, struggling primary-level readers were taught 10 new words,
with instruction either emphasizing word recognition to the point of
fluency (they practiced reading the individual words until they could
recognize them automatically) or understanding of the words
(instruction involving mostly student-teacher discussions about word
meanings). Following the instruction, the students read a passage
containing the words and answered comprehension questions about it. The
students who had learned to recognize the words to the point of
automaticity answered more comprehension questions than did students
who experienced instruction emphasizing individual word meanings.
Consistent with other analyses (e.g., Breznitz, 1997a, 1997b), Tan and
Nicholson's outcome made obvious that development of fluent
word-recognition skills can make an important difference in students'
understanding of what they read.
Thus, a first recommendation to educators who want to improve students'
comprehension skills is to teach them to decode well. Explicit
instruction in sounding out words, which has been so well validated as
helping many children to recognize words more certainly (e.g., Snow,
Burns, & Griffin, 1998, online document), is a start in developing
good comprehenders – but it is just a start. Word-recognition skills
must be developed to the point of fluency if comprehension benefits are
to be maximized.
Vocabulary
It is well established that good comprehenders tend to have good
vocabularies (Anderson & Freebody, 1991; Nagy, Anderson, &
Herman, 1987). This correlation, however, does not mean that teaching
vocabulary will increase readers' comprehension, for that is a causal
conclusion. As it turns out, however, when reading educators conducted
experiments in which vocabulary was either taught to students or not,
comprehension improved as a function of vocabulary instruction. Perhaps
the most widely cited experiment of this type was carried out by Isabel
Beck and her associates, who taught Grade 4 children a corpus of 104
words over a 5-month period (Beck, Perfetti, & McKeown, 1982). The
children who received instruction outperformed noninstructed children
on subsequent comprehension tests. When all of the work of Beck's group
and others is considered (see, e.g., Beck & McKeown, 1991; Durso
& Coggins, 1991), a good case can be made that when students are
taught vocabulary in a thorough fashion, their comprehension of what
they read improves.
One counterargument to this advice to teach vocabulary is that children
learn vocabulary incidentally – that is, they learn the meanings of
many words by experiencing those words in the actual world and in text
worlds, without explicit instruction (Stanovich, 1986; Sternberg,
1987). Even so, such incidental learning is filled with potential
pitfalls, for the meanings learned range from richly contextualized and
more than adequate to incomplete to wrong (Miller & Gildea, 1987).
Just the other morning, I sat in a reading class as a teacher asked
students to guess the meanings of new words encountered in a story,
based on text and picture clues. Many of the definitions offered by the
children were way off. Anyone who has ever taught young children knows
that they benefit from explicit teaching of vocabulary.
That children do develop knowledge of vocabulary through incidental
contact with new words they read is one of the many reasons to
encourage students to read extensively. Whenever researchers have
looked, they have found vocabulary increases as a function of
children's reading of text rich in new words (e.g., Dickinson &
Smith, 1994; Elley, 1989; Morrow, Pressley, Smith, & Smith, 1997;
Pelligrini, Galda, Perlmutter, & Jones, 1994; Robbins & Ehri,
1994; Rosenhouse, Feitelson, Kita, & Goldstein, 1997).
World knowledge
Reading comprehension can be affected by world knowledge, with many
demonstrations that readers who possess rich prior knowledge about the
topic of a reading often understand the reading better than classmates
with low prior knowledge (Anderson & Pearson, 1984). That said,
readers do not always relate their world knowledge to the content of a
text, even when they possess knowledge relevant to the information it
presents. Often, they do not make inferences based on prior knowledge
unless the inferences are absolutely demanded to make sense of the text
(McKoon & Ratcliff, 1992).
The received wisdom in recent decades, largely based on the work of
Richard C. Anderson, P. David Pearson, and their colleagues at the
Center for the Study of Reading at the University of Illinois in the
1970s, 1980s, and into the early 1990s, was that reading comprehension
can be enhanced by developing reader's prior knowledge. One way to
accomplish this is to encourage extensive reading of high-quality,
information-rich texts by young readers (e.g., Stanovich &
Cunningham, 1993).
Typically, however, when readers process text containing new factual
information, they do not automatically relate that information to their
prior knowledge, even if they have a wealth of knowledge that could be
related. In many cases, more is needed for prior knowledge to be
beneficial in reading comprehension. A large number of experiments
conducted in the late 1980s and early 1990s demonstrated the power of
"Why?" questions, or "elaborative interrogation," to encourage readers
to orient to their prior knowledge as they read (Pressley, Wood,
Woloshyn, Martin, King, & Menke, 1992). In these studies, readers
were encouraged to ask themselves why the facts being presented in text
made sense. This encouragement consistently produced a huge effect on
memory of the texts, with the most compelling explanation emerging from
analytical experiments being that the interrogation oriented readers to
prior knowledge that could explain the facts being encountered (see
especially Martin & Pressley, 1991). The lesson that emerged from
these studies is that readers should be encouraged to relate what they
know to information-rich texts they are reading, with a potent
mechanism for doing this being elaborative interrogation.
Active comprehension strategies
Good readers are extremely active as they read, as is apparent whenever
excellent adult readers are asked to think aloud as they go through
text (Pressley & Afflerbach, 1995). Good readers are aware of why
they are reading a text, gain an overview of the text before reading,
make predictions about the upcoming text, read selectively based on
their overview, associate ideas in text to what they already know, note
whether their predictions and expectations about text content are being
met, revise their prior knowledge when compelling new ideas conflicting
with prior knowledge are encountered, figure out the meanings of
unfamiliar vocabulary based on context clues, underline and reread and
make notes and paraphrase to remember important points, interpret the
text, evaluate its quality, review important points as they conclude
reading, and think about how ideas encountered in the text might be
used in the future. Young and less skilled readers, in contrast,
exhibit a lack of such activity (e.g., Cordón & Day, 1996).
Reading researchers have developed approaches to stimulating active
reading by teaching readers to use comprehension strategies. Of the
many possible strategies, the following often produce improved memory
and comprehension of text in children: generating questions about ideas
in text while reading; constructing mental images representing ideas in
text; summarizing; and analyzing stories read into story grammar
components of setting, characters, problems encountered by characters,
attempts at solution, successful solution, and ending (Pearson &
Dole, 1987; Pearson & Fielding, 1991; Pressley, Johnson, Symons,
McGoldrick, & Kurita, 1989).
Of course, excellent readers do not use such strategies one at a time,
nor do they use them simply when under strong instructional control –
which was the situation in virtually all investigations of individual
strategies. Hence, researchers moved on to teaching students to use the
individual strategies together, articulating them in a self-regulated
fashion (i.e., using them on their own, rather than only on cue from
the teacher). In general, such packages proved teachable, beginning
with reciprocal teaching, the first such intervention (Palincsar &
Brown, 1984), and continuing through more flexible approaches that
began with extensive teacher explanation and modeling of strategies,
followed by teacher-scaffolded use of the strategies, and culminating
in student self-regulated use of the strategies during regular reading
(e.g., Anderson, 1992; Brown, Pressley, Van Meter, & Schuder, 1996;
Duffy et al., 1987). The more recent, more flexible form of this
instruction came to be known as transactional strategies instruction
(Pressley et al., 1992), with the body of research on this approach
recently cited by the National Reading Panel (2000) as exemplary work
in comprehension instruction. When such instruction has been
successful, it has always been long term, occurring over a semester or
school year at minimum, with consistent and striking benefits.
The case is very strong that teaching elementary, middle school, and
high school students to use a repertoire of comprehension strategies
increases their comprehension of text. Teachers should model and
explain comprehension strategies, have their students practice using
such strategies with teacher support, and let students know they are
expected to continue using the strategies when reading on their own.
Such teaching should occur across every school day, for as long as
required to get all readers using the strategies independently – which
means including it in reading instruction for years.
Monitoring
Good readers know when they need to exert more effort to make sense of
a text. For example, they know when to expend more decoding effort –
they are aware when they have sounded out a word but that word does not
really make sense in the context (Isakson & Miller, 1976). When
good readers have that feeling, they try rereading the word in
question. It makes sense to teach young readers to monitor their
reading of words in this way (Baker & Brown, 1984). Contemporary
approaches to word-recognition instruction also include a monitoring
approach, with readers taught to pay attention to whether the decoding
makes sense and to try decoding again when the word as decoded is not
in synchrony with other ideas in the text and pictures (e.g., Iversen
& Tunmer, 1993).
Good readers are also aware of the occasions when they are confused,
when text does not make sense (Baker & Brown, 1984). A key
component in transactional strategies instruction is monitoring. Even
the first such package, reciprocal teaching (Palincsar & Brown,
1984), included the clarification strategy: When readers did not
understand a text, they were taught to seek clarification, often
through rereading. To improve children's reading and comprehension, it
makes very good sense to teach them to monitor as they read, to ask
themselves consistently, "Is what I am reading making sense?" Children
also need to be taught that they can do something about it when text
seems not to make sense: At a minimum, they can try sounding out a
puzzling word again or rereading the part of a text that seems
confusing.
By: Michael Pressley (2000)
Source: readingrockets.org