Comprehension Instruction
It is easy to find text within my content area of English, but the hard part is sorting out the effective and non-effective texts and finding literature that will interest the students and keep them engaged in learning activities. The typical texts of my discipline include short stories, novels, historical fiction, poems, news articles, and non-fiction, plays, as well as many other types of texts. Throughout my middles and high school years we mostly focused on novels and short stories. We read novels such as The Hobbit, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and To Kill a Mockingbird. We also read several short stories and we acted out a play from Shakespeare once a year. I had the same English teacher for 9th and 10th grade and she would always show us at least one movie based on the text we had just read.
My teachers throughout middle and high school mostly helped us understand the main storyline of the text. We had study guide questions, whole class discussions, and learned new vocabulary words from each specific text. We usually went no further than a overall understanding of what the text was about. My 9th/10th grade Language Arts teacher had daily routines that would motivate us to be on-track with our reading. Everyday she would have a question about the reading and ask one student to answer the question and elaborate on the hidden meaning of the specific part of the text. She pre-selected the student each day but never told us when our specific day would be in order to keep us motivated to do our homework.
It wasn't until 11th grade that I had a teacher who pushed me to think deeper into the reading by analyzing the author's style and purpose of writing. She helped the class engage in a variety of texts each week. Every Monday we read an article or a speech and we analyzed that piece of text until there was nothing left to analyze! We were required to point out allusions, understatements, metaphors, juxtapositions, and any other literary terms we could think of. We had to write our analysis of the text and describe our hypothesis of why the author wrote using the style he did, if there was a deeper meaning to the text, how this text must have influenced people during that time period, and what the overall purpose of the text was. We read novels that had a deeper social meaning and she helped us understand the deeper meaning by requiring us to participate in socratic circles and have whole group discussions.
After talking about comprehension strategies in this class, I realized that my 11th grade English teacher used many of these strategies. One strategy in particular that I remember her using was an anticipation guide. She called it "walk up to the line". My teacher would ask a question (usually a simple or silly question to get us started) and we would walk up to the line if we agreed or if we related to the question or statement. This would get us thinking about some of the hidden social meanings of the text we were reading and it also helped us to see how the issues we were reading about applied to events that were currently happening. It also helped us see how similar we were to peers that we usually didn't associate with and it helped us develop our own opinions.
If I were to replicate the practices of one of my teachers I would replicate my 11th grade English teacher. I want to use different strategies everyday so that students won't be stuck in a mindless routine. I want to help the students stay active and engaged in the activities and I want them to be able to focus on the purpose of a text and the deeper meaning as well as how a text can be applied to current events. I don't want to be the "movie day teacher" or the teacher who instills fear into the hearts of my students in order to motivate them to keep up with the reading.
I think it is interesting that I too had a better experience in 11th grade where I actually learned how to analyze works. I feel like that class prepared me the most for college level classes. It is unfortunate all classes aren't like that but I admire you for having the desire to be the type of teacher who goes the extra mile in order for her students to be successful.
ReplyDeleteHi Jenny,
ReplyDeleteI like how your teacher taught you how to analyze texts using speeches. English is such a great discipline because you can integrate so many different texts. For instance, in a unit on a novel, you could read maps, newspaper articles, speeches, political cartoons, and other texts related to the themes in the novel. I know you didn't like the "watch a movie" day, but I think even those days could be a part of sparkling discussion and analysis. My friend at Judge Memorial teaches a film class where they just analyze films, and the students love it! She engages the students in much of the same type of analysis as your 11th grade English teacher did. So, in sum, I think good teachers can take almost ANY TEXT--whether it's a graphic novel or a film or a speech--and teach higher order skills. But a not-so-great teacher can take ANY TEXT--and students could leave the experience without feeling like they learned a lot.
Thanks for a great posting!