Post
by pjdobro » Sat Apr 09, 2011 11:24 am
I have a question for all of you who are reading specialists. I am wondering if it is necessary to teach reading strategies for reading comprehension to our dc? Is good reading comprehension something that one automatically attains overtime or does it need to be taught? If so, how should it be taught? I know reading the emerging readers and doing the follow-up questions was excellent for advancing my dc's reading comprehension. We've been doing DITHR this year and I feel their reading level has advanced and so has their ability to think deeply about the answers. It seems to me they can analyze what they are reading and come up with really good thoughts on the books that they weren't able to at the beginning of the year. For example, at the beginning of the year when answering some of the questions in the workbook, I would get the "I don't know" answer from them and now I am getting really well thought out answers. So I know they are increasing in their ability to think more deeply about what they've read. However, we've just done our annual testing and though my dc are both still far above grade level in reading comprehension, neither of them advanced in their reading comprehension in the past year. The tester suggested some other reading strategy guide and I'm wondering, is is necessary? The type of reading that is done on the test is different than what we do on a daily basis. On the test, they read a small passage and then have to fill in a blank with an appropriate word. Here is an example. I'm sure this isnt' word for word, but it is close.
I am ___________. I am standing in front of my friend and he can't see me.
My ds, who is quite a literal and logical thinker, answered "blind" in the following instance. That didn't surprise me too much that he said blind instead of invisible just because invisibility isn't real and he would automatically go for the logical answer. So I'm thinking his brain just turned the second part around and read it that "my friend can't see me" instead of how it is actually written. When I asked him the question orally. He answered invisible. So I know he isn't fully reading the question or fully getting the meaning of the question. I'm not for sure of any that my dd might have missed, but I do know that she didn't do any better this year than last. I don't want to get in the mentality that I have to teach something just because it is on the test, yet I don't want to be missing a key element in reading instruction either. So I am torn as to what to do. Any thoughts and suggestions would be appreciated.

Patty in NC
b/g twins '02 Rev2Rev 2014/15
previously enjoyed LHFHG, BLHFHG, Bigger, Preparing, CTC, RTR
******
Nisi Dominus Frusta (Without God, frustration)
Unless the LORD builds the house, its builders labor in vain. Psalm 127:1