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Reading Theories and Their Relationship to

Reading Instruction
• Major Theories
– Behaviorism
– Cognitivism
– Constructivism
– Transactionalism
• These theories have neither been proven nor unproven.
• They are simply alternative ways of explaining the process
of learning to read.
• These theories have led teachers to a variety of beliefs about
instructional choices to help children develop successful
reading strategies.
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Behaviorism and a Parts-to-Whole,
Bottom-Up Reading Process
• Behaviorism – learning was essentially a
conditioned response to a stimulus.
• In reading the stimulus for reading is the print
on the page.
• Bottom-up – progressing from the parts of
language (letters) to the whole (meaning).
• Reading theorists for this model include:
– Holmes; Singer; Gough; and LaBerge and Samuels

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Meaning

Text

Paragraphs
Behaviorist or
Bottom-up model
Of the reading process Sentences

Words

Letters

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Phonics-first or subskills instruction

Teach phonics first with letters


of the alphabet and the sounds
Meaning these letters represent before
beginning to read books
Words independently.

Sound/symbol relationships

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Cognitivism and the Interactive
Reading Process
• Cognitive interactive reading theories place equal
emphasis on the role of a reader’s schema and the
importance of the print on the page.
• Word, sentence, and text meaning are conditioned,
influenced, or shaped by the whole set of
experiences and knowledge the reader brings to
reading, rather than the meaning jumping off the
page into the reader’s head based on a verbatim
rendering of text.

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Cognitivism: an Hybrid

• Cognitivism is a combination of
Gestaltist thinking and
Behaviorism

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Knowledge
Experiences
Emotions
Gestaltist or top-down
theory reflected in a
model of the reading
process.

Reader’s Intentions

Meaning
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Experiences
Cognitive or Interactive Knowledge
Emotions
model of the reading process
Reader’s intentions

Meaning
Strengths of both Gestalt and
behaviorist theories were combined Select
while at the same time minimizing unit of print
weaknesses associated with either
theory. Text

Paragraphs

Sentences
Words

Letters
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A skills instructional approach to reading is advocated by the
interactive model of reading

Vocabulary

Decoding Comprehension

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Constructivism and the Transactional Reading
Model
• Constructivism is a theory of learning that
represents the culmination of several distinct lines
of research:
– Developmental Psychology (Piaget)
– Socio-historical Psychology (Vygotsky)
– Semiotic Interactionism (Bruner, Gardner, Eisner, &
Goodman)
• Meaningful learning is at the core of
constructivist theory.
• Language cueing systems – syntax, semantics,
grapho/phonics, pragmatics.
• Reading becomes a whole-to-part-to-whole
process. 10
Syntax and semantics– word order
that determines sentence
meaning.

Learner constructs
Social and a mental version of
situational MEANING the text by using
context and
theses cues.
stance

Graphophonics –
Letters and letter sounds

TRANSACTIONAL READING11
MODEL
Views of Literacy
Traditional Constructivist
(Reading Readiness) (Emergent Literacy)

• Learning to read and write begins at • Learning to read and write begins very
6.5 years of age. early in life.
• Reading develops first, and then • Reading and writing develop concurrently
writing. and interrelatedly in young children.
• Literacy develops through learning • Literacy develops from real life situations
isolated skills, such as phonics and in which reading and writing are used to
writing the alphabet. get things done.
• Experiences of the child before • Children learn literacy through active
schooling are considered irrelevant. engagement.
• Children all pass through a • Being read to plays a special role in the
predetermined scope and sequence literacy development of the young child.
of readiness and reading skills and • Learning to read and write is a
their progress should be monitored developmental process. Children pass
by periodic formal testing. through the stages 12
in a variety of way and
at different ages.
•Reading Aloud

•Shared Reading and Writing


•Guided Reading and Interactive Writing

•Language Experience
•Supported Reading and Writing Focused/ Explicit Language Instruction
•Independent Reading and Writing
•Assessment
•Design Literacy Environments
•Instructional Planning

Elements of a Balanced Literacy Program (Holdaway, 1979)


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Syntax– word order
that determines sentence Semantics –
meaning. comprehension
/ meaning

Pragmatics Transactional Literacy


- Social MEANING
and
Event
situational
context and
stance

Graphophonics –
Letters and letter sounds

TRANSACTIONAL READING14
MODEL
Transactionalism
• Transactionalism is based on the notion that
all literacy events are a transaction between
the sender and the receiver in which both
are changed by the event.
• The stance taken by each is key to the
transaction. (Efferent and Aesthetic)
(Rosenblatt)

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Stance
• Efferent – The reader’s expectation is that
the reading will be one that informs, gives
details, and is usually expository.

• Aesthetic – The reader’s expectsation is tht


the reading will deal with feelings,
emotions and is usually narrative.

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