You are on page 1of 32

HO 1 Content Literacy

Vocabulary
Expanding the 5E Model
A proposed 7E model emphasizes “transfer of learning” and the
importance of eliciting prior understanding
Arthur Eisenkraft

Sometimes a current model must be amended to maintain its value after new
information, insights, and knowledge have been gathered. Such is now the
case with the highly successful 5E learning cycle and instructional model
(Bybee 1997). Research on how people learn and the incorporation of that
research into lesson plans and curriculum development demands that the 5E
model be expanded to a 7E model.
Published by the National Science Teachers Association, 1840 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22201-3000.

The 5E learning cycle model requires instruction to include the following discrete elements: engage,
explore, explain, elaborate, and evaluate. The proposed 7E model expands the engage element into
two components—elicit and engage. Similarly, the 7E model expands the two stages of elaborate
and evaluate into three components— elaborate, evaluate, and extend. These changes are not
suggested to add complexity, but rather to ensure instructors do not omit crucial elements for
learning from their lessons while under the incorrect assumption they are meeting the requirements
of the learning cycle.
Eliciting prior understandings
Current research in cognitive science has shown that eliciting prior understandings is a necessary
component of the learning process. Research also has shown that expert learners are much more
adept at the transfer of learning than novices and that practice in the transfer of learning is required
in good instruction (Bransford, Brown, and Cocking 2000).
The engage component in the 5E model is intended to capture students’ attention, get students
thinking about the subject matter, raise questions in students’ minds, stimulate thinking, and access
prior knowledge. For example, teachers may engage students by creating surprise or doubt through
a demonstration that shows a piece of steel sinking and a steel toy boat floating. Similarly, a teacher
may place an ice cube into a glass of water and have the class observe it float while the same ice
cube placed in a second glass of liquid sinks. The corresponding conversation with the students may
access their prior learning. The students should have the opportunity to ask and attempt to answer,
“Why is it that the toy boat does not sink?”
The engage component includes both accessing prior knowledge and generating enthusiasm for
the subject matter. Teachers may excite students, get them interested and ready to learn, and
believe they are fulfilling the engage phase of the learning cycle, while ignoring the need to find out
what prior knowledge students bring to the topic. The importance of eliciting prior understandings in
ascertaining what students know prior to a lesson is imperative. Recognizing that students construct
knowledge from existing knowledge, teachers need to find out what existing knowledge their
students possess. Failure to do so may result in students developing concepts very different from the
ones the teacher intends (Bransford, Brown, and Cocking 2000).
A straightforward means by which teachers may elicit prior understandings is by framing a “what
do you think” question at the outset of the lesson as is done consistently in some current curricula.
For example, a common physics lesson on seat belts might begin with a question about designing

Arkansas Department of Education 1


Content Literacy 2011-2012
seat belts for a racecar traveling at a high rate of speed. “How would they be different from ones
available on passenger cars?” Students responding to this question communicate what they know
about seat belts and inform themselves, their classmates, and the teacher about their prior
conceptions and understandings. There is no need to arrive at consensus or closure at this point.
Students do not assume the teacher will tell them the “right” answer. The “what do you think”
question is intended to begin the conversation.

The proposed expansion of the 5E model does not exchange the engage component for the elicit
component; the engage component is still a necessary element in good instruction. The goal is to
continue to excite and interest students in whatever ways possible and to identify prior conceptions.
Therefore the elicit component should stand alone as a reminder of its importance in learning and
constructing meaning.
Explore and explain
The explore phase of the learning cycle provides an opportunity for students to observe, record data,
isolate variables, design and plan experiments, create graphs, interpret results, develop hypotheses,
and organize their findings. Teachers may frame questions, suggest approaches, provide feedback,
and assess understandings. Students are introduced to models, laws, and theories during the explain
phase of the learning cycle. Students summarize results in terms of these new theories and models.
The teacher guides students toward coherent and consistent generalizations, helps students with
distinct scientific vocabulary, and provides questions that help students use this vocabulary to
explain the results of their explorations. The distinction between the explore and explain
components ensures that concepts precede terminology.
Applying knowledge
The elaborate phase of the learning cycle provides an opportunity for students to apply their
knowledge to new domains, which may include raising new questions and hypotheses to explore.
This phase may also include related numerical problems for students to solve. When students
explore the heating curve of water and the related heats of fusion and vaporization, they can then
perform a similar experiment with another liquid or, using data from a reference table, compare and
contrast materials with respect to freezing and boiling points. A further elaboration may ask students
to consider the specific heats of metals in comparison to water and to explain why pizza from the
oven remains hot but aluminum foil beneath the pizza cools so rapidly.
The elaboration phase ties directly to the psychological construct called “transfer of learning”
(Thorndike 1923). Schools are created and supported with the expectation that more general uses of
knowledge will be found outside of school and beyond the school years (Hilgard and Bower 1975).
Transfer of learning can range from transfer of one concept to another (e.g., Newton’s law of
gravitation and Coulomb’s law of electrostatics); one school subject to an- other (e.g., math skills
applied in scientific investigations); one year to another (e.g., significant figures, graphing, chemistry
concepts in physics); and school to nonschool activities (e.g., using a graph to calculate whether it is
cost effective to join a video club or pay a higher rate on rentals) (Bransford, Brown, and Cocking
2000).
Too often, the elaboration phase has come to mean an elaboration of the specific concepts.
Teachers may provide the specific heat of a second substance and have students perform identical
calculations. This practice in transfer of learning seems limited to near transfer as opposed to far or
distant transfer (Mayer 1979). Even though teachers expect wonderful results when they limit
themselves to near transfer with large similarities between the original task and the transfer task,
they know students often find elaborations difficult. And as difficult as near transfer is for students,
the distant transfer is usually a much harder road to traverse. Students who are quite able to discuss
phase changes of substances and their related freezing points, melting points, and heats of fusion
and vaporization may find it exceedingly difficult to transfer the concept of phase change as a means
of explaining traffic congestion.

Arkansas Department of Education 2


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Practicing the transfer of learning
The addition of the extend phase to the elaborate phase is intended to explicitly remind teachers
of the importance for students to practice the transfer of learning. Teachers need to make sure that
knowledge is applied in a new context and is not limited to simple elaboration. For instance, in
another common activity students may be required to in- vent a sport that can be played on the
moon. An activity on friction informs students that friction increases with weight. Because objects
weigh less on the moon, frictional forces are expected to be less on the moon. That elaboration is
useful. Students must go one step further and extend this friction concept to the unique sports and
corresponding play they are developing for the moon environment.
The evaluate phase of the learning cycle continues to include both formative and summative
evaluations of student learn- ing. If teachers truly value the learning cycle and experiments that
students conduct in the classroom, then teachers should be sure to include aspects of these
investigations on tests. Tests should include questions from the lab and should ask students
questions about the laboratory activities. Students should be asked to interpret data from a lab
similar to the one they completed. Students should also be asked to design experiments as part of
their assessment (Colburn and Clough 1997).
Formative evaluation should not be limited to a particular phase of the cycle. The cycle should not
be linear. Formative evaluation must take place during all interactions with students. The elicit phase
is a formative evaluation. The explore phase and explain phase must always be accompanied by
techniques whereby the teacher checks for student understanding.
Replacing elaborate and evaluate with elaborate, extend, and is a way to emphasize that the
transfer of learning, as required in the extend phase, may also be used as part of the evaluation
phase in the learning cycle.
Enhancing the instructional model
Adopting a 7E model ensures that eliciting prior under- standings and opportunities for transfer of
learning are not omitted. With a 7E model, teachers will engage and elicit and students will elaborate
and extend. This is not the first enhancement of instructional models, nor will it be the last. Readers
should not reject the enhancement because they are used to the traditional 5E model, or worse yet,
because they hold the 5E model sacred. The 5E model is itself an enhancement of the three-phrase
learning cycle that included exploration, invention, and discovery (Karplus and Thier 1967.) In the 5E
model, these phases were initially referred to as explore, explain, and expand. In another learning
cycle, they are referred to as exploration, term introduction, and concept application (Lawson 1995).
The 5E learning cycle has been shown to be an extremely effective approach to learning (Lawson
1995; Guzzetti et al. 1993). The goal of the 7E learning model is to emphasize the increasing
importance of eliciting prior understandings and the extending, or transfer, of concepts. With this
new model, teachers should no longer overlook these essential requirements for student learning.

Arthur Eisenkraft is a project director of Active Physics and a past president of NSTA, 60 Stormytown Road, Ossining,
NY 10562; e-mail: eisenkraft@att.net.
References
Bransford, J.D., A.L. Brown, and R.R. Cocking, eds. 2000. How People Learn. Washington, D.C.: National
Academy Press.
Bybee, R.W. 1997. Achieving Scientific Literacy. Portsmouth, N.H.: Heinemann.
Colburn, A., and M.P. Clough. 1997. Implementing the learning cycle. The Science Teacher 64(5): 30–33.
Gil, O. 2002. Implications of inquiry curriculum for teaching. Pa- per presented at National Science
Teachers Association Con- vention, 5–7 December, in Alburquerque, N.M.
Guzzetti B., T.E. Taylor, G.V. Glass, and W.S. Gammas. 1993. Promoting conceptual change in science: A
comparative meta- analysis of instructional interventions from reading education and science education.
Reading Research Quarterly 28:117–159.
Hilgard, E.R., and G.H. Bower. 1975. Theories of Learning. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall.

Arkansas Department of Education 3


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Karplus, R., and H.D. Thier. 1967. A New Look at Elementary School Science. Chicago: Rand McNally.
Lawson, A.E. 1995. Science Teaching and the Development of Thinking. Belmont, Calif.: Wadsworth.
Lawson, A.E. 2001. Using the learning cycle to teach biology concepts and reasoning patterns. Journal of
Biological Education 35(4): 165–169.
Mayer, R.E. 1979. Can advance organizers influence meaningful learning? Review of Educational Research
49(2): 371–383.
Thorndike, E.L. 1923. Educational Psychology, Vol. II: The Psychology of Learning. New York: Teachers
College, Columbia University.
Copyright 2003. The Science Teacher. Published by the National Science Teachers Association, 1840
Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22201-3000. September 2003 59
Reprinted with permission from "The Science Teacher", Vol. 70, No. 6, Copyright © 2003, by the National
Science Teachers Association (NSTA).

Arkansas Department of Education 4


Content Literacy 2011-2012
cont., HO 1
Seatbelt lesson using the 7E model:

Elicit prior understandings


xStudents are asked, “Suppose you had to design seatbelts for a racecar traveling at high speeds. How
would they be different from ones available on passenger cars?” The students are required to write a brief
response to this “What do you think?” question in their logs and then share with the person sitting next to
them. The class then listens to some of the responses. This requires a few minutes of class time.
Engage
x Students relate car accidents they have witnessed in movies or in real life.
Explore
xThe first part of the exploration requires students to construct a clay figure they can sit on a cart. The
cart is then crashed into a wall. The clay figure hits the wall.
Explain
xStudents are given a name for their observations. Newton’s first law states, “Objects at rest stay at rest;
objects in motion stay in motion unless acted upon by a force.”
Engage
x Students view videos of crash test dummies during automobile crashes.
Explore
xStudents are asked how they could save the clay figure from injury during the crash into the wall. The
suggestion that the clay figure will require a seat belt leads to another experiment. A thin wire is used as a
seat belt. The students construct a seat belt from the wire and ram the cart and figure into the wall again.
The wire seat belt keeps the clay figure from hitting the wall, but the wire slices halfway through the
midsection.
Explain
xStudents recognize that a wider seatbelt is needed. The relationship of pressure, force, and area is
introduced.
Elaborate
xStudents then construct better seat belts and explain their value in terms of Newton’s first law and
forces.
Evaluate
xStudents are asked to design a seat belt for a racing car that travels at 250 km/h. They compare their
designs with actual safety belts used by NASCAR.
Extend
xStudents are challenged to explore how airbags work and to compare and contrast airbags with seat
belts. One of the questions explored is, “How does the airbag get triggered? Why does the airbag not
inflate during a small fender-bender but does inflate when the car hits a tree?”

Arkansas Department of Education 5


Content Literacy 2011-2012
HO 2
Implementing Marzano’s Strategy

Please read the scenario to the participants.

Scenario:

As the teacher, you decide the unit on motion can be extended to include real-world
research. The article (HO 3) contains several terms that are important in understanding
what the research is suggesting as to how the suit can work to power the iPod. Because
of this, you, as the teacher, decide to “frontload” select vocabulary to assist in the
students’ understanding of the article.

The terms you have decided to explicitly provide instruction/definition on are the
following: nanofibers, nanometers, nanotechnology, piezoelectricity, and polyvinylidene
fluoride.

Procedures:

The presenter will follow the first three steps of Marzano’s strategy using the word
piezoelectricity.
1. Provide a description or explanation or example of the new term.
- Piezoelectricity- electricity produced by mechanical pressure on certain crystals
OR the ability of some materials (notably crystals and certain ceramics, including bone)
to generate an electric field or electric potential in response to applied mechanical stress.
(Definitions taken from wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn and
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piezoelectricity, respectfully.)

2. Have the students restate in their own words. General Definition could be: Electricity
is created when two objects, like certain crystals or even bone, are rubbed together.

3. Ask the students to construct a picture that represents the term. (If the audience is
struggling to come up with an image, an example is provided below.)

Image taken from http://www.vectorious.net/index.php (This image was used with


permission. It is a royalty free image.)

Instructor’s notes:

Arkansas Department of Education 6


Content Literacy 2011-2012
1. Explain to the participants the only term that will actually be addressed will be
piezoelectricity during the workshop.
2. If this has occurred in a classroom, the teacher would have covered each of the
terms individually to ensure student understanding.
3. During the procedures, please feel free to modify the wording from the first three
steps, but not the three steps themselves.
4. For the remaining three steps, explain to the audience that these last three steps
can be implemented at various times through a lesson plan and do not have to be
done in sequential order. They are intended to enhance and sharpen
understanding. The teacher should use his or her discretion as to when these
activities should be implemented to best assist in the learning.

Marzano’s Six-Step Process for Learning New Terms

1.Provide a description, explanation, or example of the new term.

2.Ask students to restate the description, explanation, or example in their own words.

3.Ask students to construct a picture, symbol, or graphic representing the term.

4.Engage students periodically in activities that help them add to their knowledge of
the terms.

5.Periodically ask students to discuss the terms with one another.

6.Involve students periodically in games that allow them to play with terms.

Arkansas Department of Education 7


Content Literacy 2011-2012
HO 3 “One day your pants may power up your iPod”
Content Literacy
Vocabulary/Questioning
One day your pants may power up your iPod
UC Berkeley researchers are perfecting microscopic fibers that can make
electricity from simple body motions. The nanofibers may soon be woven
into clothing, creating the ultimate portable generator.
May 20, 2010|By Tiffany Hsu, Los Angeles Times, reporting from Berkeley

Need juice for a dying iPod? You may soon be able to plug the gadget into a shirt, dance
the electric slide and be good to go.

Researchers at UC Berkeley are perfecting microscopic fibers that can produce


electricity from simple body motions such as bending, stretching and twisting. The
filaments, which resemble tiny fishing lines, may soon be woven into clothing and sold
as the ultimate portable generators.

It could take three years or more before it hits the store shelves, but the technology is
already being hailed as a breakthrough.

The so-called nanofibers "will have very significant implications," said Mihail Roco,
senior advisor for nanotechnology with the National Science Foundation, which recently
gave a $350,000 grant to the project.

In addition to helping reduce electricity demands on local utilities, new industries could
spring up to manufacture the tiny personal generators, he said.

Researchers are envisioning hikers powering up their digital cameras while trekking up a
mountain or a jogger charging up her cell phone in mid-run.

The Pentagon is hot for it too: Soldiers would no longer have to carry heavy batteries to
power their gear. Along with the National Science Foundation, the Pentagon's secretive
advanced research agency is helping fund the project.

For now, the "smart power suit" is still a lab experiment, said UC Berkeley mechanical
engineering professor Liwei Lin, who is overseeing the development of the fibers.

Lin and his team, including researchers from Berkeley, Germany and China, recently
were able to demonstrate the fibers' capacity to harness the energy from minute body
movements.

Arkansas Department of Education 8


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Working in a small, two-room lab on the Berkeley campus, the researchers were able to
convert energy from finger motions into electricity using fibers attached to a surgical
glove.

At roughly 500 nanometers thick, a strand is barely noticeable to the human eye. It's
one-tenth the width of a cloth fiber and one-hundredth the width of a human hair.

It would take about 100,000 fibers to produce enough power for an electrical watch and
1 million fibers to generate enough current to power an iPod. But a bundle of 1 million
fibers would be only about the size of a grain of sand.

Lin said the fibers can soak up the untapped energy produced by the human body, a
remarkably efficient natural generator. The more vigorous the motion, the more power
can be harvested, making knees and elbows and other joints prime spots for the
strands.

The strands take advantage of piezoelectricity, which produces energy through "applied
stress," similar to the heat generated when rubbing hands together.

Multiple dips in the washing machine won't hurt — the fibers are flexible and resistant
to heat and chemicals. They're also small enough to blend unobtrusively into most
garments.

And static shouldn't be a problem, Lin said.

The filaments are made from a cheap, organic plastic called polyvinylidene fluoride. The
material, known as PVDF, also cameos in fishing lines, insulation for electrical wires and
paint on buildings such as the Taipei 101 tower in Taiwan.

Lin's team produces the fibers using a technique it pioneered called near-field
electrospinning. A syringe filled with a polymer solution is suspended over a moving,
electrically conductive silicon wafer. An electrical field pulls the solution out, forming
fine fibers on the wafer in regular patterns. Think of a baker applying very thin lines of
frosting on a very small cake.

Generating electricity from tiny components has been a distant dream for scientists for
decades, said Roco, who also leads the National Nanotechnology Initiative.

"Up until now, there were too few ways to effectively do this, too far away to really
have a discussion," he said. "Now, there's finally a technical solution. Now, people may
finally start to think more seriously about it."

Lin's work builds on several years of efforts to mix clothing and electricity.

Arkansas Department of Education 9


Content Literacy 2011-2012
A team from the Georgia Institute of Technology developed fibers similar to Lin's several
years ago using synthetic Kevlar strands coated with zinc oxide rods. The resulting
filaments, which look like hair rollers, produce energy when rubbed together.

Led by professor Zhong Lin Wang, the researchers have also produced electrical currents
from fingers typing on cell phones, hamsters running on exercise wheels, even vibrating
vocal cords. Tiny modules could eventually be implanted in the human body to harvest
energy from muscle movement or blood vessels, Wang said.

But the fibers from Lin's team are made with organic matter that can be spun to infinite
lengths, while the Georgia strands used inorganic materials and were limited to just a
few millimeters in length.

At rival Stanford University, researchers are developing fabric-based batteries, or


eTextiles, that could potentially store the energy produced at UC Berkeley.

Ordinary cloth becomes rechargeable batteries and capacitors when immersed in a


special ink formula and then oven-dried. A piece weighing about an ounce can retain up
to three times the amount of energy that a cell phone battery can, while remaining
lightweight and flexible.

Berkeley's Lin said he might seek venture capital funding within three months, though
he hasn't decided whether he wants to start his own company with the technology or
license it out to other firms.

If the product can be cheaply mass-produced, the lack of competition would give
nanofibers an easy way to conquer the market, Roco said.

"It will be determined by economics — if the nanofibers cost $10,000, nobody will buy
them," he said. "But if they're $2, everyone will buy. People will use nanotechnology not
because it's fancy but because it's economical."

tiffany.hsu@latimes.com - 10 -Copyright 2011 Los Angeles Times

Arkansas Department of Education 10


Content Literacy 2011-2012
HO 4 Prefixes and Suffixes
Content Literacy
Vocabulary

Scientific Prefixes and Suffixes

Prefix/Suffix Meaning
a or an not or non
meso middle
endo inner, inside
aero needing oxygen or air
anti against
amphi both, doubly
aqua water
arthro joint
auto self
bi two, twice, double
bio life, living
cephal head
chloro green
chromo color
cide killer, kill, killing
cyto cell
derm skin

Arkansas Department of Education 11


Content Literacy 2011-2012
di two, double
ecto (exo) outer, external
endo internal
epi above
gastro stomach
genesis origin, beginning
herba plants
hetero different
homo alike, similar
hydro water

Word Meaning
hemo blood
hyper above
hypo below
intra within, inside
itis disease, inflammation
lateral side
logy study of
lys break down
meter measurement
mono one, single

Arkansas Department of Education 12


Content Literacy 2011-2012
morph form
micro small
macro large
multi many
pod foot
phobia dislike, fear
philia like
plasm form
proto first
photo light
poly many
synthesis to make
sub lesser, below
troph eat, consume
therm heat
tri three
zoo, zoa animal

HO 5 Reflecting as a Reader
Content Literacy
Questioning

Arkansas Department of Education 13


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Reflecting as a Reader

Do you like to read? Why or why not?

When you are reading, what do you do when you come to


something you don’t know?

What do you do when you read something that doesn’t make


sense?

What do you do when come to a word you don’t know?

What do you like best, reading aloud or reading silently? Why?

Do you read at home? How often?

What is a good reader?

HO 6 “Rethinking the Role of Literacy in the Content Areas”


Content Literacy
Questioning

Arkansas Department of Education 14


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Literacy Instruction in the
Content Areas:
Getting to the Core of Middle and High School Improvement
Rafael Heller and Cynthia L. Greenleaf June 2007

RETHINKING THE ROLE OF LITERACY IN THE CONTENT AREAS


Section 1

There’s much more to reading than the basics, and that becomes especially clear as
soon as students start to study the academic content areas. After the elementary years,
not only do reading assignments become longer and more full of content; they also
become increasingly varied in their style, vocabulary, text structure, purpose, and
intended audience. For instance, science textbooks differ from textbooks in history and
math, and all textbooks differ from the whole universe of other materials that teachers
might assign, from newspaper columns to historical documents, reference materials,
Internet-based hypertexts, and on and on.
Middle and high school students must learn that in some classes they are expected to
follow written instructions to the letter, while in others they are expected to read
skeptically, or to question the author’s assumptions, or to analyze the writer’s style.
Moving from one subject area to the next, they must tap into entirely different sets of
vocabulary and background knowledge. They must learn to write well in many genres,
as well as realize that chemists, historians, mathematicians, journalists,
and members of every other profession have their own unique ways of sharing
information, getting people’s attention, debating, responding to criticism, reporting
facts, and establishing authority.

Section 2

It has become common among literacy researchers to describe the distinct ways of
reading and writing and communicating among different groups as “social practices”
(Barton, 1994, 2003; Greenleaf, 1994; New London Group, 1996; Scribner and Cole,
1981; Street, 1995). That is, researchers have challenged the assumption that literacy
learning is basically a solitary activity. Rather, people learn by interacting with others
(especially with people who are more knowledgeable in the area than they are),
gradually becoming familiar with and internalizing their ways of doing things (their
“practices”). Every academic discipline, or content area, has its own set of characteristic
literacy practices. Students won’t learn how to read and write and become comfortable
in the field of biology, for example, unless they spend a lot of time reading, writing, and
talking about biology, ideally with interested peers and well-trained teachers.
To enter any academic discipline is to become comfortable with its ways of looking at
and communicating about the world. Algebra, for instance, focuses on interactions

Arkansas Department of Education 15


Content Literacy 2011-2012
among real or imagined objects, and it translates those interactions into a simple
shorthand language that permits description of how any given “A” relates to a “B” or a
“C.” By contrast, historians choose to zero in on events rich in human significance, and
instead of condensing those events into a formal shorthand, they prefer to elaborate on
them by means of description, narrative, and logical exposition, so as to flesh out an
overarching thesis. Chemists, on the other hand, tend to prize an extremely precise sort
of description and narrative, meant not to elaborate a thesis but to compose an
accurate record of a procedure and its results. In each case, writers choose particular
sorts of words, arrange them in particular sorts of ways, imagine a particular sort of
audience, and otherwise bend their language to suit the particular purposes and values
of the discipline.

Section 3

Over the last few decades, education researchers have become increasingly aware of
the varied ways in which people use written materials to communicate with one
another, define themselves as individuals, and identify themselves as belonging to
particular groups, both in and outside of the classroom. Gradually, it has become clear
that being “literate” means very different things in differing contexts and content areas
(Barton et al., 2002; Borasi and Seigel, 2000; Saul, 2004; Wineburg, 2001). Yet educators
often take a somewhat narrower view of what it means to be literate. Over the last few
decades, appeals to teach “reading across the content areas” have tended to translate
into courses, textbooks, and workshops that encourage all content area teachers to help
their students learn a core set of reading comprehension strategies, and “writing across
the curriculum” has tended to mean instruction in a single, all-purpose writing process.
Less common have been efforts to help teachers address the literacy demands that are
specific to their content areas. Research suggests that the teaching of generic reading
comprehension strategies does have merit, and that students can learn a number of
routines that can help them comprehend many different kinds of written documents
(reviewed in Kamil, 2003; Biancarosa and Snow, 2004; RAND Reading Study Group,
2002; Brown, Palincsar, and Armbruster, 1994). These include pre-reading activities such
as reviewing vocabulary to be found in the text, making predictions as to what the text
is likely to say, and identifying text features such as tables of contents, headings,
illustrations, and authors’ biographical statements. These strategies also include things
that students can do while reading, such as drawing a visual representation of the
unfolding argument, or asking questions about main ideas as they unfold, or making
note of unfamiliar words, concepts, or ideas to research after reading. And they include
post-reading activities such as summarizing and restating the text’s main points, or
comparing notes with other students.

Section 4

Arkansas Department of Education 16


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Moreover, numerous studies over the past few decades have demonstrated that it is
most helpful to teach comprehension strategies, text structures, and word-level
strategies while students are engaged in reading challenging, content-rich texts. Such
skills don’t stick when practiced for their own sake. Rather, students learn those skills
best when they have compelling reasons—such as the desire to make sense of
interesting materials—to use them (Alvermann, 2002; Guthrie and Wigfield, 1997; Vacca
and Vacca, 1998; Wilhelm and Smith, 2002).
Given that content area reading materials are often quite difficult—in fact, many of
the most popular middle and high school textbooks rival the complexity of college-level
materials in their syntax, vocabulary, content, and presentation—it makes good sense to
encourage all teachers to become familiar with these strategies. Students will need
advanced literacy skills in order to do the sorts of intellectual work that the academic
disciplines require, such as conducting and reporting scientific experiments, analyzing
historical sources, or proving mathematical theorems. If teachers want their students to
be able to handle such assignments, they would do well to help them become more
competent in reading difficult texts in general.
However, a sole emphasis on generic reading comprehension strategies may also lead
students to believe that all academic texts are more or less the same, as though the
reading that students do in math class were identical to the reading they do in history,
or as though good writing in biology were identical to good writing in English.

Section 5

Not all literacy skills can be transferred easily from one field to another (Alvermann
and Moore, 1991; Hynd, 1998; Bazerman and Russell, 2003; Moje, 2006). The ways in
which successful students read algebra textbooks (for example, working to translate
word problems into an understanding of the problem being posed and a representation
of the problem in algebraic terms, then working to arrive at a single, correct
mathematical solution) don’t apply to reading and interpreting modern poetry (which
calls for sustained attention to word choice, tone, the relationship of form to content,
narrative voice, the use of metaphor and symbol, and other aspects of language that
don’t often come into play when studying algebra). And the ways in which students
write up their chemistry notes (crafting a detailed, impersonal, accurate record of steps
taken and reactions observed) may not be helpful when trying to write a history paper
or a literary analysis.
To become competent in a number of academic content areas requires more than
just applying the same old skills and comprehension strategies to new kinds of texts. It
also requires skills and knowledge and reasoning processes that are specific to particular
disciplines.
By way of illustration, consider two of the core subject areas, science and history. To
some extent, the challenges involved in reading the texts of these disciplines are the
same. For example, whether students have to read a chemistry paper or a political
speech from the Civil War, they will probably need to learn new terms and phrases, pay
close attention to detail, and work their way through long, complex sentences, written

Arkansas Department of Education 17


Content Literacy 2011-2012
in a style that sounds nothing like contemporary spoken English. Likewise, when
assigned to write a term paper on either of these subjects, they will probably want to
generate ideas and organize what they intend to write, write more than one draft, and
cite prior sources and include them in a bibliography. In many other ways, though,
science texts are very different from texts in history, and each discipline emphasizes
particular kinds of language and particular approaches to reading and writing. In
chemistry textbooks, for example, language tends to be extremely precise with respect
to things and events in the physical world, and students must learn to read those parts
of the text with exactitude, taking care to note whether a reaction occurred at 31.9
degrees Fahrenheit or 32.1 degrees Fahrenheit, or whether a solution turned orange or
yellow. However, students likely will have no reason to ask whether a particular
experiment was conducted in New Hampshire or Georgia, or whether it happened to
occur in 2001 or 2003.

Section 6
At times, historians may pay close attention to these sorts of physical details, too, but
their reasons for doing so are different from those that motivate chemists (Wineburg,
2001; Wilson and Wineburg, 1988). In particular, historians tend to be more exacting
readers than chemists when it comes to details that made an important difference in
people’s lives, and they tend to take a special interest in the circumstances in which
written documents were produced, particularly when reading primary source materials.
Here, the context in which materials were written matters as much as the literal
meaning of the text itself, and students need to know that it is crucial to take note of
who wrote the given document, under what circumstances, for whose eyes and ears,
and to what ends. To fully comprehend the significance of a Civil War–era speech, for
example, students must understand that it matters greatly whether it was composed in
1860 or 1862, or whether it was delivered by a senator from New Hampshire or one
from Georgia.
All teachers, in every discipline, have reasons to emphasize certain kinds of reading
and writing over others, depending on the nature of the specific content and skills they
want their students to learn. Some kinds of details matter more when reading in history
class than in chemistry, or in biology class more than in algebra. Certain forms of writing
(interpretive essays, for example) tend to be required in American Literature even
though they would be considered inappropriate in Earth Science, where an extended
scientific explanation of data would be expected.
If the goal of content area instruction were simply to get students to memorize facts
and crunch numbers, there would be little reason to show them that they need to pay
attention to different things when reading algebra textbooks and geometry textbooks,
or that a lab report requires a different narrative voice than a historical essay. However,
the goal of content area instruction is instead to introduce students to the ways in
which experts in the core academic disciplines look at the world, investigate it, and
communicate to one another about what they see and learn.
Section 7

Arkansas Department of Education 18


Content Literacy 2011-2012
This is not to say that middle and high school students should be expected to become
fully expert in the ways that scientists, historians, and other disciplinary specialists read
and write. To produce an expert level of fluency in the literacy of any profession or
content area is a goal better left to professional training programs, college majors, and
graduate schools.
But as adolescents move up through the middle and high school curriculum, they will
have to read and write in increasingly varied ways in various content areas. And in the
best of circumstances— where the secondary school curriculum is properly aligned with
authentic disciplinary endeavors and builds the academic dispositions and skills that will
be important to postsecondary pursuits— students’ reading and writing assignments
become increasingly similar to the ones they will encounter at college and in the
workforce.
Moreover, even if students still need help developing fluency, increasing their
vocabularies, and learning reading comprehension strategies, they must receive content
area literacy instruction at the same time. Teachers may be tempted to take them out of
the regular curriculum and to drill them in basic literacy skills (or to dumb down their
assignments or even to excuse them from coursework altogether). However, abundant
evidence shows that students tend to be ill-served by having to do basic, skills-focused
reading exercises at the expense of time spent engaged in reading, writing, and talking
about academic content. Such empty, remedial exercises tend to be intellectually bland,
and they only reinforce certain common misconceptions, such as the notion that skillful
reading amounts to nothing more than pronouncing the words on the page (Allington,
2001; Alvermann and Moore, 1991; Carbonaro and Gamoran, 2002; Hull and Rose,
1989; Knapp, 1995).

Section 8

The role of knowledge and domain- specific vocabulary in reading comprehension is


well known (Alexander and Jesson, 2000). If students do not have the opportunity to
learn subject area concepts and vocabulary, their word knowledge and capacity to read
a broader range of texts will be further diminished. In fact, research sponsored by ETS
found that inequalities in students’ access to a rigorous academic curriculum contribute
significantly to the achievement gaps that separate relatively affluent and/or white
students from low-income and minority students (Barton, 2003). Likewise, research
from ACT (2006) found that exposure to rigorous, well-written materials in science,
history, and other disciplines is the best available predictor of students’ ability to
succeed in introductory college courses.
It is certainly challenging to work with students who need help understanding
textbooks, but rather than excusing those students from demanding assignments,
teachers would do better to find ways to engage them in reading, writing, and talking
about compelling issues and problems related to the particular academic discipline.
They can do this by, for instance, providing materials that are related to the subject
matter and are written at a level of complexity that the given students can manage; such
texts are becoming increasingly available today, now that the major textbook companies

Arkansas Department of Education 19


Content Literacy 2011-2012
have begun to respond to the current attention to adolescent literacy. And instead of
focusing only on students’ deficiencies in reading and writing, teachers would be well
advised to look for the cognitive, social, and personal strengths students bring with
them from home, which can be used to build connections to academic content and
interest them in the reading and writing that go on at school (Greenleaf, Brown, and
Litman, 2004; Guthrie, 2004; Moje, 2006). Simply put, teachers should assume that all
students are capable of doing rigorous academic work—even if they struggle with
fluency, vocabulary, reading comprehension, or decoding— and they should provide
every student with meaningful and interesting opportunities to learn high-level skills by
reading, writing, and talking about rich intellectual content.
Teachers need to understand that literacy proficiency grows through developmental
processes that continue over a lifetime (Alexander, 2007).
In order for students to become proficient in the long term, they must be willing to ride
out short-term mistakes, take risks, accept a certain amount of confusion and error, and
remain confident that things will in time come to seem easier and more “natural”
(Bartholomae, 1985; Lave and Wenger, 1991). Content area teachers must be patient in
supporting students as they make their way through a complex reading assignment,
learn the vocabulary specific to the content area, or compose a thoughtful and well-
constructed essay.

HO 7 Questioning the Author


Content Literacy

Arkansas Department of Education 20


Content Literacy 2011-2012
QtA

Questioning the Author (QtA)


Questioning the Author: An Approach for Enhancing Student Engagement with Text (Beck McKeown,
Hamilton, & Kugan)

Background
Question the Author (QtA) is a comprehension strategy that requires students to pose
queries while reading the text in order to challenge their understanding and solidify
their knowledge (Beck et al., 1997).

Primarily used with nonfiction text, QtA allows students critique the author's writing and
in doing so engage with the text to create a deeper meaning.

Benefits
QtA aims to engage all students with the text. Although it requires a bit of prep work,
you will reap the rewards of your labor through the student interactions and discussions
in your classroom.

Create and use the strategy


Beck et al. (1997) identify specific steps you should follow during a QtA lesson:

5. Select a passage that is both interesting and can spur a good conversation.
6. Decide appropriate stopping points where you think your students need to delve
deeper and gain a greater understanding.
7. Create queries (questions to encourage critical thinking) for each stopping point.
a. Ex: What is the author trying to say?
b. Ex: Why do you think the author used the following phrase?
c. Ex: Does this make sense to you?

To introduce the strategy, display a short passage to your students along with one or
two queries you have designed ahead of time. Model for your students how you think
through the queries. Invite individual students or small groups to read and work through
the queries you have prepared for their readings. Remember that your role as the
teacher during this strategy is to facilitate the discussion, not lead it. When students ask
questions that go unanswered, try to restate them and encourage students to work to
determine the answer.

“The Russian Traveler”

Arkansas Department of Education 21


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Content Literacy
QtA
“The Russian Traveler”

The day is Friday, October 4. The year is 1957. People in many parts of the earth
turned on radios and heard strange news. “Russia has used rockets to put a new
moon in the sky,” said one station. “The tiny moon is a metal ball. It has a radio
in it. The radio goes ‘beep! beep! beep!’ as the moon travels along. The new
moon is named Sputnik. Sputnik is a word that means traveler in Russian.”
A month later, radios sent out more exciting news. “Russian rockets have
carried a small spaceship into space,” they said. “The ship is just big enough to
carry a little dog. The ship sends out signals about the dog. The signals will help
us learn if animals can live in space.”
Everywhere people became interested in rockets and spaceships.

Authors do not intentionally make text difficult to understand but rather involve the
reader and the reader’s thinking as they process the text.

Explicitly teaching students that they are going to be thinking about text in a new way is
an important first step in implementing QtA. Using a think-aloud-demonstration is one
way to do this directly. Classroom arrangements can also cue students to collaborate
and involve their own thinking when reading difficult text.

The strength of QtA discussions is derived from the modeling of appropriate problem-
solving questions that help readers think about their comprehension as they read.

Arkansas Department of Education 22


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Trainer
Questioning

Questioning the Author (QtA)


from Beck, I.L., & McKeown, M.G., Hamilton, R.L., & Kugan, L. (1997).
Questioning the author: An approach for enhancing student engagement
with text. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.

Background
Question the Author (QtA) is a comprehension strategy that requires
students to pose queries while reading the text in order to challenge their
understanding and solidify their knowledge (Beck et al., 1997).

Primarily used with nonfiction text, QtA allows students to critique the
author's writing and in doing so engage with the text to create a deeper
meaning.

Benefits
QtA aims to engage all students with the text. Although it requires a bit of
prep work, you will reap the rewards of your labor through the student
interactions and discussions in your classroom.

Create and use the strategy


Identify specific steps you should follow during a QtA lesson:

8.Select a content-specific passage that is both interesting and can spur a


good conversation.
9.Decide appropriate stopping points where you think your students need
to delve deeper and gain a greater understanding.
10. Create queries (questions to encourage critical thinking) for each
stopping point.
Example questions:
What is the author trying to say?
Why do you think the author used the following
phrase?
Does this make sense to you?

To introduce the strategy, display a short passage to your students along


with one or two queries you have designed ahead of time. Model for your
Arkansas Department of Education 23
Content Literacy 2011-2012
students how you think through the queries. Invite individual students or
small groups to read and work through the queries you have prepared for
their readings. Remember that your role as the teacher during this strategy
is to facilitate the discussion, not lead it. When students ask questions that
go unanswered, try to restate them and encourage students to work to
determine the answer.

Model QtA - passage for grades 5-8:


The purpose of presenting “A Russian Traveler” is to begin to help students
become aware of the kinds of thinking and work it takes to construct
meaning from text. The demonstration is intended to help students
understand what is different about QtA reading and to emphasize that
authors do not always communicate information clearly, which can make
text difficult to understand.

Authors do not intentionally make text difficult to understand but rather


involve the reader and the reader’s thinking as they process the text.

Explicitly teaching students that they are going to be thinking about text in
a new way is an important first step in implementing QtA. Using a think-
aloud-demonstration is one way to do this directly. Classroom
arrangements can also cue students to collaborate and involve their own
thinking when reading difficult text.

Introduce “The Russian Traveler:”

When we read something, if we’re really going to put the ideas together so
we understand what we read, we have to work and figure it out as we go
along. You can think of it as a little like talking to yourself about what
you’re reading and deciding whether the ideas are clear. Let’s read this
short piece of text, because it has some things in it that seem pretty
confusing at first.

The Russian Traveler

Arkansas Department of Education 24


Content Literacy 2011-2012
The day is Friday, October 4. The year is 1957. People in many parts of
the earth turned on radios and heard strange news. “Russia has used
rockets to put a new moon in the sky,” said one station. “The tiny
moon is a metal ball. It has a radio in it. The radio goes ‘beep! beep!
beep!’ as the moon travels along. The new moon is named Sputnik.
Sputnik is a word that means traveler in Russian.”
A month later, radios sent out more exciting news. “Russian rockets
have carried a small spaceship into space,” they said. “The ship is just
big enough to carry a little dog. The ship sends out signals about the
dog. The signals will help us learn if animals can live in space.”
Everywhere people became interested in rockets and spaceships.

A Russian Traveler - “Hmm…someone from Russia must be going


somewhere.” The day is Friday, October 4. The year is 1957. “Ok, so I know
something about a date and time.”

(Continue is this same way, reading and then stopping to think aloud.)

People in many parts of the earth turned on radios and heard strange news.
“I think the author is trying to tell us that something important happened.”
“Russia has used rockets to put a new moon in the sky,” said one station.
“Hmm. I don’t know what the author means. How can you put up another
moon?”
The tiny moon is a metal ball. It has a radio in it. The radio goes ‘beep!
beep! beep!’ as the moon travels along. “I don’t know what the author is
trying to tell us about…how can a metal ball with a radio in it be a moon?”

(At this point in the text, students should be given an opportunity to say if
the passage seems confusing to them as well. Continue with Guided
Practice, asking students to generate questions with support. Example
thinking aloud follows.)

The new moon is named Sputnik. Sputnik is a word that means traveler in
Russian. “Now I think I know what the author is getting at. You might not
know this, but I remember that there was a Russian satellite or spaceship
called Sputnik. Maybe that’s what the author means when he says “new
moon”---a satellite in space! I think the author could have explained this

Arkansas Department of Education 25


Content Literacy 2011-2012
better because kids are going to be reading this and they may never have
heard of Sputnik before.”
A month later, radios sent out more exciting news. “Russian rockets have
carried a small spaceship into space,” they said. “Here, the author is being
clearer…talking about a spaceship rather than a moon with a radio.”
The ship is just big enough to carry a little dog. “So it must not be a very big
spaceship.”

The ship sends out signals about the dog. “Oh! There is a dog on the
spaceship! I thought they just meant that’s what size it was ---big enough
for a dog.”

(At this point, students might be asked if they understood there was a dog
on board or thought the reference to the dog was just an indicator of size.
Then, continue reading.)

The signals will help us learn if animals can live in space. “Hmmm, what
does the author mean, signals could help us learn if animals could live in
space? He doesn’t say what kind of signals ---what kind of signals could do
that, do you think?”

Everywhere people became interested in rockets and spaceships. “This last


sentence seems like a big jump from talking about the dog. I guess maybe
the author is trying to connect the ending sentence with the beginning
sentence about people all over the world turning their radios on.”

Trainer: Did that offer us ideas about how things are written sometimes?
Sometimes, authors make things very clear, and then other things are not
written in a very clear way at all ---like calling the satellite a “new moon.”
Did anyone have any other questions or see anything confusing as we read
along? The strength of QtA discussions is derived from the modeling of
appropriate problem-solving questions that help readers think about their
comprehension as they read.

Lesson Plan for Teaching QtA

Arkansas Department of Education 26


Content Literacy 2011-2012
Materials Text: Select a passage that is both interesting and can spur good
conversation. For this lesson “The Russian Traveler”
What: Today we will practice the strategies of Questioning the
Author and Question/Answer relationships as we read “The
Direct Explanation Russian Traveler.”
Explain what the Why: This strategy prompts critical reading that skilled readers
strategy is and why and use in order to deeply understand texts . Questioning the Author
when to use it. keeps a reader thinking and monitoring his/her own reading.
When: We use questioning when we need to read for deep
understanding and as we problem-solve during reading.
How:
“When we read something, if we’re really going to put the ideas
Model or Demonstrate together so we understand what we read, we have to work and
Show how to use the figure it out as we go along. You can think of it as a little like
strategy. talking to yourself about what you’re reading and deciding whether
the ideas are clear. Let’s read this short piece of text, because it has
some things in it that seem pretty confusing at first.”

To introduce the strategy, display “The Russian Traveler” to your


students. Model for your students how you read and think through
the passage. Using a think-aloud-demonstration is one way to do
this directly. Read aloud and then stop to think aloud. Use explicit
language to explain your thinking as you apply the strategy. For
example:

People in many parts of the earth turned on radios and heard strange
news. “I think the author is trying to tell us that something important
happened.”
“Russia has used rockets to put a new moon in the sky,” said one station.
“Hmm. I don’t know what the author means. How can you put up another
moon?”
The tiny moon is a metal ball. It has a radio in it. The radio goes ‘beep!
beep! beep!’ as the moon travels along. “I don’t know what the author is
trying to tell us about…how can a metal ball with a radio in it be a moon?”
Have students work together in small groups to read another
section of the short passage and create questions. Students
practice and the teacher provides feedback.
Have students practice creating questions with other short
Guided Practice passages.

Scaffold the use of


the strategy.

Apply
Use the strategy
Content Literacy
Questioning

HO 10 Question-Answer Relationships
Content Literacy

Arkansas Department of Education 27


Content Literacy 2011-2012
QAR

Question-Answer Relationships (QAR) What is it?

QAR (Raphael, 1982; 1986) is a strategy that is designed to demystify the questioning
process, providing teachers and students with a common vocabulary to discuss different
types of questions and sources of information for answering these questions. There are
four levels of questions during strategy use and practice.

Two are text-based QAR's :

"Right There" questions ask students to respond on a literal level; the words used to
formulate the question and the answer can be found "right there" in a sentence of the text.
"Right There" questions begin with words or statements such as "who is," "where is,"
"list," "when is," "how many," "when did," "name," "what kind of." These questions
usually elicit a one-word or short response and require one right answer. Sample
questions are "Who discovered America?" or "Who was the first man to walk on the
moon?"

"Think and Search" questions require students to know how the information or ideas in
the text relate to one another and to "search" through the entire passage they read to find
information that applies. "Think and Search" questions begin with words or statements
such as "summarize," "what caused," "contrast," "retell," "how did," "explain," "find two
examples," "for what reason," or "compare." A sample question could be, "Which
strategies could the individual described in this chapter use to improve his financial
situation?”

The other QAR's could be called knowledge-based because students must use their
prior knowledge to answer the question.

"Author and You" questions require students to answer with information not in the text;
however, students must read the text material to understand what the question is asking.
A sample question is, "The topic of the passage was cloning. In what instances, if ever,
do you think cloning should be used?"

"On My Own" questions can be answered with information from the students'
background knowledge and do not require reading the text.

Students who become skilled at this strategy recognize the relationship between the
questions teachers ask and the answers they expect; therefore, they know where to find
information needed for a correct response. Although teaching this strategy can take time,
Richardson and Morgan (1994) report that students who learned and practiced this
strategy for as little as eight weeks showed significant gains in reading comprehension.

Anthony and Raphael assert that QAR can also facilitate the transfer of control of the

Arkansas Department of Education 28


Content Literacy 2011-2012
questioning process from teacher to learner. That is, when students become skilled at
QAR, they need to rely less on their teacher because they are able to generate different
level of questions themselves during independent reading.

How to use it:

1. Introduce the strategy by giving students a written and verbal of each question-answer
relationship.

2. Assign short passages to be read from the textbook. As students finish reading each
passage, ask them one question from each QAR category. Point out the differences
between each question and the kind of answer it requires.

3. After students demonstrate that they understand the differences among the four QAR
levels, assign several more short passages to be read. Again, ask one question for each
category of QAR per passage, provide students with answers, and identify each question's
QAR type. Discuss why the questions represent one QAR but not another.

4. Next, assign short text passages, and provide the questions and the answers. This time,
however, have students identify each question as a particular QAR and explain their
answer. Repeat the reading and questioning process, but have students work in groups to
determine which QAR each question represents and write out their answers, accordingly.

5. At this point have students read a longer text passage. Give them several questions, not
necessarily one per QAR level. Have students individually determine the QAR and write
their answers. Continue assigning longer passages and various QARs for students to
identify and answer.

6. Eventually, when reading is assigned in class, students should generate various QARs
on their own that they present to the rest of the class for identification and answers.

How could QAR be used in science instruction?

Arkansas Department of Education 29


Content Literacy 2011-2012
This strategy focuses on the relationship between questions and answers. It teaches
students that answering different kinds of questions requires different reading behaviors
and thought processes. That is, some questions require students to explore text to find an
answer; some questions require students to explain something they have read; some
questions require students to elaborate on what they have learned; and some questions
ask students to evaluate their own thinking about a topic.

QAR Examples that apply to science content:

· Right There Questions

What is a warm-blooded animal? Name the device that changes solar energy into
electrical energy. What is the movement of air from land to water called? List the three
types of muscles.

· Think and Search

Describe the characteristics of a reptile. Compare and contrast solution and suspension.
Explain the four kinds of air masses. Summarize how the blood moves through the body.

· Author and You

Based on the author's description of mollusks, identify animals that you have seen that fit
that classification. What evidence have you seen over the past three years that confirms
or refutes the information that you just read about global warming? Based on the author's
information about energy sources, which resource would be most efficient for you to use
if you were designing a home? Relate what you have read about potential and kinetic
energy to experiences that you have had at an amusement park.

· On My Own

Describe a bone or muscle injury that you have experienced. What can you do to help
stop water pollution? Identify constellations that you have observed. What are your
thoughts about nuclear energy?

Trainer

Arkansas Department of Education 30


Content Literacy 2011-2012
QAR

Demonstrating QAR: Question and Answer Relationships

What is it?
Taffy Raphael developed QAR as a tool for clarifying how students can
approach the task of reading texts and answering questions. It helps them
realize the need to consider both information in the text and information from
their own background knowledge. Without QAR instruction students often
over rely on text information or background knowledge.
Why use it?
This strategy: *explicitly shows the relationship between questions and
answers; *categorizes different types and levels of questions; *helps student
to analyze, comprehend and respond to text concepts;
and *helps refute the common misconception held by students that the text
has all the answers.

The gradual release of responsibility:


How will I release the responsibility for learning from the teacher to the
student?
The easiest way to describe this is by using Jeff Wilhelm’s model of show me,
help me, let me. First, the teacher models the desired behavior. In this case,
the desired behavior is asking questions, finding answers, and then
categorizing the question-answer relationship. Then, the teacher guides
students as they practice the desired behavior, gradually releasing the
responsibility for learning to them. Finally, the teacher provides opportunities
for the students to try the strategy on their own as he/she observes and
evaluates student performance to inform instruction.

Example passage and questions:

Tom has lived in Marysville his entire life. However, tomorrow, Tom and his
family would be moving 200 miles away to Grand Rapids. Tom hated the idea
of having to move. He would be leaving behind his best friend, Ron, the
baseball team he had played on for the last two years, and the big swing in his
backyard where he liked to sit and think. And to make matters worse, he was
moving on his birthday! Tom would be thirteen tomorrow. He was going to be
a teenager! He wanted to spend the day with his friends, not watching his
house being packed up and put on a truck. He thought that moving was a

Arkansas Department of Education 31


Content Literacy 2011-2012
horrible way to spend his birthday. What about a party? What about spending
the day with his friends? What about what he wanted?
That was just the problem. No one ever asked Tom what he wanted.

1. How long has Tom lived in Marysville?


2. What is the name of the town where Tom and his family are moving?
3. What might Tom do to make moving to a new town easier for him?
4. Does Tom like playing on the baseball team he has played on for the last
two years?
5. In what ways can moving to a new house and to a new city be exciting?
6. What is Tom’s best friend’s name?

Arkansas Department of Education 32


Content Literacy 2011-2012

You might also like