首页
登录
职称英语
In many classrooms around the country, teachers are emphasizing, and periodi
In many classrooms around the country, teachers are emphasizing, and periodi
游客
2024-12-27
48
管理
问题
In many classrooms around the country, teachers are emphasizing, and periodically testing, students’reading fluency, the current buzzword in reading instruction. The problem is that speed isn’t the only element to fluency, educators said. Key elements are also accuracy and expressiveness.
"The food was delectable" is different from "the food was detestable," and Shakespeare should not sound like a chemistry textbook.
It is a complicated process teaching students to recognize enough words and read at a consistent rate so they can spend their time concentrating on meaning rather than decoding, educators said. And when tackling a book such as "The Giver," one that deals with a boy’s discovery that his Utopian world comes at the expense of the stifling of intellectual and emotional freedom, meaning is critical.
"Fluent readers are readers who know how to dig into a book and pull out just what they are looking for — whether it is information, a part with strong language, a part with good character development, or just a chance to read for fun," said Susan Marantz, a longtime teacher now at a suburban school in Columbus, Ohio.
Yet a combination of politics, insufficient teacher development and an inherent difficulty in capturing all aspects of fluency have led to questionable instruction practices, according to Richard Allington, a reading researcher and University of Tennessee professor.
Many students are asked by teachers to reread the same passages over and over — often with constant interruptions from the teacher. And some struggling readers are given books — including textbooks — that are above their reading level and soon become a source of frustration.
"You can make any adult a disfluent reader by giving them books that are too hard and jump in and interrupt them a lot," Allington said. "What do you think it does to kids?"
As a result, some kids are motivated to read only to beat a test clock, he and other researchers said.
"The more important question to ask is: Are teachers focusing on all three parts of fluency?" Beers, vice president-elect of the National Council of Teachers of English, wrote in an e-mail. "When fluency is only about building automaticity (and therefore speed), then some (teachers) do mistakenly believe that the point of reading is fast decoding. That’s no more the best measure of a skilled reader than fast driving is the best measure of skilled driver."
The current interest in reading fluency illustrates the complexities in the long national argument about how best to teach reading, dubbed the "reading wars."
Advocates of phonics and literature-based instruction have been at odds for years, with the argument only intensifying after a controversial 2000 report by the National Reading Panel. Many reading experts said the panel relied on a limited set of studies that supported, among other things, intensive drilling in phonics. Reading fluency also was one of the key areas for instruction, along with phonemic awareness and phonics instruction, comprehension, teacher education and computer technology. President Bush used the report as a basis for Reading First, a program to improve reading scores that became the centerpiece of his No Child Left Behind Law.
Although fluency had long been identified by experts as important, it then became a hot issue.
Reading researchers began devising programs to help teachers improve students’ fluency. And although there was no consensus definition of fluency, panels approving Reading First money accepted programs that used tools that stressed reading speed, according to some educators. A report by the Department of Education’s inspector general this month slammed the grant-approval processing, saying it was riddled with problems and conflicts of interest.
The result, said fluency expert Tim Rasinski of Kent State University, was a message sent to schools to concentrate on speed. "The influence of No Child Left Behind has been such that even schools that aren’t Reading First schools are doing periodic (speed reading) testing of kids," he said.
In Ottumwa, Iowa, Evans Middle School did it a different way. Evans was declared a school in need of improvement in reading in 2004, and Principal Davis Eidahl said he adopted a program focused on reading fluency using a model constructed by Rasinski aimed at improving comprehension.
Some students, he said, came into the school reading fast but understanding little.
"They read so fast, with no punctuation and no expression that, we’d go back and ask comprehension questions and they weren’t very successful answering them." he said.
To slow them down and teach them to talk with expression and comprehension, various exercises were used, including having children read passages to each other and listen to how they sound when reading, asking students to repeat passages, and adding 45 more minutes of reading time each day, he said.
Now, 71 percent of the kids are reading at grade level, up from 58 percent two years ago. What worked, Eidahl said, was addressing all’aspects of fluency, maintaining consistency and most importantly, having a quality teacher.
"It all comes down to the teacher," he said. "It’s people, not programs." [br] It can be inferred from the passage that the key element in improving the reading ability of children lies in
选项
A、No Child Left Behind Law
B、all kinds of experiments
C、the students’ awareness of their shortcomings
D、the teachers’ guidance
答案
D
解析
推断题。文章的最后一句话“It all comes down to the teacher”,he said.“It’s people,not programs.”表明教师的引导是最重要的,所以选D。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3886242.html
相关试题推荐
WhyistheIran’sSupremeLeaderurginghiscountrymentoworkharder?[original
Thesealaylikeanunbrokenmirrorallaroundthepine-girt,lonelyshore
Thesealaylikeanunbrokenmirrorallaroundthepine-girt,lonelyshore
Thesealaylikeanunbrokenmirrorallaroundthepine-girt,lonelyshore
Thesealaylikeanunbrokenmirrorallaroundthepine-girt,lonelyshore
Inmanyclassroomsaroundthecountry,teachersareemphasizing,andperiodi
Inmanyclassroomsaroundthecountry,teachersareemphasizing,andperiodi
Inmanyclassroomsaroundthecountry,teachersareemphasizing,andperiodi
Throughoutourliveswehavemanyteachers,andparentshavebeenregardeda
______isavarietyoflanguage(usuallyanativelanguageofacountry)whichse
随机试题
Whyshouldanyonebuythelatestvolumeintheever-expandingDictionaryof
SpeakerA:Mr.Carson,Dr.Brownwillhavetochangeyourappointmenttotomorro
Shesaysshe’dratherhe______tomorrowinsteadoftoday.A、hadleftB、leftC、sh
在HTML文件中,预格式化标记是(42)。A.<pre> B.<table
氯化铵给药速度过快可导致A.血压升高 B.肺水肿 C.惊厥、呼吸停止 D.
唇腭裂患者可能的正畸治疗不包括A.正畸正颌外科联合治疗 B.固定矫治器治疗
证券公司应当以提供网上查询、书面查询或者在营业场所公示等方式,保证客户在证券公司
关于“佐剂应用”叙述错误的是A:可溶性抗原需使用佐剂B:所有免疫原必须使用佐剂
十八届三中全会决定提出,紧紧围绕更好保障和改善民生,促进社会公平正义深化社会体制
关于钢筋混凝土预制桩锤击沉桩顺序的说法,正确的有()。A.基坑不大时,打桩
最新回复
(
0
)