English Language Development

(Elliott) #1
Figure 3.3. Contributors to Meaning Making with Text

Many strands or clusters of standards contribute to meaning making with text. Among
them are the following:


  • Those that help students develop a deeper understanding of literary
    and informational text. Students respond to probing questions, make
    inferences, connect new ideas and information to previous knowledge, and engage
    aesthetically and critically with a range of text. In the transitional kindergarten
    through grade one span much of this work is done through interactive read alouds.
    As students become more proficient in reading independently, a combination of
    interactive read alouds and reading text is used.

  • Those that help students understand more complex language and
    discourse structures (i.e., academic language). Students build proficiency
    with more grammatically complex clauses, expanded noun and verb phrases, and
    complex sentences. Much of this work with young children is done orally at first,
    and then it is blended with reading text.

  • Those that focus on developing students’ vocabularies and knowledge
    of the concepts underlying these words. Students cannot understand either
    spoken or written text unless they know nearly all the words being used and the
    concepts embodied in those words.

  • Those that contribute to students’ knowledge about a subject and the
    manner by which the content is communicated. Knowledge has a major
    impact on readers’ ability to engage meaningfully with the content of a text. Thus,
    material used in either oral or written form should contribute to students’ growing
    knowledge about the world and of the ways in which that knowledge is conveyed
    (e.g., different text structures and features).

  • Those that lead to mastery of the foundational skills so that students
    can independently—and with ease—access written language. Students
    learn how print works. They learn to decode written words accurately and with
    automaticity, that is, effortlessly and rapidly. They identify the sounds represented
    by letters in printed words and blend those sounds into words. With practice, the
    words become automatically recognized. Eventually, students reach the magic
    moment when they can use the foundational skills they have been acquiring to
    recognize enough decodable and high-frequency irregularly spelled words that
    written text becomes like speech and they can decode and understand new (that
    is, previously unencountered) text at their level. Most children should be able to
    read simple text independently by mid-first grade. A significant, but by no means
    exclusive, focus of the work in the transitional kindergarten through grade one
    span is devoted to instruction in foundational skills. As children become familiar
    with more complex spelling-sound patterns and have practiced enough words, their
    growing lexicon of automatically recognized words allows them to read increasingly
    complex text fluently and frees them to think about, enjoy, and learn from what
    they are reading. As children progress through the grades and develop more
    confidence in their reading ability, they can also productively struggle with text with
    concept loads, vocabulary, and language structures somewhat above their level.


138 | Chapter 3 Transitional Kindergarten to Grade 1

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