Understanding and Teaching Reading Comprehension: A handbook

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Routledge, 21 ago 2014 - 138 páginas

The ultimate aim of reading is not the process but to understand what we read and comprehension can take place at many different levels. There has been an increasing emphasis on the importance of reading comprehension in recent years but despite this there is very little written on this vital topic accessible to trainee and practicing teachers.

The Handbook of Reading Comprehension presents an overview of recent findings on reading comprehension and comprehension problems in children. It provides a detailed examination of the characteristics of children who have reading comprehension difficulties, and examines ways in which comprehension can be supported and improved. It is accessibly written for students and professionals with no previous background in the psychology of reading or reading problems.

This indispensable handbook asks the question ‘what is comprehension?’ The authors consider comprehension of different units of language: understanding single words, sentences, and connected prose and outline what readers (and listeners) have to do to successfully understand an extended text. This book also considers comprehension for different purposes, in particular reading for pleasure and reading to learn and explores how reader characteristics such as interest and motivation can influence the comprehension process.

Different skills contribute to successful reading comprehension. These include word reading ability, vocabulary knowledge, syntactic skills, memory, and discourse level skills such as the ability to make inferences, knowledge about text structure, and metacognitive skills. The authors discuss how each one contributes to the development of reading comprehension skill and how the development of these skills (or their precursors) in pre-readers, provides the foundation for reading comprehension development.

Areas covered include:-

  • Word reading and comprehension
  • Development of comprehension skills
  • Comprehension difficulties
  • Assessment
  • Teaching for improvement

Throughout the text successful experimental and classroom based interventions will be highlighted, practical tips for teachers and summary boxes detailing key points and explaining technical terms will be included in each chapter

 

Índice

1 What its all about
1
2 Skills and processes
11
3 Assessing comprehension and the characteristics of poor comprehenders
22
going beyond explicit details to make sense of text
38
5 Knowing and learning the meanings of words
54
6 Sentences and their connections
69
7 Finding and using text structure when reading
82
8 Does it make sense? Monitoring for meaning
94
9 Pulling it all together
105
References
115
Author index
124
Subject index
128
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Sobre el autor (2014)

Jane Oakhill is Professor of Experimental Psychology at the University of Sussex. Kate Cain is Professor in Language and Literacy in the Department of Psychology at Lancaster University. Carsten Elbro is Professor of Reading and Director of the Centre for Reading Research at the University of Copenhagen.

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