Do You Want Your Husband to Remember Your Birthday or Anniversary?

  • 26 October, 2014
  • 5 Comments
Originally posted October 26, 2014
Reposted October 26, 2014
       
    Let’s be honest. Any woman (or man, for that matter) wants their significant other to be involved enough that they remember both of these dates. Remember my birthday, but forget the day that we linked ourselves together for eternity, and you’re in obvious trouble. Recall the date we connected, but not my special day (all by myself) and I wonder if you think of me only in connection to you. Problem!
            Your spouse wants to know that he/she is important to you and not having a premature Alzheimer’s attack when it comes to both of these dates is a real plus.
            Easy question. Easy answer. Okay, try this one…
            Is oral or silent reading more important in middle school?
            We live in a time when silent reading ability will probably buy you more than oral reading skills. There definitely are radio and television announcers who have to read scripts well, but most of us don’t have those duties.
            However, that doesn’t mean oral reading is without value—especially for kids who are 11-, 12-, or 13-years-old.
            Oral reading has some small value as an outcome on its own, but in school-age kids, it has its greatest value as a teaching tool. While it is true that oral reading fluency matters much more when you are 7 than when you are 11, it still matters a lot. 
           Oral reading proficiency explains more than 80% of the variation in the reading comprehension of second-graders. What that means is that if you could make all 7-year-olds equal in oral reading fluency (recognizing equal numbers of words, reading with similar speed, pausing equally appropriately), then you would do away with 80% of the differences in comprehension.
            Phony choice: If I had to choose—and I do not—I would spend more time on fluency instruction in second grade than on vocabulary instruction—because the learning payoff is bigger.
            The amount of reading comprehension variance explainable by oral fluency falls to about 25% by the time the average student is in eighth grade. To me, that justifies fluency instruction, though I recognize the payoff is smaller. (What self-respecting secondary teacher wouldn’t gladly do away with 25% of the reading variation in their students?)
            Phony choice (again): If I had to choose—and I still do not have to make such a choice in real classrooms—I would spend more time on vocabulary instruction in 7thgrade than on fluency—because the learning payoff should be bigger.
            What happens is that as children progress up the grades, more and more of them read at ceiling levels of fluency. Few third-graders can read 175 words correct per minute with proper pausing and prosody. But those numbers increase each year, meaning that more and more students have sufficient levels of fluency to allow them to accomplish the highest levels of comprehension. But, once those ceiling levels of fluency are reached, then to accomplish the highest levels of comprehension will require other kinds of gains (such as in vocabulary).
            I would definitely include oral reading practice in my secondary classes—at least for any students not reading at about 150-175 words correct per minute (and, yes, it has to sound like English—none of this “read as fast as you can” baloney). 
            That doesn’t mean that my students would do a lot of round robin or popcorn turn taking. No, I’d follow the research: we’d engage in paired reading and echo reading with repetition and feedback. Our purpose would be to practice the reading of demanding texts (texts which the students can’t already read well) until we could read them at high levels of proficiency.
            But just because I would provide students with that kind of practice, does not mean that I don’t understand the value of silent reading. I would also devote substantial class time to engaging students in the silent reading of texts that have rich content and language. I would engage students in discussions and debates about the content of those texts, and I would require that students write about the ideas in such texts (e.g., summarizing them, analyzing them, and synthesizing information from that and other texts). 
            Our responsibility is to make students effective readers. There are many things that go into that outcome: students need to develop rich vocabularies, they need to know how to parse sentences so that they can be interpreted well, they need to know how to operate on texts that they don’t understand just from reading, and they need to know how to reason and think about the kinds of information that they will meet in text. 
            Thus, when it comes to oral and silent reading, I’m unwilling to pick one over the other. It is a foolish choice that confuses outcomes and inputs. There is no question that our goal is to develop readers who can read a text with a depth of understanding. But practice, both oral and silent, contributes to the accomplishment of that goal so only a very foolish teacher would require one and not the other.
            By the way, how many dozens of roses must you send if you do forget your anniversary? No, reason… I’m just asking.

Comments

See what others have to say about this topic.

Dylan Smith Apr 20, 2017 03:36 PM

Fascinating discussion, Timothy. I have always viewed silent reading to be "the real thing," because the reader performs in a lowest gear, if you will, building meaning and correcting miscues internally without extraneous burden on wherewithal/working memory. I wish to pose a question, which I assure is sincere:

If your admin ass’t wishes to improve his/her typing skills, is s/he better advised to practise typing, or conversing while typing?

Heather Jun 13, 2017 06:42 PM

10/29/2014

Thanks for your posts. I am always very interested in what reading them. This post made me wonder about your thoughts on how you would approach vocabulary instruction in middle school. If you would ever consider addressing that in one of your posts, I would greatly appreciate it.

Timothy Shanahan Jun 13, 2017 06:42 PM

10/29/2014

Thanks, happy to have you aboard. I'll try to add a blog about middle school vocabulary teaching soon. keep reading.

Digital Mom Jun 13, 2017 06:43 PM

6/6/2015

Do you not consider vocabulary instruction an important component of fluency instruction?

Timothy Shanahan Jun 13, 2017 06:43 PM

6/6/2015

Digital Mom--

Vocabulary (word meaning) plays some role in fluency, but a rather modest one I think. Fluency depends heavily on quick word recognition and the ability to parse sentences so that they make sense as English sentences... and that has to be done on the fly. To accomplish the latter it helps to know the range of meanings associated with the individual words. Thus, vocabulary clearly plays a role, but it is unlikely that vocabulary instruction would have a very big payoff in terms of fluency (comprehension is another thing).

What Are your thoughts?

Leave me a comment and I would like to have a discussion with you!

Comment *
Name*
Email*
Website
Comments

Do You Want Your Husband to Remember Your Birthday or Anniversary?

5 comments

One of the world’s premier literacy educators.

He studies reading and writing across all ages and abilities. Feel free to contact him.