Ask, why is it now well accepted that reading is a language-based skill?
Use information from the video to connect reading and language.
Define language (slides 6-8).
Walk through the slides.
Define language from the American Speech Language and Hearing Association (slide 6).
Explain the parameters of language using Bloom and Lahey’s model: form, content and use (slide 7).
Explain the components of language development and explain that each of these components includes the ability to express and understand these components of language (slide 8).
Define reading (slide 9).
Explain how reading is different from language as language provides additional cues not represented in text requiring the reader to make inferences.
Connect components of language to reading (slide 10).
Ask, what do readers need for effective comprehension.
Ask, in what way is comprehension more than testing understanding.
Discuss the importance of discourse processing (slide 15).
Reading Development (slide 16 & 17)
On the site Great Schools.org share videos from Kindergarten, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, middle and high school that demonstrate reading development over time.
While participants watch videos ask them to stop and turn to a partner after each video and share the cognitive and linguistic skills the child is applying in Competency 4 Activity Sheet 1.
After reviewing half of the elementary videos, stop and share with the large group the developmental progression observed (cognitive and linguistic).
After reviewing the other half of elementary ask them to share with the large group the developmental progression observed (cognitive and linguistic) and continue this process through high school.
Revisit the Simple View of Reading (slide 17).
Ask why the simple view is far from simple?
Discuss the integration with decoding and language comprehension from the earliest grades.
Discuss how emphasis on word recognition typically decreases over time as readers become increasingly effective decoders and the role of the processes related to comprehension become more essential to understanding complex texts.
Explain how it is essential to target all of these skills from the earliest grades.
Classifying Reading Difficulties (Slides 20-22)
Using the model from the Simple View of Reading explain the classification of reading difficulties (slide 20).