Comprehension [Grades K-12]. Douglas Fisher
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The Will of Comprehension Instruction
When reading comprehension is reduced to a set of skills, many students simply don’t read, even when they might otherwise. And we are not just referring to reading outside of school, an important effort for increasing reading volume. We are alluding to students who skim a text simply to find answers, or avoid reading tasks altogether. The will level of reading comprehension focuses on students’ mindsets about reading. These approaches invite them to engage more fully with texts. Efforts aligned with building the will dimension of reading comprehension center on creating the mental attitude, inclination, habit, or disposition that predetermines a students’ willingness to engage in reading. In other words, the will of comprehension relates to student engagement and motivation to read and understand. Reading comprehension instruction oriented to goals, choice, and relevance contribute to will.
The will level of reading comprehension focuses on students’ mindsets about reading.
Far too often, students abandon reading when the text is complex. A common misconception is that reading should always be easy, and that struggle must be avoided. In fact, productive failure is widely understood as a necessary component of the problem-solving process. And reading is problem solving. There are times when we grapple with ideas, and we persevere to make sense. That is not to say that first graders should be reading War and Peace, but rather that struggle should be seen as natural and that sometimes the texts we read are challenging. Overcoming appropriately challenging tasks fuels a sense of pride and accomplishment, important ingredients in motivation.
Overcoming appropriately challenging tasks fuels a sense of pride and accomplishment, important ingredients in motivation.
Challenge is crucial for goal setting, itself a powerful influence on learning. After all, we don’t set goals for things we already do well. We set goals for things we want to achieve but have not yet attained. But all goals are not created equally. Mastery goals are focused on increasing competence, whereas performance goals are focused on demonstrating the skill and ability of a student. Performance goals are much less motivating—getting a good grade on an essay is not likely to increase a student’s will to read. Writing a clear and coherent essay is primarily a mastery goal, even though it is also likely to result in a good grade. Helping students establish mastery goals can positively impact their will. We have seen students set goals to understand an Emily Brontë novel (e.g., “My goal is to understand the ways the author uses the unreliable narrator device in Wuthering Heights”) and with science texts (e.g., “My goal is to use the information in the main part of the article with what’s listed in the diagrams.”). Students don’t independently generate goals like these. Rather, they are the product of success criteria developed by the teacher. Mastery goals that illustrate the criteria for success in the lesson illuminate the incremental progress students are making in their learning.
Another dimension of will in reading comprehension is the use of choice. Sending students home to read the whole class novel is counter to developing their will to read and comprehend. There is nothing wrong with studying texts in class, but increasing choice will increase the number of students who actually read. Imagine focusing on a genre, topic, or theme and creating a list of 10 titles that will allow students to master the standards. Simply increasing choice can increase will.
The Thrill of Comprehension
The final phase of our framework focuses on the excitement that students should experience when they comprehend a text. Thrill in this context refers to the ways in which students can use the information or experience of reading and comprehending in service of something else. We discovered this phase when we started asking students, “What does the text inspire you to do?”
We discovered the thrill when we started asking students, “What does the text inspire you to do?”
Over time, we have come to realize that students need to experience the thrill of comprehension if they are to accept the challenge of developing their skills and putting forth the will to understand. Richard Anderson (personal communication, June 18, 2019), a pioneer in reading research, argued that we needed new metaphors for the purpose, or thrill, of reading. Students should be speaking, thinking, and doing things. Anderson argued that the new roles might be of storyteller, explainer, or arguer.
Imagine the power of writing Amazon.com or Goodreads.com reviews rather than book reports. Or the impact of presenting information to others and seeing something change, or debating ideas or engaging in a Socratic seminar. There are all kinds of ways that students can be invited into the thrill of comprehension. But all of the options we have discovered involve students becoming producers and sharing their thinking with others.
Why This Book
Simply comprehending the text is no longer the point of comprehension instruction. Too many students are stuck at the skill level, with their teachers working very hard to develop students’ strengths in this area. A more comprehensive framework for comprehension instruction recognizes that skills are not enough. We would be wise to ensure students’ engagement and motivation, developing their will to understand. And, ultimately, we show them that reading and reading comprehension are not passive experiences. Rather, students come to understand that the point of all of this work is to do something with the information. To our thinking, students need lessons on all three levels if we are going to radically change their learning from texts. And that’s what we hope to accomplish with this book.
Students come to understand that the point of all of this work is to do something with the information.
1 The Point of Comprehension Is Not Comprehension
In the introduction, we noted that students needed instruction in the skill, will, and thrill of comprehension. But that may leave you thinking that these are discrete and separate activities that are linear in nature. To dispel that myth, let’s take a look inside Bridget Gengler’s third-grade class. They were focused on the upcoming Veterans Day. As Ms. Gengler explains, “It’s more than a day off school. It’s a holiday to recognize some very specific people. Unlike holidays that recognize people who have died, this holiday focuses on people who are alive. Are you interested to know who gets a holiday in their honor?”
The students were excited to get started, in part because Ms. Gengler was enthusiastic, and she made the information sound interesting to them.
There were a number of skills that were taught and practiced throughout the unit. Ms. Gengler had modeled annotation, for example, and students annotated the complex texts that they read. The students had been taught how to take notes and to create graphic organizers (see Figure 1.1 for a sample). They had previous lessons on fluency and vocabulary, including word solving. The students knew that when they encountered an unfamiliar word,