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Effective Instruction in Reading Comprehension

Webcast: October 25, 2006

Scroll down to access archived streaming video.

Featuring:
photo of Ruth McQuirter Scott photo of Diane Snowball Diane Snowball, Author, educator, and founder of Australian and United States Services in Education
Ruth McQuirter Scott, Author, educator and professor at Brock University Faculty of Education, Hamilton Campus

Also Contributing:
Margaret Marion, Program Consultant, Niagara Catholic District School Board
Maria Solomon, Literacy Leader, Niagara Catholic District School Board

The Context for the Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat's focus on Effective Literacy Instruction

The government of Ontario has made improvement in publicly-funded education the centrepiece of its mandate. This commitment begins with improved student learning and achievement in literacy and numeracy.

The first step in realizing this goal requires that every student in Ontario develop reading, writing, mathematics, and comprehension skills at a higher level by the age of 12. Progress will be measured by ensuring that by 2008, 75 percent of students reach or exceed the provincial standard.

Effective Instruction in Reading Comprehension

Living in today's information age, students need to be competent communicators who are comfortable interpreting, creating, and using a wide variety of texts for varied purposes in familiar and increasingly complex contexts.

Comprehension is central to effective communication. In order to make meaning, students must understand how language and words work and what strategies they need to utilize as communicators in order to critically analyze, make, or convey meaning. Students need to understand that the skills, strategies, and behaviours they develop are transferable to all content areas within school and beyond school.

The purpose of this webcast is to inspire dialogue, reflection, and action as participants explore critical aspects of effective comprehension instruction. The following questions are provided as a guide for further reflective conversations:

"Tomorrow's citizens face greater reading demands than ever before. The written word is no longer restricted to paper form. Children of all ages are bombarded with information from the Internet and other electronic forms of print. The 'E' generation needs to comprehend more than ever before."

Tovani, C. I Read It But I Don't Get It. 2000

For technical specifications and other technology details, please visit the Video Feed page.

Streaming Video on Demand

  1. Introduction, Judy Speirs, Executive Student Achievement Officer, Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat
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  2. Introduction, Judy Speirs, Executive Student Achievement Officer, Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat
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  3. Effective Instruction in Reading Comprehension
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  4. Effective Instruction in Reading Comprehension
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  5. Conclusion, Judy Speirs, Executive Student Achievement Officer, Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat
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  6. Conclusion, Judy Speirs, Executive Student Achievement Officer, Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat
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Segments

  1. Introduction
  2. Literacy for the Twenty-First Century
  3. Making Predictions
  4. Activating Prior Knowledge
  5. Shared Reading: Text Structure
  6. Guided Reading: Metacognition
  7. Individual Conference: Assessment/Metacognition
  8. Strategic Instruction
  9. Reading Conference: Text Structure
  10. Visualizing
  11. Read Aloud: Critical Literacy/Questioning
  12. Accountable Talk: Critical Literacy
  13. Literary Conversations
  14. Reading Conference: Critical Thinking
  15. Reciprocal Teaching
  16. Influences on Comprehension
  17. Language and Word Study
  18. Language-Rich Environment
  19. Learning Stations
  20. Reader's Theatre
  21. Gradual Release of Responsibility
  22. Reflection/Metacognition
  23. Conclusion


Hosted by the Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat in partnership with Curriculum Services Canada

 
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