As you can tell from my earlier posts, I have been thinking
quite heavily about how we help build students identities as readers…and how we
do not. To create readers, we need to cultivate a classroom community of
reading books that interest and matter to us and to respond to those books in
ways that matter as readers. I have been working with a group of elementary
teachers to look at the curriculum in grades 3 – 5 and think carefully about the
kinds of reading and writing we are asking them to do.
There are many resources to support our work. If you have
not done so already, you might start by reading ‘Falling in Love With Close Reading’ and pair it with ‘Notice and Note’. They each have a unique stance,
but complement each other beautifully. Rather than focus on a strict protocol,
each focus on teaching students how and why to read texts that matter. I guarantee
our summer reading is not spent reading ‘closely’ as we have been artificially defining
it for students. Instead, we will read carefully, purposefully, and with the
motivation to apply our learning to the classroom and share it with fellow
teachers. I plan to revisit these two books over the summer and look at my
curriculum work with teachers with new eyes: as a chance to redefine close
reading as a practice with an authentic purpose, not as a protocol for reading
to answer text-dependent questions.
Here are some of the comments that stuck out to me and moved
me to reflect and write this post:
“They can read and
fill out the evidence for literal elements, but they can’t pull it all together.”
‘They can talk about a book, but they can’t
always answer text-dependent questions in writing.”
‘They are good
readers, but they still did not finish the test in time because they were doing
what we trained them to do: read, reread and read closely for evidence.”
As we talked about close reading and the practices that are
found in many current curriculum modules, I was struck by how close reading had
become a protocol and not a way of reading to discover messages and meaning in
books that matter.
The process of reading for meaning and analysis seems to
have taken a back seat to reading by a protocol. That protocol typically
follows this sequence:
1. Read the text.
2. Re-read the text and underline important details. Circle
words you do not know.
3. Re-read the text and write the gist of each paragraph.
4. Answer text-dependent questions.
I have even seen posters that outline this protocol for
students and standardize the way we are closely reading texts together. Yet,
with all of this ‘work’ and ‘training’ students to read closely, we still have
students who struggle with comprehending text and writing about their
responses. Why? In my opinion, a large reason is the way we have implemented
close reading: as a regimented protocol to better answer comprehension
questions after reading rather than a process of reading for meaning.
Close
reading is NOT meant to be a regimented protocol to better answer comprehension
questions. It is meant to be an authentic process of reading that creates strategic
and thoughtful readers who read a particular text with a particular lens for a
particular reason. Close reading is purposeful reading. Yet, in our valiant
attempts to create ‘close readers’ we have focused much too much on the
protocol over the authentic process and purpose of such reading. As a result,
we have readers who robotically go through the motions of close reading and
even read TOO closely when the book, context and purpose for reading might not
call for it.
Rather than focus on the protocol of close reading, we need
to focus on the reason for close reading and the flexible, strategic process
for doing so. How? First, we must consider the reader. The reader needs to have
an authentic reason for reading and must read with a particular lens to dig
deeper into the text and actually learn and widen their knowledge base…..not to
answer comprehension questions.
Next, we need to consider the text. Not all texts are meant
to be read closely. We need to carefully and strategically choose the texts we
read with students and model the ways in which we choose our purpose and
process for reading, all which change based on the reader, the context and the
reason for reading.
We need to step back and honestly reflect on our close reading
practices. However well-intentioned we were in teaching close reading, we may
actually be contributing to a larger problem. Are we requiring a particular way
of reading? Are we focusing on the list of steps and the number of times we
reread a text to guide our teaching? Or are we helping students to discover
purposes for reading, providing them with a flexible process for thinking,
reflecting and sharing that knowledge in real ways that matter?
I created this simple printable as a reminder of what close
reading really is. I encourage you to add to it and use it as a reminder when
planning literacy instruction and close reading in the Fall.
Stephanie