Saturday, June 2, 2012

Module 1: Reading Reflection

What are some of the major differences between a skills approach to literacy and a comprehensive or sociopsycholinguistic approach?

The comprehensive approach discusses understanding and comprehending passages and sentences without necessarily knowing the meanings of all words. Readers comprehend and use context clues to define the meaning of a passage, even if several words are unfamiliar. Readers define meaning of words from the text that they are reading.

The skills approach to reading starts from the readers recognizing letters and their sounds, to then recognizing words. After letters and letter-sounds are learned, word recognition and meaning fall into place automatically. This model has seven steps and principles, but the steps simply stop at, “Teach decoding and comprehension skills separately until reading becomes fluent”. Most educators would agree that students need to be taught to understand the meaning of text while fluently reading.  

The sociopsycholinguistic approach of reading states that several reading processes (letter-sound relationships, visual aspects of words and texts, context, words and their meanings, and schemas) all support each other and interact.

When reading about the differences between the three approaches, the major differences I noticed is how the reading processes support, or do not support each other. For example, in the sociopsycholinguistic approach, it states that all reading processes support each other. When reading about the skills approach, those processes are taught separately in a certain order. And finally, when reading about the comprehensive approach to reading, letter-sound relationship is taught in the beginning of the approach. Words and their meanings are not necessarily being taught, but using context clues and schemas allows the meanings of the words to be recognized.  These are all very different approaches to reading, and I have to say I understand and agree with some parts, but definitely disagree with others as well. 

2 comments:

  1. Jaclyn,

    I agree with you that there are pros and cons to the different approaches. I have to say that I agree the least with the skills approach. What good is it for a student to be able to sound out a word or words if they have no understanding of what they read? I really feel like I have a better understanding of how frustrating that can be for a child after completing activity two of this module. The comprehensive/ sociopsycholinguistic approach appears to be much more focused on what the child is taking away from what they are reading, as opposed to them correctly identifying every word. You did a great job of clarifying the differences between the approaches.

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  2. Jaclyn,

    I liked how you stated that there are pieces of each approach that you like, while others you don't. I agree completely. As far as the skills approach goes, I do not think that is reading. Reading is far more than letter-sound recognition; however, I think it is an important part to reading. In the younger grades, I think a teacher must teach this skill as a prerequisite to reading, but that teacher is not actually teaching their children to read at this point in the process. I agree with the comprehensive approach to literacy, because I believe that reading is understanding the whole story, not just bits and pieces. When I teach reading, I emphasize the importance of using key words/context clues in the passage to help with unfamiliar meaning. This tells the students that they do not have to know every single word in order to comprehend what we are reading.

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