Subject Area Reading for:
My book is: Benjamin,
A. (2007). But I’m Not a Reading
Teacher: Strategies for Literacy
Instruction in the Content Areas. Larchmont, NY: Eye on Education.
Black font
indicates my blogging about what the author says.
Red font indicates my comments about what she says.
Benjamin spends quite a few pages on various subject areas,
talking about specific reading techniques for each one. She discusses the fact that many people used
to think that reading was reading, no matter the subject. That the way kids learned comprehension in
English class, on stories perhaps, would transfer easily to any subject, where
the child would be reading what she calls, informational text. She states, “We understand much more about
the domain-specific nature of reading sills, and how they don’t so easily walk
themselves over from the room in which story text is taught to the rooms in
which other kinds of subjects are taught.”
For each of the subjects she discusses, math,
business/computer/vocation, science, social studies, foreign language, and English,
she gives examples of typical texts a kid might come across, a discussion of
why it would be difficult for the kid to understand it, and techniques on how
to help the kid understand. I had naively thought that once you knew the
specialized jargon for a subject area, you were golden, but that’s not the
case. There are grammatical,
phrasing, and contextual differences for various subjects too. She gives some good, but simple examples: in the computer section, paste is a term used
in computing as a verb, when in Standard
English, it’s a noun. Math is a
specialized symbolic language, dominated by large phrases.
In many subjects, including science, a textbook uses both
text and graphs to explain concepts. The
reader must be proficient in reading both, and in interpreting one in relation
to the other. “It’s difficult to get
students interested in straightforward facts devoid of a point of view,” she
states. This lack of interest manifests
itself as a comprehension barrier, just as the vocabulary does.
Benjamin recommends breaking this comprehension barrier by
using a different types of text to augment the science textbooks. Literary text. By offering literary texts that can be easier
to understand, and have more similarity with stories that kids are used to
reading, a teacher can arouse interest in science or any subject. She points out that she’s not referring to
poetry or anything, but what she calls “nature writing.” I have no idea what this is, but I’m
going to look it up and blog about it tomorrow.
I personally can’t imagine why anyone wouldn’t be fascinated by science
and soak it in like a sponge! I’ll use
any methods I can to engender some enthusiasm for science!
She suggests using these literary texts and “nature writing”
as reference materials for the classroom, and for kids to use in projects as
one of several sources. Might be a good idea – again, I’ll know more and report in
the blog tomorrow.
She’s definitely getting more and more specific in
her recommendations and techniques. Yea!

Ellen - I really like the quote, “It’s difficult to get students interested in straightforward facts devoid of a point of view.” That's the point that my book is making as well and it makes sense. It is tough to engage in reading that you don't feel some kind of connection to. As for nature writing, last semester at Eisenhower we often used this website to get kid-friendly science news:
ReplyDeletehttps://student.societyforscience.org/sciencenews-students
Thanks, I'll check this website out. I found one called www.naturewriting.com . I'm blogging about nature writing tomorrow, so check it out and let me know what you think.
DeleteI just googled "nature writing" and found a website www.naturewriting.com. I copied a few lines from the website that describe what it is. It sounds really interesting:
ReplyDeleteNature writing is not just any writing that happens to mention an animal or "the outdoors."
Nature writing is born out of love, respect, and awe. It finds its subject during days of close observation of the natural world. It finds its voice in the relationship with nature developed during those days.
Nature writing begins with observation. Nature writing records what the writer has seen and seen again. It may begin with a casual, serendipitous occurrence, but it moves far beyond the casual to record details noticeable only by those who have looked deeply. Nature writing often adds to personal observation the observations and experiences of others. Nature writing is concerned with what scientists have discovered, but the focus always returns to the personal observations of the writer. The writer is part of the natural world and draws the reader into that world.
Thanks! I actually googled it too and found the same site. Check out my blog tomorrow and see if you agree with what I say about nature writing. I'd love to hear your input.
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ReplyDeleteI find that the book I am reading has some of the same content as the book you are reading. One is using verbs and changing them to nouns such as destroy to construction which is called "nominalization".
ReplyDeleteHi Ellen,
ReplyDeleteYour blog looks so attractive! And I really like the idea that you use different color to indicate the author's and your thoughts.
Although in your article it seems that making students comprehend the science textbooks that contains both texts and graphs is not an easy job like making students love a story, it works totally the opposite way on my husband, who now is a postdoc of the Los Alamos National Lab (and this is why I am here in NM and the States :) ). Since he was young he loves science, especially chemistry, and was interested in all those science textbook. But on the other hand he was so bad at reading. Except the science textbooks, journal papers and science websites, he barely read, even novels like Harry Potter couldn't raise his interest in literature. After reading your article I couldn't help but wondering why "stories" just don't work on him, and is there any ways to make him willing to try to read some literature even he is already an adult?
Ellen, I liked this chapter of the book. Your quote of the author:
ReplyDelete"That the way kids learned comprehension in English class, on stories perhaps,
would transfer easily to any subject, where the child would be reading what
she calls, informational text."
that thought was mine only a few weeks ago. I so resonated with your feelings about that too! We need to teach our kids reading in all of our subject area (some less and some more) because of this!! This was a new revelation for me.