Get Ready for Middle and High School Reading
Is your middle school student ready for the demands of high school reading? Here
are the tools she'll need to succeed.
In elementary school, teachers focus on teaching
basic reading skills as
students progress from learning to read to reading to learn. As they advance through
middle school and beyond, students need to develop more sophisticated reading skills
that include interpreting, analyzing and discussing texts. But just when many students
reach the point where they need instruction in these skills, teachers are concentrating
on course content rather than reading skills. Here are the skills your child will
need to succeed and advice for how to help.
Moving Up From Basic Reading Skills
Middle and high school students move from class to class, and the skills required
differ, depending on the subject. Science, social studies and English
|
Tips for Students
The keys to becoming a successful reader include learning organization skills and
sophisticated reading strategies.
Laura Hendrick, a literacy coach in Santa Rosa, CA advises:
1. Create an organization system at home. Keep binders
neat and have a file for completed papers.
2. Practice reading. Read every day and particularly
during the summer—the more practice the better; it doesn't matter what genre you
read, just make sure you are reading.
|
each have their own vocabulary and structure, and students must move from the basic
skills of sounding out words and understanding plot to reading longer and more complex
texts that require gathering, analyzing, interpreting and responding to information.
According to "Why the Crisis in Adolescent Literacy Demands a National Response,"
a report from the Alliance for Excellent Education: "To succeed in high school and
beyond, students must become chameleons, able to adapt to a range of academic contexts,
each of which requires its own set of literacy skills."
A Literacy Crisis
While most of the emphasis in classrooms across the country has been on making
sure all students learn to read by third grade, national tests reveal a literacy crisis at the middle and high school levels.
Middle-Schoolers Need to Learn Reading Skills, Too
These frightening statistics have led educators to realize that teaching reading
doesn't end at third grade. They have a two-fold task: making sure all students
achieve the basics of reading but also making sure students go beyond the basics
to learn complex reading skills.
At the higher school levels, teachers may feel pressure to cover a certain amount
of the curriculum in their content area and may not feel it is their responsibility
to teach reading skills. But students who are not developing complex reading skills
may find it difficult or impossible to understand the subjects they are studying.
Middle and high school administrators who are concerned about addressing this problem
are putting programs into place that include after-school tutoring, literacy coaching
and reading skills instruction for teachers.
If you suspect your middle school student is having trouble with reading, ask her
to summarize a chapter or tell you in her own words about what she just read. If
she has difficulty, don't delay in seeking help from a teacher or counselor, and
find out what support your school or community offers for struggling readers.
What Reading Skills Do Middle and High School Students Need to
Learn?
As students move through middle and high school, they put aside basic readers and
stories and move on to more difficult, content-rich materials including novels,
plays, textbooks, laboratory manuals and technical texts. In science classes, students
must learn how to read and write laboratory reports, while in history classes they
must interpret historical documents and understand biographical information.
In the upper grades, reading skills and content knowledge become intertwined. Students
must develop sophisticated reading and writing skills along the way in order to
fully understand the content of their courses. They must learn to use cues from
the text such as tables, diagrams and questions at the end of the chapter. They
must learn to predict what they might learn from a given text and connect what they've
read to what they've already learned.
Teachers and parents can help by guiding students as they review vocabulary related
to a given text, encouraging them to have a dictionary or encyclopedia close by
to look up unfamiliar terms, and helping them engage with the text, take good notes
and summarize the main points of the reading.
|