Question: How improve
fluency through understanding phrase boundaries?
Answer/Quote: “One approach
for helping students develop their ability to phrase texts essentially involves
making visible those normally invisible phrase boundaries for students. We have
noticed that public speakers, when giving a speech, will often mark phrase
boundaries in the written texts of the speeches they are reading, as visual
cues to assist them in phrasing their oral rendition of the speech. If this
benefits fluent speakers when reading, a text, would it not benefit children
learning to become fluent readers?” p. 253.
Quote: “Find a
relatively short passage (100-400 words in length) from a text that students
have previously read or will be reading …. With a pencil, mark what you believe
are the appropriate phrase boundaries in the text where reader would pause with
slash marks—one slash mark for short phrase boundaries and pauses within
sentence and two slashes for boundaries (longer pauses) between sentences.” P.
253-254.
Example
of phrase markings for a story: from Seven
Brave Women by Betsy Hearne: “My grandmother did great
things.//Betty lived during World War II/ but she did not fight in it.// She
took fencing for fun/ and played basketball/ on the first girls’ team in her
state/ and went to France/ To take harp lessons/ from a famous harpist there.//
Sequence
of activities:
“First, read the text to students while having them follow along silently….
Then, chorally read the passage with your students, again placing emphasis on
expressive and phrased reading…. Next have students practice the passage on
their own….. Finally have selected students individually, in pairs or in small
groups read the passage in performance for the other students.” P. 254.
Comment: Interesting idea—if it translates into
fluency when reading silently. RayS.
Title: “Building
Fluency Through the Phrase Text Lesson.” T Rasinski, K Yildirim and J
Nageldinger. The Reading Teacher (December 2011/January 2012), 252-255.
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