Read Aloud, Part 4

A young Alfred Munnings reading aloud outside ...
A young Alfred Munnings reading aloud outside on the grass, circa 1911, by Harold Knight. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Ever wonder what to do with your child after reading aloud with them?  I’ve always felt like the activity was unfinished if I just read and then moved on to another book or activity.  Timothy Rasinski explains several ways to respond to reading in The Fluent Reader.

Responding orally can be a way of allowing your child or student to discuss the story with you and explain what they understood.  With younger kids, ask them literal questions about details of the story.  Stretch their thinking and that of older ones with open ended questions.  Ask them to predict what will happen next.  With my own boys, I ask them to identify pictures or ask them about details that would show me they understand the basic information.  I want them to expand their thoughts and comprehend the text at a deeper level.  They make guesses about what might happen next and talk about what parts they like and don’t like.  My students constantly discuss the text with each other with a think-pair-share activity and answer higher level questions like, “Why do you think the main character did…?”

Kids can respond visually, too.  Students can either draw a scene from the book or describe the mental imagery they experienced while listening.  I love to have my students draw while I read or after reading and then share similarities and differences in the pictures.  I search for books with great description to use to teach them to create a picture in their mind to “see” what they hear.

Once children are able to write and put their thoughts on paper they can use an open ended journal to write about anything they want related to what was read.  They could also respond in writing to a given prompt.  I use free-writing and dialectical journals quite a bit as well as providing a prompt that asks the kids to describe characters and what influences them, predict what would happen next,  to rewrite the end of the story, etc.  Now that my oldest son is starting to write, I want to help him begin to write in response to what I read to him.

Finally, kids and students can show their understanding physically.  “Tableau” is an activity where a group of students create a physical depcition of a scene from what they heard read.  At home, my boys and I constantly use part of stories in our daily activities.  We walk with our toes pointed in and out as in The Snowy Day, or copy the moves from Barnyard Dance.  My students enjoy role playing scenes from our read aloud, too.

Rasinski lists out specific examples of activities to do in responding to read aloud as follows:

“Oral Response:  Discussion; Think, Pair, Share; Oral reading of selected passages

Written Response:  Writing to a prompt; Open-ended writing; Journal writing; Poetry writing

Visual Response:  Creating/drawing pictures; Sketch-to-stretch; Induced imagery

Physical Response:  Tableau; Pantomime; Dance and movement

Combinations of any of the above:  For examples, students may create a poster for a story, using words and pictures, and act out the story, using movement and oral language.”

The importance of responding to a read aloud is to show you what they understood and to deepen their own comprehension.

Read Aloud, Part 1

Cover of "The Fluent Reader: Oral Reading...
Cover via Amazon

Reading out loud to our children is so very important to their language development, finding enjoyment in reading, and increasing their own reading skills.  My boys LOVE to be read to and even my middle school students enjoy hearing a story read aloud. Professionally, I get excited when I see that spark in a student when we’ve found a topic/author/book series/etc. that they are interested in due to something I read to the class.  Personally, I find great pleasure in the opportunity to snuggle up with my kids and bond with them over a book or two (or ten). As part of my independent professional development, I’ve been reading, The Fluent Reader: Oral Reading Strategies for Building Word Recognition, Fluency, and Comprehension by Timothy V. Rasinski.  I felt that he clearly outlines how reading aloud benefits kids of all ages, how to prepare for a read aloud, and what to do during and after a read aloud. This will be the first in a four part series discussing read alouds.

Rasinski lists the benefits of read aloud in this way:

1.  Improves Comprehension and Vocabulary

Exposing our children to more complex written language (in comparison to oral language) provides the opportunity to ask questions about the text because they aren’t losing meaning when decoding the words.  We can expose them to advanced vocabulary in the context of a meaningful topic.  I was shocked to read that, according to Rasinski, “most printed material, even a children’s book, has more sophisticated words than nearly every form of oral language.  For example, they note that the level of vocabulary in story books for preschoolers is at approximately the same level as speech between college graduates.” My husband and I read everything to our kids.  Parker and Brandon have been interested in everything from the simple infant-targeted board books to the books we are reading to articles in Time magazine.  Parker now has a much more sophisticated vocabulary than an average three year old.

2.  Increases Fluency

I’ve always felt that reading out loud to my students allows them to hear what a good reader sounds like.  Fluency isn’t just correctly reading the words on the page.  It’s conveying meaning with how you read the words.  Rasinski stated, “Through intonation, expression, phrasing, and pausing at the appropriate points, the reader demonstrates that meaning is embedded in more than just the words; it’s also in the interpretation of the words.”  I teach my students to “read the punctuation” and emphasize certain words to allow their listener to hear the meaning of the text.  We practice placing greater emphasis on different words of the same sentence and discuss how the meaning of the sentence changes each time.  Try this.  Read aloud the sentence, “I wanted some of that,” four different times, each time emphasizing “I,” “wanted,” “some,” and “that.”  Hear how the meaning of the sentence changes each time it is read?

3.  Builds Motivation

Did I mention that my boys LOVE being read to?  They fight over chair and lap space.  We have to negotiate how many books are read in one sitting.  At bedtime, it’s not uncommon for Brandon to load up our lap with books to read before finally being put into his crib or for Parker to say, “Mommy! Mommy! Wake up!  I want to hear what happens next!” during the fourth reading in a row of his favorite book of the night.  Both of them now find their own enjoyment in reading books.  Usually, if my husband or I suddenly notice we can’t hear one or both of them, it means they’re sitting with a pile of books in their laps, focused on each page.

At school, I typically have a book or two set aside specifically for read aloud.  I read at the beginning of each class, for the entire period, and/or if we finish a lesson before the bell rings.  My students will ask me to read when we have some down-time. Rasinski said, “In a study of the factors that motivate middle-grade students to read, for example, Ivey and Broaddus (2001) found that being read to by the teacher was second only to free reading as the activity students enjoyed most.”  I agree with him.  Year after year, my students want to be read to and are motivated to check out other books by the same author or on a similar topic, and they frequently ask if there is a sequel to read next.

Regular oral reading is not only enjoyable to all ages; it is a strong factor in advancement of vocabulary, comprehension, fluency, and motivation to read.  So make reading to your kids part of your daily routine.  Read to each other on road trips. Attend story time at the local library.  And find out if your child’s teacher incorporates read aloud into classroom activities. Keep reading, everyone!