Teaching Reading in the Content Area

Article by EditorDave (257 pts )
Edited & published by Sallyfd (476 pts ) on Aug 29, 2009

If you've taught for a while, you've encountered "Reading in the Content Area" programs and courses in your Certification Training or your Continuing Education studies. As a teacher of something other than literature or "reading" you may resent this method. This article provides tips to help you.

Introduction to "Reading in the Content Area"

Many of us who have been teaching for a while have been exposed to the "Reading in the Content Area" methodology in our Teaching Credential Classwork or Continuing Education Classwork. The proponents of this formalized and academic approach proclaim that it encourages and provides more practice with reading than if students were exposed to "reading" in just their literature classes. This “content-area” reading is considered academically to be "real-world" reading in that the reading is not from a self-proclaimed "reading textbook" that provides "stories" and "narratives" only for the sake of "text for reading.”

How Reading Usually Works at the Elementary Level

At the elementary-level, students in "Reading Classes" learn the alphabet symbols and how words and then sentences are formed through the use of these symbols. Students learn the sounds produced by certain combinations of the symbols and how to acquire basic meaning from these combinations of symbols. They learn a basic vocabulary from these classes along with basic spelling, syntax, and grammatical principles. And they generally read for the purpose of “reading.”

How Reading Usually Works for the Secondary Level

In the usual secondary-level school situations, reading in “literature” classes has meant “reading for enjoyment” while "reading in the content area" has meant improving reading skills while using textbooks from math, chemistry, history, biology, or geography courses. “Reading in the Content Area” is READING FOR A PURPOSE—to LEARN the material such that you can APPLY the information.

Instead of learning the basic combinations of the alphabet that form words and then sentences for comprehension, students move from this practice to learning more vocabulary and meanings of new terms from the specific areas of study. Students learn the subject matter concepts and terminology while they read the textbooks. They are doing more reading for comprehension rather than reading for vocabulary-building. In fact, when students encounter in their subject-matter textbooks a word they are unfamiliar with, they might be able to use the context of the sentence to determine the meaning of the problem word. This new word becomes a part of their subject-matter ("content area") vocabulary.

Applying the "Reading in the Content Area" Paradigm

After the students have seen the new word a number of times in their reading--and through context or definition has added the word and its meaning to their vocabulary--the students' reading proficiency in that particular subject area will have improved. And, the students should be able to remember and recall the information they have read such that they can formulate correctly in their own phrasing how they understand it.

None of this “reading in the content area” paradigm is really “ground-breaking” information, however. We already know this.

Good teachers in any subject-matter/content-area have always encouraged and enhanced the students’ abilities in reading in their content area by using techniques that help with vocabulary/terminology learning for that particular subject. But too frequently, instructors in various subjects assign chapters of reading to students without verifying if the students have comprehended what they’ve been assigned to read. This is counter-productive.

Struggling with Reading - Particularly in the Content Areas

If the students are stumbling over the vocabulary and terminology and the underlying concepts and meanings, the students are not only NOT reading well, but they aren’t effectively learning the subject matter either.

If the students’ reading abilities are improved, this also helps the student in comprehending and learning the various subject matter topics. Reading in the subject matter/content area in a broad sense is synergistic in that it improves the students’ understanding of the specific content while at the same time enhancing the students’ vocabularies and reading abilities.

So, even though teachers in the content areas of science, math, history, geography, foreign languages, and other “content areas” will argue that they don’t even have time to teach their subject matter, let alone teach reading, they can make minor changes to their lessons, their curriculum, and their classwork to help students with their reading—reading for the PURPOSE of learning and applying the subject matter.

The following section provides some tips on how to make some minor adjustments to your coursework, lessons, and curriculum to make "reading in the content area" a viable endeavor for your teaching.

Showing page 1 of 2
Subscribe to K-12 Learning
RSS
Get free weekly updates, directly to your inbox.
Subscribe