Science of Reading: The Podcast

Amplify Education

Science of Reading: The Podcast will deliver the latest insights from researchers and practitioners in early reading. Via a conversational approach, each episode explores a timely topic related to the science of reading.

  1. -1 J

    S10 E6: Understanding assessment, with Melissa Farrall, Ph.D.

    In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert is joined by Affiliated Scholar at the Stern Center for Language and Learning, Melissa Farrall, Ph.D., to discuss understanding assessment. Melissa explains why it's beneficial for every educator to understand the fundamentals of assessment, especially comprehension assessment. Together, Melissa and Susan discuss the relationship between reading comprehension and language comprehension, why reading comprehension can be challenging to assess, and how, in a perfect world, educators would be trained both in the Science of Reading and assessment. Show notes: Submit your questions on comprehension!Access free, high-quality resources at our brand new, companion professional learning page.Connect with Melissa Farrall on LinkedIn.Learn more about Chall's Stages of Reading Development.Read The Academic Achievement Challenge: What Really Works in the ClassroomListen to Season 2 of Amplify's Beyond My Years podcast.Join our community Facebook group.Connect with Susan Lambert. Quotes: "My view of reading comprehension is that it is thinking guided by print." —Melissa Farrall, Ph.D."If we supplement our evaluation with measures of listening comprehension, we can then get a sense of an individual's ability to make meaning." —Melissa Farrall, Ph.D."In a perfect world, we would have not just evaluators, but educators who are trained both in the Science of Reading and in assessment so that we can all sit at the same table and participate." —Melissa Farrall, Ph.D.Episode Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction: Exploring comprehension assessment, with Melissa Farrall 07:00 The legacy of Jean Chall's research on the developmental stages of reading 10:00 "Reading Assessment: Linking Language, Literacy, and Cognition" 17:00 Comprehension is thinking guided by print 21:00 Different ways of assessing reading comprehension 27:00 Kintsch's construction-integration model 30:00 Word recognition 33:00 Reading comprehension is not easily quantified 38:00 How background knowledge affect the meaning-making process 41:00 The two modalities of language comprehension 45:00 How today's educators might think differently about comprehension instruction 48:00 Closing thoughts *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute

    51 min
  2. 19 NOV.

    S10 E5: Reimagining comprehension assessment, with Gina Biancarosa, Ed.D.

    In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert is joined by University of Oregon College of Education Professor and Ann Swindells Chair in Education Gina Biancarosa, Ed.D., to explore how best to assess for comprehension. Gina elaborates on her extensive work developing more precise and informative measurements of reading comprehension and discusses think-aloud research, demonstrating how to infer for coherence, and examining how students who are struggling with comprehension tend to rely too heavily on making inferences or paraphrasing. Show notes: Submit your questions on comprehension!Access free, high-quality resources at our brand new, companion professional learning page.  Connect with Gina on LinkedIn.Read “Diagnostic and Instructionally Relevant Measurement of Reading Comprehension”Watch Dr. Biancarosa's recent Amplify webinar appearance: Where and How to Measure Comprehension to Drive ImprovementListen to Season 2 of Amplify’s Beyond My Years podcast.Join our community Facebook group.Connect with Susan Lambert.Quotes: "A lot of what we know about reading comprehension comes from think-alouds where you ask someone to tell you what they're thinking as they read." —Gina Biancarosa, Ed.D "To model reading comprehension, [try] thinking aloud in front of a classroom of students in a way that is instructive for them, and also authentic to the reading process." —Gina Biancarosa, Ed.D. "Students are making causal inferences in their daily lives, when they watch movies, and when they're hearing stories. And so what we're really trying to do is get them to generalize these behaviors that they engage in outside of the task of reading, during reading." —Gina Biancarosa, Ed.D. Episode Timestamps: 02:00 Introduction: Gina Biancarosa, Ed.D. and comprehension assessment 08:00 How do we assess comprehension? 14:00 Think-aloud research 21:00 MOCCA (Multiple-Choice Online Causal Comprehension Assessment) 24:00 Causal coherence 30:00 Paraphrasers and elaborators 33:00 Comprehension assessment research 39:00 Professional development and comprehension assessment 42:00 Closing thoughts *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute

    45 min
  3. 5 NOV.

    S10 E4: The science of memory and misinformation, with David Rapp, Ph.D.

    In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert is joined by Northwestern University Professor of Education, Social Policy, and Psychology David Rapp. David’s research focuses on language and memory, and his conversation with Susan gives insight into how memory is connected to comprehension. The first half of the episode is spent defining comprehension as a process, a product, and a higher-order cognitive process. David then digs into how that definition informs the ways in which educators assess comprehension and where they can look for potential failure points. One of these failure points includes misinformation. David addresses what happens when misinformation is stored in long-term memory. He details the issues this can cause for student comprehension, and he gives guidance on how to prevent and correct them. Show notes: Submit your questions on comprehension! Access free, high-quality resources at our brand new, companion professional learning page.  Check out David Rapp's lab.Resources:Listen to Season 2 of Amplify’s Beyond My Years podcast.Join our community Facebook group.Connect with Susan Lambert.Quotes:  “Once the information is in memory, you can't really get rid of it. What you can try to do is make other memories more powerful, more likely to resonate to things.” —David Rapp, Ph.D. “Sometimes our most effective processes actually lead us to misunderstand. For example, you're really good at encoding information to memory, that's great, except if you're exposed to inaccurate ideas, that's a problem.” —David Rapp, Ph.D. “It feels easy for us to comprehend texts if we're well practiced at it, it feels easy, but it's actually a lot of cognitive operations going on behind the scenes and a lot of years of practice.” —David Rapp, Ph.D. “In terms of being exposed to misinformation, we see even if people have been exposed to inaccurate ideas, even once, it's encoded into memory, it's potentially gonna be there to influence you.” —David Rapp, Ph.D. Episode Timestamps 02:00 Introduction: Who is David Rapp? 04:00 Defining reading comprehension 05:00 Comprehension as a process vs a product 08:00 Comprehension as a higher order cognitive process 12:00 Coherence 18:00 Memory activation and misinformation 21:00 Consequences of misinformation 25:00 Correcting misinformation 28:00 Preventing misinformation 36:00 The evolution of thinking on comprehension 40:00 Current research 45:00 Closing thoughts and encouragement to dig into research *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute

    49 min
  4. 22 OCT.

    S10 E3: Finding fluency at the heart of comprehension, with Doug Lemov

    In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert is joined by Doug Lemov,  former teacher and school principal, to discuss how teachers can identify when disfluency is actually the root cause for students’ struggles with comprehension—and what they can do about it. Using his new book, The Teach Like a Champion Guide to the Science of Reading, to guide the discussion, Susan and Doug address building attention stamina, the argument for reading whole books, and the value of expressive read-alouds. Finally, Doug ends the episode asserting that humans are meant to live in community, and that a deeper level of comprehension is unlocked through deep empathic connection to text and the experience of reading with others. Show notes:  Listen to Season 2 of the Beyond My Years podcast for solutions to common teaching challenges directly from seasoned educators.Connect with Doug Lemov:X: @Doug_Lemov Resources:Read: The Teach Like a Champion Guide to the Science of ReadingWatch: Gabby Woolf’s Dr. Jekyll Lesson and the Power of Reading FluencyListen: ”Phonology as a settled science”Listen: ”The plea to preserve deep reading, with Maryanne Wolf, Ed.D.”Listen: ”Writing the way to better reading, with Judith Hochman, Ed.D.”Listen: ”The joy of reading aloud, with Molly Ness”Download: cComprehension 101 BundleSubmit your questions on comprehension! Join our community Facebook Group: www.facebook.com/groups/scienceofreadingConnect with Susan Lambert: www.linkedin.com/in/susan-lambert-b1512761/Quotes:   “If you're not a fluent reader, you can't be a deep reader.”—Doug Lemov “The research is clear that when you start to read expressively externally, then your internal reading voice while reading silently is much more expressive and therefore infused with more meaning.”—Doug Lemov  Episode Timestamps 03:00 Introduction: Doug Lemov 05:00 The importance of the middle grades 07:00 Book: The Teach like a Champion Guide to the Science of Reading 13:00 How to build attention stamina 16:00 Background knowledge and vocabulary 19:00 Writing’s impact on memory and reading 22:00 The value in reading whole books 25:00 Embracing smaller writing assignments 27:00 Fluency deep dive 30:00 Working memory 35:00 Troubleshooting fluency 39:00 Expressive reading 41:00 Read-alouds 44:00 Reading as a social act 52:00 The argument for books *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute

    58 min
  5. Science of Reading Essentials: Dyslexia

    8 OCT.

    Science of Reading Essentials: Dyslexia

    In this special dyslexia-focused Essentials episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert pulls from past episodes to summarize everything you need to know about dyslexia, from experts Emily Lutrick, Ed.D.; Nadine Gaab, Ph.D.; Tim Odegard, Ph.D.; Sally Shaywitz, M.D.; and Francisco Usero-González, Ph.D. You'll also hear first-hand accounts from young people about their personal experiences with dyslexia, reading, and the education system. Even if you have little prior knowledge of dyslexia, you’ll walk away from this episode with a foundational understanding of the condition, including what it is, what causes it, how to identify it, the importance of early screening, how it is a continuum, methods for intervention, and more. Show notes: ResourcesAccess free high-quality resources at our brand new professional learning page: http://amplify.com/science-of-reading/professional-learning Download your Dyslexia Support Power PackJoin our community Facebook Group: www.facebook.com/groups/scienceofreadingEpisode Timestamps 00:27 Introduction to SoR: Essentials 01:02 Susan’s personal connection with dyslexia 02:53 Accounts from young people on their experience of dyslexia 05:09 Defining dyslexia with Dr. Emily Lutrick 06:53 Dyslexia as a reading disability with Dr. Nadine Gaab 07:39 Three key characteristics of people with dyslexia with Dr. Tim Odegard 09:42 Longitudinal study with Dr. Sally Shaywitz 11:54 The causes of dyslexia 13:09 Early identification and effective intervention 15:22 Discrepancy model/Waiting to fail model 16:35 How early is too early to screen for dyslexia 18:37 How to know when a student is at risk for dyslexia 21:54 Identifying risk factors in older students 22:54 Decoding nonsense words 24:27 The power of naming a struggle 25:28 The importance of having a cohesive system in place 26:43 Screening students in their home language with Dr. Francisco Paco Usero Gonzalez 29:45 Dyslexia as a continuum 33:41 Final thoughts from young people on dyslexia 36:12 Preview of upcoming episode *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute

    37 min
  6. 24 SEPT.

    S10 E2: Orthographic mapping is a cognitive process, with Katie Pace Miles, Ph.D.

    In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert is joined by Katie Pace Miles, Ph.D., founder of The Reading Institute and director of the Advanced Certificates in Reading Science, Brooklyn College. An expert in orthographic mapping, Pace Miles explains why it’s a cognitive process, why that means it can’t be “taught,” and how we can instead leverage an understanding of it to inform instructional practices across reading, writing, and spelling to improve comprehension. Pace Miles outlines what it takes to develop good word-reading habits in emergent readers, and offers step-by-step advice on how to implement quick intervention when needed. Show notes: Submit your questions on comprehension! Access free, high-quality resources at our brand-new companion professional learning page.  Connect with Katie Pace Miles:Website: https://www.katiepacemilesphd.com/Instagram: @thereadinginstitutenyc Resources:Book: Making Words Stick: A Four-Step Instructional Routine to Power Up Orthographic Mapping Article: ”Phases of Development in Learning to Read and Spell Words” by Linnea C. EhriPodcast episode: The joy of reading aloud, with Molly NessJoin our community Facebook group: www.facebook.com/groups/scienceofreadingConnect with Susan Lambert: https://www.linkedin.com/in/susan-lambert-edd-b1512761/  Quotes:   "You don't teach orthographic mapping, 'cause, again, that's a cognitive process, but you can facilitate support for long-term storage of words." —Katie Pace Miles, Ph.D. "Never acquiesce to illiteracy. We all, as a community that supports all readers, have to figure out what instruction needs to be provided and what dosage over what duration of time … and it will happen." —Katie Pace Miles, Ph.D. "If you're focused only on phonics and not on spelling, you are going to miss a whole bunch of decoding instruction, word analysis work." —Katie Pace Miles, Ph.D. "You don't need a Ph.D. to have that knowledge. That should come in all teacher training. The complexity of the English language—every teacher I've ever met can handle it once we teach it."—Katie Pace Miles, Ph.D. Episode timestamps* 03:00 Introduction: Who is Katie Pace Miles? 04:00 Beginnings as a teacher 07:00 Book: Making Words Stick: A four step instructional routine to power up orthographic mapping 10:00 The motivation behind the book 13:00 Orthographic mapping as a cognitive process 17:00 Can you teach orthographic mapping? 19:00 Research behind the theory of orthographic mapping 24:00 Developing good word reading habits with emergent readers 28:00 Reading-spelling connection 32:00 Rubberband analogy: Developing speaking and reading skills in tandem 34:00 Orthographic mapping can support or impede comprehension 39:00 Intervention 43:00 Activities and strategies from the book 44:00 Final thoughts *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute

    48 min
  7. 10 SEPT.

    S10 E1: The (not so) Simple View of Reading, with Wesley Hoover, Ph.D.

    In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert is joined by Wesley Hoover, a psycholinguist at the University of Texas at Austin, to discuss the Simple View of Reading and how it can serve as the basis for our understanding of comprehension. Wesley digs into all the complexities of this model—which is only simple at a high level—including the meaning of language comprehension vs. reading comprehension, the impact of word recognition, and using the simple view to identify struggling students. He’ll even address the limitations of the simple view of reading, untangle common misconceptions, and give you tools for assessing the value of any model for reading that you might encounter. Show notes:  Submit your questions on comprehension! Access free, high-quality resources at our brand-new, companion professional learning page: http://amplify.com/science-of-reading/professional-learning  Resources:Listen: Science of Reading Essentials: ComprehensionRead: The Primacy of Science in Communicating Advances in the Science of ReadingJoin our community Facebook Group: www.facebook.com/groups/scienceofreadingConnect with Susan Lambert: https://www.linkedin.com/in/susan-lambert-edd-b1512761/Check out Season 2 of the Beyond My Years podcast at.amplify.com/bmy Quotes: "Language comprehension is unbounded… the knowledge of the world and being able to express the knowledge of the world in language—that's always a key difficulty you work on for your entire life.” —Wesley Hoover, Ph.D.  “If you're a teacher thinking about language comprehension, whatever time you devote to helping people understand language, if you can be effective in doing that, you'll never waste a kid's time.” —Wesley Hoover, Ph.D.  "To be a reader, you have to be good at two things: word recognition and language comprehension. Both of them are necessary components of reading, but neither one of them is sufficient on its own.”—Wesley Hoover, Ph.D.  Episode timestamps* 03:00 Introduction: Wesley Hoover and the simple view of reading 06:00 What is the simple view of reading? 08:00 What is language comprehension? 10:00 What is word recognition? 11:00 Defining reading comprehension 12:00 Dr. Gough’s big A-Ha! Moment 15:00 Reading competency 16:00 Misconceptions of the simple view of reading 21:00 Changing the size of the boxes 23:00 Extension of the simple view 26:00 Using the simple view to identify kids that are struggling 29:00 What the simple view does or does not address 33:00 Navigating models of reading comprehension 35:00 Is the simple view outdated? 38:00 Why is comprehension worth exploring? 41:00 Final advice *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute

    44 min
4,5
sur 5
611 notes

À propos

Science of Reading: The Podcast will deliver the latest insights from researchers and practitioners in early reading. Via a conversational approach, each episode explores a timely topic related to the science of reading.

Vous aimeriez peut‑être aussi