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The Dade-Monroe Teacher Education Center
(TEC) was awarded a grant from the Florida Department of
Education to create videotapes and a website based upon
superior instructional models. The teaching and learning
strategy, Reciprocal Teaching, was chosen as the prototype
for this grant initiative.
As part of the grant, Reciprocal Teaching was piloted in
selected Chapter I fourth grade classes and the overall
project was referred to as Project MERIT (Making Excellent
Readers Intelligent Thinkers).
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Chapter I teachers in Project MERIT were
trained in the Reciprocal Teaching strategy. These teachers,
with their students, practiced one reading passage per day
for 20 consecutive days before the standardized test.
Teachers read the passages aloud each day with their
students, clarified the words the students didn t know,
required the students to ask "teacher-like-like"
comprehension questions, and then write summaries of the
passages. For homework, students took the passages home,
read them aloud and came back the next day to answer the
multiple choice questions.
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At one of the pilot schools the
standardized test scores rose 13 points in the fourth grade.
This increase in scores was even more impressive in light of
fact that scores actually decreased in other grade levels.
Clearly, the strategy of Reciprocal Teaching made a
difference.
Encouraged by the test results and the positive attitudes
toward Reciprocal Teaching exhibited by students and
teachers, the Language Arts/Reading Department applied for
and was awarded a Title VI grant to expand the pilot to
eight middle school sites.
During the initial trial-runs, students were
asked to complete the K in the KWL sheet to tell what good
readers do when they read. The less proficient readers wrote
that good readers read fast, they like books and they know
how to pronounce lots of words. The more proficient readers
wrote some of those things, but almost all of them included
something to the effect of "good readers have a video going
on in their heads when they read."
In analyzing students responses, it was
clear that a piece was missing from the original Reciprocal
Teaching technique. Thus, visualization was added as a
reading strategy. Instead of four strategies, Project MERIT
taught students to use five. Icons were developed to
represent the five strategies. A bookmark with those icons,
question stems, and hints for using the strategies was
developed for students to use as they read. Task cards for
each of the five strategies were also developed. Scripts
were added as guides for students to become reading leaders
during group work. Teachers were trained in the use of the
five strategies, and demonstration lessons were modeled in
classrooms.
Pre- and post-tests were administered to students in the
eight schools and were analyzed by reading subskill. In a
comparison of the pre- and post-tests, students in five of
the eight schools improved in reading comprehension.
Students used the five strategies as well as the practice
passages and multiple choice questions for the twenty days
before standardized tests were administered in March, 1997.
The most dramatic results were the improved attitudes of
students and teachers who practiced the five comprehension
reading strategies of Project MERIT which were based on
Reciprocal Teaching.
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