Today's guest post is by my favorite literacy specialist, Cynthia Mershon. Besides her many years as a teacher,Cynthia has been a consultant to the television program, Reading Rainbow, the former chairperson of the Video and Literacy Special Interest Group of the International Literacy Association, and has presented workshops on using captioned television as a text in the classroom.
Every teacher who teaches
reading, every teacher who cares about students’ reading development, knows
that the more we read, the better we read.
Practicing reading for significant amounts of time each and every day
helps students become better readers. As
teachers, we are constantly trying to give our students more time to practice
the whole act of reading, as well as searching for classroom strategies that
facilitate that practice.
A strategy that offers
powerful support for our goal of offering students the opportunity to read more
and read better is captioned television.
Captions – the dialogue, narration, and/or sound effects of a television
program or video that are printed on the television screen – are now available
on hundreds of hours of television programming each week and on thousands of
home videos. The reading practice that results from reading captions affords
students an opportunity to develop and improve their reading ability. It is that simple, and yet there is more to
captioned television than meets the eye.
Captions
were originally developed to enable deaf and hearing-impaired individuals to enjoy
and gain information from television.
Research, however, reveals that when students read the words on the
television screen and hear them
spoken by the people in the television program or movie and see the pictures or images on the television screen that tell
them what those words mean, their reading comprehension, vocabulary, fluency,
and general engagement with reading increases and develops at a higher rate
than those students not watching
captioned television. In particular, learning disabled and ESL students exhibit
dramatic improvement in language skills when captioned television is a regular
part of their reading program (Koskinen, P.S., & Wilson, R.M. 1987; Koskinen, et al., 1993; Neuman, S.,
1991).
Not only is captioned
television effective in developing reading skill,
it also motivates student to want to
read. Taking advantage of students’ familiarity with and interest in watching
television and films, using television as a reading text plays into skills
students possess and can use effectively in instructional settings. Researchers have found students and teachers
are enthusiastic about the use of captioned television in their classrooms:
students’ attention to task is high and their attitude toward learning is
positive when captioned television and film is a component of their lessons
(Koskinen, P.S., & Wilson, R.M.
1987).
Initial
research looked at simply including
captioned television in the classroom reading program without direct instruction
on the part of the teacher, i.e., while the concept of captioned television was
explained, no explicit teaching accompanied that viewing. The positive effects on children’s reading
comprehension, vocabulary, fluency, and attitudes were gathered from studies
that involved the introduction of time spent watching – and only watching –
captioned television. As a result of this research, teachers are
considering captions as reading material for all students, and are embracing
television programs and films as classroom texts for developing reading
comprehension, vocabulary, and fluency, building background knowledge, and
encouraging student interest in learning.
Since
that early research, teachers have been expanding their use of captioned
television in the classroom to include deliberate teaching of
comprehension/vocabulary strategies that can be effectively used with any text. Are we teaching predicting,
questioning, and inferring with our read-aloud, for example? Then we can teach those three strategies when
using captioned television as a text.
Keeping in mind that early research, however, suggests strongly the
benefit of students watching from 30 to 60 minutes of captioned television at
home each day, even if, unfortunately, they watch it alone. The time spent reading the captions, and the
multimedia input of text, sound, and visuals that supports their ability to
read the captions, will have a positive effect on their reading development.
This knowledge is especially important
considering the deleterious effect of “summer loss phenomenon” (Crowell &
Klein, 1981) – children’s reading ability actually declines during their summer
vacation from the daily organized reading practice provided by schools. Students at home over the summer could be
watching captioned television each day, developing their reading skills doing
something they do well and do often. Parents
often ask us about what they might do during the summer months to support their
children. One of the best – and easiest
- answers we can offer is to tell them to turn on their television’s
captions.
When captions first became
available to television viewers, they were “closed” to those viewers unless a
television was equipped with a TeleCaption Decoder that electronically opened
(made visible) the captions. Since June
of 1993, however, the Television Decoder Circuity Act, legislated by the United
States Congress, requires that all new televisions sold in the United States
have built-in circuitry to decode and display captioned programming. This circuitry differs from manufacturer to
manufacturer, but can be easily accessed by using a television remote to put
the caption setting on “open.”
My experience with using
captioned television in the classroom began when I used Reading Rainbow for 30
minutes each week to support my third, fourth, and fifth grade struggling
readers. (Interestingly, this program premiered in July 1983 funded in part by
a grant with the intention of providing a solution to summer loss phenomenon).
I was looking for a variety of strategies to develop their comprehension and
vocabulary, but wanted also classroom practices that would extend background
knowledge, interest in and excitement about reading, and engagement in
learning. I turned on Reading Rainbow and its captions and
found, through its program design, that it supported and facilitated the
teaching of reading: it featured a read-aloud followed by an experiential segment
related to the read-aloud; the program ended with students reviewing books
related to the read-aloud; host LeVar Burton talking about the importance of
reading as he interacted positively with a variety of people. Reading was celebrated throughout each
episode of the program, providing students with a regular picture of the power
and pleasure of reading. And……in addition to their daily independent reading,
they were reading 30 minutes of captions each week.
Reading
Rainbow led to films – or parts of films –
presented as texts in the classroom. My reading program was organized around
several literacy components that supported students’ reading development:
teacher read-alouds, literature discussion, direct instruction of comprehension
strategies, independent reading, written response to reading, partnership work,
and student-teacher conferences. These
components were practiced with all texts in our classrooms, be they print or
video. For example: Our first read-aloud in grade five, selected to support a
science unit that focused on insects, was Mary James’ Shoebag (a young
cockroach wakes one morning to find he has changed into a boy). With great humor, the story is told entirely
from the cockroach’s point of view. To
deepen our understanding of the story, we explored the important literary
devices of “point of view” and “personification” in our discussions and by
reading also Chris Van Allsburg’s Two Bad Ants (two ants and their
adventure in a kitchen with an enticing sugar bowl, again told from the insects’
point of view). Watching parts of the
captioned film, “Honey, I Shrunk the Kids” followed. This third text tells the tale of a brilliant
but eccentric scientist who accidentally shrinks his son and daughter, as well
as his neighbor’s two children, so that the four children, now the size of
insects, must find a way to survive in the family’s back yard. This part of the movie, of course, is told
entirely from the tiny children’s perspective.
As we watched the children make their way through grass five times their
height, we talked about point of view and how it affected our perception of and
understanding of a story: we carried the strategy of examining a text though
the lens of literary devices through all three texts. Captioned television,
acting as a classroom text, not only offered our students reading practice that
led to comprehension, vocabulary, and fluency development, but allowed us as
teachers to extend students’ understanding of strategies as tools that could be
used flexibly and consciously to construct meaning from a variety of texts in a
variety of situations.
Captioned
television is one of many strategies and practices available to classroom
teachers in their quest to ensure students become successful readers. Too often we hear that watching television is
a waste of time and that we should rethink the role of television in our
lives. Important considerations,
certainly, but perhaps thinking about the power of captioned television is a
more important one. I am drawn to a
strategy that can develop comprehension, vocabulary, fluency, and positive
engagement with reading. I appreciate a
strategy that takes advantage of students’ obvious appreciate for television
and video, and the ease with which they watch, embrace, and manipulate this
medium. I applaud a strategy that
students can practice at home, even when they are alone, that will build their
reading skills and perhaps blunt the effect of three months each year without
the daily practice in reading that school promises them. I remain convinced that captioned television
is one of the most important research-based reading strategies to appear in the
20th century. I wonder –
often – what might happen if we found a way to share it, enthusiastically and
regularly, with all of our students.
REFERENCES
Crowell,
D.C., & Klein, T.W. (1981). Preventing summer loss of reading skills
among primary children. The
Reading Teacher, February, 561-564.
Koskinen,
P.S., & Wilson, R.M. (1987). Have you read any good TV lately?: A guide for using captioned television in
the teaching of reading. Falls
Church, VA: National Captioning Institute.
Koskinen,
P.S., Wilson, R.M., Gambrell, L.B., & Neuman, S.B. (1993).
Captioned video and vocabulary learning: An innovative practice in
literacy instruction. The
Reading Teacher, 47, 36-43.
Neuman,
S. (1991). Closed captioning helps ESOL students learn
English. Reading Today,
February/March.
Thron,
J.R. (1991). Children’s literature: Reading, seeing,
watching. Children’s Literature in
Education, 22, 51-58.
CHILDREN’S
TEXTS
James,
M. (1990). Shoebag. New York: Scholastic.
Van
Allsburg, C. (1988). Two bad ants. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Honey, I Shrunk the
Kids: The Movie. Dir: Joe Johnston. Walt Disney Pictures, 1989.
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