Public Burden Statement
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Introduction
Your school has partnered with the Regional Educational Laboratory West to study the impact of a new toolkit on improving reading comprehension instruction. As part of that study, all K–3 regular classroom teachers in your school are invited to complete the following survey twice, at the beginning and end of the study. For each completed survey, we will offer you a $30 gift card.
Your participation in this questionnaire is voluntary. You may skip any question or the entire survey. However, your responses would help improve reading comprehension supports, so we hope you will participate.
Your responses are confidential. Your survey is associated with a unique identifier rather than your name and survey responses will be aggregated so individuals cannot be identified.
Teacher Pedagogical Content Knowledge Assessment, Phelps, 2008
1. While reading The Marvelous Manatee, Jamal says, “I’ve heard the word habitat before, but I can’t remember what it means.” Ms. Gomez is debating what to do next. Given the text of The Marvelous Manatee, which of the following are steps that could help Jamal understand the meaning of the word “habitat?”
(Mark YES, NO, or I’M NOT SURE for each choice.)
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2. Mr. Sloan writes the following sentences on the board:
John and Mary were worried about the cost. The operation was expensive. They called their Uncle William.
Mr. Sloan then asks students to work independently to write what these three sentences might be about. Louis responds that this is a story about an expensive operation. When pressed by Mr. Sloan to say more, Louis adds, “The operation was expensive.” Mr. Sloan asks Louis to reread and then asks him again what the three sentences might be about. Louis responds, “It is about John and Mary and they were worried. They called their Uncle William.” Based on this answer, which of the following might Louis quite possibly need help with?
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3. Robert, a second-grade student, makes many substitutions for words while oral reading. His errors seem to preserve the meaning of text. His teacher is concerned that Robert might be reading texts that are too difficult. She checks the number of errors he is making and decides that the text he is reading is actually appropriate for Robert’s instruction. Which of the following instructional approaches are likely to help Robert notice or correct these substitutions?
(Mark YES, NO, or I’M NOT SURE for each approach.)
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4. Mr. Siegel recently picked up some supplementary materials to help his students review antonyms. He sent home a worksheet from these materials for his students to complete as a homework assignment. Near the end of the week, he received a note from an angry parent who claimed the worksheet was filled with errors. Concerned, Mr. Siegel studied the worksheet more closely. He reviewed the pairs of words meant to represent antonyms for any sets that might be incorrect. The parent had complained that many of the words were not exact opposites. Was the parent right? Read the words in the following list to determine which pairs represent exact opposites and which ones do not.
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5. Ms. Dilley’s fifth-grade class is reading about the explorations of Lewis and Clark. The word “portage” appears in a story that they are reading, and several children do not know what this word means. Ms. Dilley has been trying to help her students look at the structure of words to examine their “meaning elements.” Which of the following options are examples of taking this approach with the word “portage”?
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[Teacher pedagogical content knowledge assessment, Jordan et al., 2018]
6. For skilled readers, listening and reading comprehension are usually about equal. For developing readers in K–3, it is true that:
Reading comprehension is better than listening comprehension.
Listening comprehension is better than reading comprehension.
Reading and listening comprehension are comparable, about the same.
There is no systematic relationship between reading comprehension and listening comprehension.
7. Mr. Drake recently read two nonfiction books to his class. One of the books was about ants and the other about spiders. Which of the following tools would be most useful in allowing his students to compare and contrast the characteristics presented in the two books?
Semantic map
Story map
KWL chart
Venn diagram
8. According to research, the least effective way to teach vocabulary to students is through the use of:
Ask students to write definitions of new vocabulary words
Teach new terms in context of subject-matter lesson
Identify examples related to the word’s meaning
Discuss synonyms for new vocabulary words
9. Mrs. Pink has assigned her students a short story to read independently. She wants to practice a strategy with her students in order to enhance their comprehension during reading. Mrs. Pink should instruct her students to:
Ask her a question when they do not understand
When they come across a word they do not know, stop reading and look it up in the dictionary
Scan the text and prewrite questions that they want to have answered as they read
Write a reflection in their literacy journals immediately after reading the text
10. You plan time during your literacy block for students to engage in a reading activity that will improve fluency. Which of the following activities would be most effective in achieving this goal?
Students independently read a text and then answer a series of literal and inferential comprehension questions.
As a whole class, each student will take a turn reading a paragraph from a text related to your current curriculum. While one student is reading, the other students listen and read along silently in their own text. (Round-robin reading)
The teacher reads a passage aloud to model fluent reading and then students reread the text independently. (Guided oral reading)
In pairs, students are assigned a list of words for which they are asked to write definitions and sample sentences.
11. Ms. Jones’ students say they understand the text that they are reading in their science textbooks, but they are unable to correctly answer questions about the content. What comprehension strategy would best help her students to realize they may not understand the content as they read?
Self-monitoring and fix-up strategies
Making mental pictures of the text
Activating their background knowledge
Answering questions at the end of the chapter
12. You observe your student teacher asking students to think about things that happened to them that are similar to what happened to the character in the story. This is an example of:
Predicting
Summarizing
Activating prior knowledge
Building background knowledge
13. After you read a story to your students, you ask your students to recall important details from the story. This is an example of:
Highlighting
Monitoring
Generating questions
Inferencing
14. You plan to read a story to your students about a rainbow. You want to be sure that your students will understand the story so you first provide them with a brief explanation of how a rainbow forms before you read the story. This is an example of:
Building story structure
Predicting
Building background knowledge
Making connections
15. One example of an activity that teachers can use to assist with multi-strategy instruction is:
Explicit instruction
Reciprocal teaching
Sustained silent reading
Journal reading
16. As you read a passage from a book about ants, you are telling the students what you are doing and why, as you do it. This is an example of:
Monitoring comprehension
Using a think aloud strategy
Inferencing
Highlighting
17. Kyle, one of Mrs. Valcourt’s first-grade students, reads the sentence, “The hot dog tasted great!” However, Greg pronounced the word great as greet. What should Mrs. Valcourt say?
Tell me the sound of each letter, then tell me the whole word.
Think, what do the first part and the last part of the word say? Now put them together.
Think what sound the ea spelling pattern makes. Now say the whole word.
This word doesn’t follow the rules. This is the word ‘great.’
18. Mrs. Frank is teaching her students to identify multi-syllable words. Which is an appropriate first step for her to do?
Model analyzing words for familiar prefixes and suffixes
Show students how to blend individual letter sounds, left-to-right
Model how to look for little words in big words
Demonstrate sequentially blending onsets and rimes
Understanding practice guide recommendations
19. Which of the following are recommended strategies that improve reading comprehension? Choose are that apply
a. monitoring
b. summarizing
c. asking questions
d. activating prior knowledge
e. drawing inferences
20. [True/False] Reading comprehension strategies can be taught individually and in combination.
21. [True/False] Story maps can be used to teach text structure
22. [True/False] Differentiated instruction is beneficial when teaching reading comprehension strategies.
23. [True/False] When selecting text for reading to students, the text should be at reading level for students
24. [True/False] Informational texts are structured the same as narrative texts]
25. [True/False] Providing choice to students promotes their engagement in the text.
26. [True/False] Whole group discussions are more beneficial than small group discussions for teaching reading comprehension.
Implementation measures
Have you ever received the REL West Toolkit “Supporting Early Reading Comprehension with Teacher Study Groups: A Comprehensive Toolkit for the What Works Clearinghouse Practice Guide Improving Reading Comprehension in Kindergarten through 3rd Grade.”?
Yes
No
Implementation measures – Treatment Teachers Only
Did you complete the initial diagnostic survey that is part of the toolkit?
Yes
No
Did you create a Teacher Action Plan as part of the toolkit?
Yes
No
How many Toolkit teacher learning modules did you participate in?
Number of modules
Which modules did you participate in? Check all that apply.
Introduction to the toolkit
Motivating students for reaching comprehension
Comprehension strategies and text structure instruction
Discussion with an emphasis on text selection
How many hours did you spend participating in Toolkit teacher learning modules?
Number of hours (between 0 and 20)
How many teacher study group sessions did you participate in as part of the Toolkit work?
Number of sessions
How many hours did you spend participating in Toolkit teacher study groups?
Number of hours (between 0 and 20)
How many times did you meet with your facilitator as part of the Toolkit work?
Number of meetings
How many times did the facilitator observe your teaching as part of the Toolkit work?
Number of observations
a. How many times did the facilitator provide feedback following the observations as part of the Toolkit work?
Number of feedback sessions
How many hours did you spend being observed and discussing feedback?
Number of hours (between 0 and 20)
For Toolkit teachers only] Professional development on reading comprehension [through the Toolkit activities] has been useful for helping me improve the achievement of my students.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
The training and support I received as part of the toolkit helped me improve my instruction.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
After each toolkit learning session, I walked away with a clear understanding of the training materials.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
I received specific and actionable suggestions from the toolkit facilitator for how to improve my instruction.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
Professional development – All Teachers; Text in Brackets and Italics is for Toolkit Teachers Only
Did you participate in professional development activities focused on reading instruction [other than Toolkit activities] since September 20231?
Yes
No
Have you participated in professional development [other than Toolkit activities] since September 2023 focused on the following topics?
43.1. Teaching students how to use reading comprehension strategies
Not covered in my professional development
A minor focus of one or more professional development activities
A major focus of one or more professional development activities
43.2. Teaching students to use a text’s organizational structure to improve reading comprehension?
Not covered in my professional development
A minor focus of one or more professional development activities
A major focus of one or more professional development activities
43.3. Leading student discussion on the meaning of the text?
Not covered in my professional development
A minor focus of one or more professional development activities
A major focus of one or more professional development activities
43.4. Selecting texts purposefully to support comprehension development?
Not covered in my professional development
A minor focus of one or more professional development activities
A major focus of one or more professional development activities
43.5. Establishing an engaging and motivating context in which to teach reading comprehension?
Not covered in my professional development
A minor focus of one or more professional development activities
A major focus of one or more professional development activities
Please describe your learning experiences between September 2023 and May 2024 designed to improve reading comprehension instruction [Please focus only on non-Toolkit activities]?
44.1. I completed a self-assessment of my skills at teaching reading comprehension
Yes
No
44.2. I developed a plan to improve my instructional strategies for teaching reading comprehension
Yes
No
44.3. I completed online learning modules about teaching reading comprehension
Number of modules (between 0 and 10)
44.4. How many hours did you spend participating in online learning modules about teaching reading comprehension?
Number of hours (between 0 and 20)
44.5. I participated in facilitated teacher discussion groups about teaching reading comprehension
Number of facilitated group sessions (between 0 and 10)
44.6. How many hours did you spend participating in facilitated teacher discussion groups about teaching reading comprehension?
Number of hours (between 0 and 20)
44.7. An instructional leader observed me teach reading comprehension and gave me feedback about improving my teaching techniques, excluding formal evaluation observations
Number of observation/feedback sessions (between 0 and 10)
44.8. How many hours did you spend being observed and discussing feedback about your reading comprehension teaching techniques?
Number of hours (between 0 and 20)
44.9. I participated in a continuous improvement cycle in which I learned, practiced, reflected, and refined a pedagogical strategy.
Number of continuous improvement cycles (between 0 and 10)
Between September 2023 and May 2024, have you had any learning experiences related to improving reading comprehension not addressed in the above questions?
Yes
No
[If yes] Please summarize these experiences
45.1 Types of activities (e.g., course, conference, workshop)
45.2 Number of meetings total
45.3 Number of hours total
Professional development on reading comprehension [other than Toolkit activities] has been useful for helping me improve the achievement of my students.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
Professional development on reading comprehension has been useful for improving my instruction.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
Professional development on reading comprehension has taken more time than it was worth.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
[For Toolkit teachers only] Professional development on reading comprehension [through the Toolkit activities] has taken more time than it was worth.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
I had easy access to a list of the possible [toolkit] professional development courses or offerings I could take.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
School leadership has encouraged and supported my participation in [toolkit] professional development.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
Sufficient resources (for example, substitute coverage, funding to cover expenses, stipends) have been available to allow me to participate in the [toolkit] professional development I need to teach reading effectively.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
I have had sufficient flexibility in my schedule to pursue the [toolkit] professional development opportunities recommended for me.
Disagree strongly
Disagree somewhat
Agree somewhat
Agree strongly
Teacher Background Characteristics – All Teachers
Which of the following best describes your teaching arrangement this year?
I teach a single group of students all or most of the day in multiple subject areas. (Traditional elementary arrangement; sometimes called “self-contained.”)
I teach several classes of different students during the day in a particular subject (for example, math) or perhaps two subjects (for example, you teach some math classes and some science classes). (Traditional secondary arrangement; sometimes called “subject-specific” or “departmentalized”; at elementary level, sometimes called “subject matter specialist.” Also typical arrangement for physical education, art, music, etc.)
I mainly teach selected students released from (or in) their regular classes in specific skills or to address specific needs (for example, special education, reading, English as a second language, gifted and talented.) (Sometimes called “pull out,” “resource,” or “push in” instruction.)
I am one of two or more teachers who are jointly responsible for teaching the same subject to a group of students (for example, in the same classroom), all or most of the time and/or in a majority of classes. (Sometimes called “co-teaching” or “job share.”)
Other (please describe):
Including this school year, how many years have you been working in the school district, total, regardless of location?
Number of years
Including this school year, how many years have you been working in your current school?
Number of years
Including this school year, how many years have you been working in your current school and your current position?
Number of years
How do you classify your position at your current school?
Regular full-time teacher
Regular part-time teacher
Itinerant full-time teacher (i.e., your assignment requires you to provide instruction at more than one school)
Itinerant part-time teacher (i.e., your assignment requires you to provide instruction at more than one school)
Long-term substitute
Teacher assistant
Other professional staff
Which grade do you teach at your current school?
K
1st grade
2nd grade
3rd grade
Other
Did you enter teaching through an alternative route to certification program? (An alternative route to certification program provides an accelerated path to licensure for individuals who already hold a bachelor’s degree)
Yes
No
Which of the following teaching certificates do you hold?
Elementary Certificate
Early Childhood Certificate
Special Education Certificate with an Early Childhood Endorsement
Do you hold any of the following endorsements?
Bilingual Endorsement certificate
Gifted Endorsement certificate
Reading, K–8 Endorsement
Reading, K–12 Endorsement
Reading Specialist, K–12 Endorsement
What is your highest degree earned?
Bachelor’s
Master’s
EdD
PhD
Other
1 For the May 2024 survey, we will ask about professional development in the period between June 2023 and May 2024. For the September 2024 survey, we will ask about June to September 2024. For the May 2025 survey, we will ask about October 2024 to May 2025.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Nolan, Elizabeth |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2023-09-03 |