Using Technology To Support Expository Reading and Writing in Science Classes
Using Technology To Support Expository Reading and Writing in Science Classes
Using Technology To Support Expository Reading and Writing in Science Classes
ABSTRACT Students struggle with the transition from learning to read narrative text in the early grades to reading expository text in the science classroom
in the upper grades as they begin reading and writing to gain information.
Science teachers can adapt their teaching materials to develop students reading comprehension and recall by writing summaries of scientific text. Using
technology, teachers can scaffold text comprehension and improve students
reading and writing skills. Technology encourages improved comprehension
of reading and more elaborate writing in the science classroom by motivating
students to act on their curiosity, access resources, and embellish their work.
KEYWORDS comprehension, expository text, multimedia literacy, reading skills, technology, writing in science
Example
ProblemSolution
ComparisonContrast
CauseEffect
Generalization
When a sheep falls down, it cannot get up again by itself. A sheep has a heavy body but
delicate legs. When it is lying on its back, it is weighed down by its thick heavy fleece. Even
waving its legs does not help. Its legs are too thin and weak to swing its heavy body onto its
side. A shepherd has to help the sheep onto its feet.
Crocodiles and alligators are similar in many ways but different in others. Both have tough
hides, which are wanted by manufacturers of leather. Both prey on fish and small mammals
that they swallow whole. The crocodile seems the more menacing of the two, because it
shows more teeth when its mouth is closed. Still, nobody would want to encounter either one
of these creatures alone.
The lack of gravity makes even simple tasks a challenge. Astronauts have to wear boots that
hold their feet to the floor so they can walk around. Eating is a real chore. Dried and frozen
foods are stored in plastic bags. To eat chicken soup, the astronauts cut a hole in one end of a
bag and squeeze the soup into their mouths.
Although all living things are made of cells, all cells are not the same. Some plant cells have a
boxlike shape. Some even contain a green material called chlorophyll. When sunlight strikes
chlorophyll, the cell can make food for the plant. Animal cells do not contain chlorophyll and
are not box-shaped.
task (Montelongo and Hernandez 2007). It links learning science content with learning to read and write
expository texts. With this strategy, comprehension
instruction is no longer an isolated teaching practice, but rather an integrated exercise in science and
technology.
Main Idea
Supporting Detail 1
Supporting Detail 2
Supporting Detail 3
Supporting Detail 4
Main Idea
Supporting Detail 1
Subject 1
Supporting Detail 1
Subject 2
Supporting Detail 2
Subject 1
Supporting Detail 2
Subject 2
THE MODIFIED
SENTENCE-COMPLETION TASK
One way of providing students frequent practice
with vocabulary, locating main ideas, and identify-
TABLE 2 Signal Words and Phrases for Science Expository Text Structures
Generalization
CompareContrast
CauseEffect
ProblemSolution
for example
to illustrate
for instance
to begin with
like
similarly
on the other hand
however
because
since
consequently
thus
problem
answer
solution
response
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The theoretical basis for the modified sentencecompletion task can be found in reading theories that
suggest that reading comprehension results from the
interaction between the authors organization of ideas
and a readers prior knowledge (e.g., Spivey 1990, 1997).
Authors take students prior knowledge into account
when writing their texts. They provide their readers with
the supporting details necessary to increase the strength
and learnability of the main ideas. For their part, readers
bring a pre-existing level of prior knowledge of the topic
to the reading act. This prior knowledge consists of images, facts, opinions, and associations about the topic
acquired from texts, experiences, and other sources of
information stored in memory.
The degree to which a readers prior knowledge facilitates or inhibits the comprehension of text is dependent
on the fit between an authors organization and explanation of the expository material (Spivey 1997). Expository text that is consistent with the readers pre-existing
mental representations of the topic is more likely to
be comprehended, assimilated, accommodated, and remembered than material that is not. Expository text
that is inconsistent with a readers prior knowledge is
more likely to be misunderstood, learned poorly, and
forgotten.
Teachers can do their share to ensure that their students develop the mental representations necessary to
understand expository text. They can do this by teaching their students the different expository text structures, along with the new and difficult vocabulary introduced in unfamiliar text. They can also help students
internalize the various text structures by scaffolding
students expository writing through the use of these
text structures. Through constant practice, the modified sentence-completion task can be used to accomplish these goals.
THE MODIFIED
SENTENCE-COMPLETION TASK WITH
COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
Effective science programs use technology to teach
students. Teaching science by using technology is
important for preparing students to be scientifically
and technologically literate (California Department of
Education 2004).
The use of computer technology gives students
more options for completing the modified sentencecompletion task than does a paper-and-pencil activity
at each step in the process. With a word-processing program, students can use the dictionary or the thesaurus
to check the meanings of the vocabulary words in the
fill-in-the blank exercises. Students can consult an online encyclopedia to gain more information about the
subjects discussed in the exercises. In abstracting the
related sentences that make up the hidden paragraph,
students can copy and paste the related sentences into a
graphic organizer several times and read them over until
they are satisfied with the sentences they have selected.
The use of technology also makes it easier for students
to arrange the sentences logically. They can experiment with different orders and arrangements. They may
test different main-idea placements and try out various
J. A. Montelongo and R. J. Herter
THE MODIFIED
SENTENCE-COMPLETION TASK ON AN
INTERNET WEB PAGE
The modified sentence-completion task can be made
even more versatile when it is placed on an Internet
Web page. Taylor et al. (2002) suggest that effective
practice engages students in active reading and writing.
The use of the Internet allows the modified sentencecompletion activity to be more interactive through the
use of feedback. This can be done by providing students
with corrective feedback on their choice of answers. A
Web page can be designed to provide the students with
corrective feedback for their choices in the fill-in-theblanks task, their selections of the related sentences, and
their logical orderings of sentences. It also provides students the self-regulation that Pressley et al. (2001) found
in the classrooms of outstanding reading teachers.
As Pearson et al. (2005) have suggested, teachers
need not be bystanders in the use of technology in
classrooms. They can tailor their instruction by creating Web pages that include sentence-completion tasks
in tandem with other educational resources, as in the
sample Web site in Figure 3ac. When the sentencecompletion task is placed on an Internet Web page,
student learning may be extended beyond the classroom walls. Students are afforded the freedom to expand their learning and to be creative. They are not
locked into being consumers of knowledge but can
also act as co-creators alongside the authors of the
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FIGURE 3 Web site version of the modified sentence-completion task, Screens AC.
94
FIGURE 3 (Continued)
CONCLUSION
The presentation of the exercises that comprise the
modified sentence-completion task using technology
propels students into 21st-century learning. Furthermore, technology obligates schools to encourage students to fully engage its potential in their own learning.
Technology and Expository Text
The science classroom is ideally suited to the exploration of interaction between authors ideas in written
texts to the possibilities present in students imaginations. Teaching and learning scientific knowledge and
competence begin with the ability to read and write.
This strategy teaches students to go beyond the boundaries of text while guiding and grounding their comprehension of it. For all the advantages of technology,
reading and writing are the pathways to unlocking its
potential.
As Pearson et al. (2005, 24) conclude, We believe
the time has come to take technology more seriously
as a component of middle-school literacy curriculum
and pedagogy. We suggest that the use of this strategy, enhanced by the power of technology, can support
expository reading and writing across the entire K12
science curriculum.
REFERENCES
Berber-Jimenez,
L., J. Montelongo, A. Hernandez,
R. Herter, and D.
95
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APPENDIX A:
MODIFIED SENTENCE-COMPLETION TASK FOR A FOURTH-GRADE SCIENCE
CLASS
ecosystem
shape
faster
solid
gases
spread
matter
unlike
1.
2.
Like atoms and molecules in liquids, the bits in ______________ are not arranged
in any pattern.
3.
4.
This is because atoms and molecules in gases are moving much ______________
than those in liquids.
5.
6.
7.
Atoms and molecules in a ______________ stay close together and move back
and forth in all directions but around one point.
8.
9.
Earth has three layers: the ______________, the mantle, and the core.
10.
Correct answers:
1.
ecosystem
5.
plates
9.
crust
2.
6.
10.
gases
spread
Unlike
3.
7.
matter
solid
4.
8.
faster
shape
97
Step 3: Find the main idea and arrange the sentences in a logical order using the
graphic organizer.
DIRECTIONS: PASTE THE MAIN IDEA AND SUPPORTING DETAILS IN THE
GRAPHIC ORGANIZER.
MAIN IDEA: A gas is matter that has no definite shape and takes up no definite
amount of space.
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APPENDIX B:
MODIFIED SENTENCE-COMPLETION TASK FOR A SEVENTH-GRADE SCIENCE
CLASS
Step 1: Complete the sentences with the appropriate vocabulary words.
applied
method
papers
chemistry
hypothesis
knowledge
predict
results
scientific
laws
technology
theory
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Theories not only explain an observation, but also ________________ what will
happen in the future.
10.
11.
________________ involves the study of all forms of matter and how they
interact.
12.
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Step 3: Find the related sentences. Paste them onto the graphic organizer.
There are differences between scientific
theories and scientific laws.
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APPENDIX C:
MODIFIED SENTENCE-COMPLETION TASK USING A WORD PROCESSOR
hypothesis
particles
inference
positively
matter
static electricity
microscope
variables
When an object has more _______________ with a negative charge than particles with a
positive charge, it is negatively charged.
The buildup of charges in one place is called _______________.
It will attract a _______________ charged object and repel a negatively charged object.
A _______________ is a testable explanation of observations.
To observe very small details, you might use a _______________.
A scientist controls _______________ to know what caused the results.
Every particle in _______________ can have a positive or negative charge.
It will attract a _______________ charged object and repel a positively charged object.
An _______________ is a conclusion based on observations and what you already know.
If an object has more particles with a positive _______________, it is positively charged.
Step 2: Find the related sentences of a hidden paragraph.
When an object has more particles with a negative charge than particles with a positive
charge, it is negatively charged.
It will attract a positively charged object and repel a negatively charged object.
Every particle in matter can have a positive or negative charge.
It will attract a negatively charged object and repel a positively charged object.
If an object has more particles with a positive charge, it is positively charged.
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Step 3: Find the main idea and arrange the sentences in a logical order using
the graphic organizer or create a graphic organizer of your own.
Main Idea Sentence
Every particle in matter can have a positive or negative charge.
Detail 1
If an object has more particles with a positive charge, it is
positively charged.
Detail 2
It will attract a negatively charged object and repel a positively
charged object.
Detail 3
When an object has more particles with a negative charge than
particles with a positive charge, it is negatively charged.
Detail 4
It will attract a positively charged object and repel a negatively
charged object.
Step 4. Write a paragraph in your own words using the graphic organizer as an
outline on another sheet of paper. Use the dictio nary, a thesaurus, or other
reference works to make this composition your own.
Step 5. Include fonts, clip art, your own drawings and/or pictures and photographs
from the Internet for your composition.
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