1) Content knowledge refers to all the information and facts people know about the world, which is obtained through experience, education, media, and social interactions.
2) A study found that students' background knowledge of baseball had a bigger impact on their comprehension of a passage about baseball than their reading level.
3) Building students' content knowledge should include directly teaching needed background context, sequencing instruction to build connections between topics, and using reading strategies in the context of meaningful content.
2. What is content knowledge?
Content knowledge is all the information we have about the
world. It includes things like:
scientific and historical facts
literary frameworks
rules for games
famous people
geography
animals
technology
language
5. Hmmm... No idea what it
means? Let's say you are
determined to understand
that sentence. You might:
1. read an encyclopedia entry
on Einstein’s theory of
relativity
2. look up an article on
relativistic equations
3. figure out what a Lorentz
transformation is
6. Now you are holding
three significant new
pieces of information in
your working memory
and trying to connect
them.
It’s quite a bit to
mentally juggle, and
that is only one
sentence from a much
longer article.
7. That is the reading experience of a
student who lacks content knowledge.
Even with all the best strategies at
your disposal, you just can't wrap your
head around the ideas in the text.
8. You might think that
string theory is an
extreme example. Let's
try something simpler:
This is the opening line
of the iconic poem
"Casey at the Bat":
“The outlook wasn’t
brilliant for the Mudville
nine that day.”
9. The poem is so simple that Disney
turned it into a movie!
10. But what if you grew up in India only playing cricket?
You can look up “Mudville” and “nine” in the dictionary,
but unless you know something about baseball, you will
not understand that the poet is referring to a local town’s
baseball team.
11. Everything we read contains information that the
writer assumes his or her reader already knows.
A sports columnist will not remind his or
her readers about the basic rules of
football.
A novelist will use figurative language
that relies on a reader’s ability to infer
non-literal meaning.
Even math and physics problems
involving trains, ramps, and pendulums
assume that students are familiar with
these objects and how they work.
12. This makes reading less tedious for
those of us who share the writer's
background knowledge. If you're
reading Motor Trend magazine, you
don't need to be reminded what a car is.
But it makes it difficult for readers who
don't have the knowledge that the
writer assumes they have.
13. How significant is content knowledge to
reading comprehension?
Source: Recht, D. R., & Leslie, L. (1988). Effect of prior knowledge on good and poor readers'
memory of text. Journal of Educational Psychology, 80(1) 16–20.
In 1988, researchers took a group of junior high
school students and gave them a reading test.
The students had either high or low reading
ability (as determined by a standard reading test),
and either high or low knowledge of baseball.
The students were asked to read a passage
describing a baseball game and reenact or
describe what they'd read.
15. And students who grow up in resource-
poor environments tend to have less
content knowledge.
By the age of 3, a poor
child has a vocabulary
that is only half the
size of his or her
peers.
Source: https://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2014/06/25/empowering-our-children-bridging-word-gap
Affluent parents are more
likely to engage in the arts,
travel with their children, and
pass on cultural capital
through reading and
conversation.
16. “Teaching reading strategies is a low-cost
way to give developing readers a boost, but
it should be a small part of a teacher’s job.
[...] Acquiring a broad vocabulary and a rich
base of background knowledge will yield
more substantial and longer-term benefits.”
— Cognitive scientist and reading expert Daniel T. Willingham, "The
Usefulness of Brief Instruction in Reading Comprehension Strategies"
http://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/periodicals/CogSci.pdf
17. So what can you do
to build students'
content knowledge?
18. Action #1:
Consider the background knowledge
needed to comprehend the text...
What was
Prohibition?
Why is “Oxford”
such a big deal?
What's a
Prime Minister?
Why does
the EU matter?
What is “the red
planet”? What do
metals have to do
with soil?
19. ... and share that knowledge in ways
students can access while reading.
videos imagesnotes
21. Students will learn more from reading a
sequenced text set than they will from
reading a series of disconnected texts.
22. Use questions to tie the texts together.
"How does this
compare to...?"
"What is the
connection
between...?"
"How does this
account differ
from...?"
23. Action #3:
Utilize reading strategies in the context of
content you care about.
Students should see
reading strategies as a
key that allows them to
access meaningful
content.
24. Assigning students random,
irrelevant passages solely to test
reading strategies does not build
content knowledge (or convince them
that reading strategies have a
purpose.)
25. To improve reading
comprehension, we need to
build content knowledge.
Focusing on reading strategies
will not overcome knowledge
deficits.