Schema
theory explains how our previous experiences, knowledge, emotions, and
understandings affect what and how we learn (Harvey & Goudvis, 2000).
Schema is the background knowledge and experience readers bring to the text.
Good readers draw on prior knowledge and experience to help them understand
what they are reading and are thus able to use that knowledge to make
connections. Struggling readers often move directly through a text without
stopping to consider whether the text makes sense based on their own background
knowledge, or whether their knowledge can be used to help them understand
confusing or challenging materials. By teaching students how to connect to text
they are able to better understand what they are reading (Harvey & Goudvis,
2000). Accessing prior knowledge and experiences is a good starting place when
teaching strategies because every student has experiences, knowledge, opinions,
and emotions that they can draw upon.
Keene
and Zimmerman (1997) concluded that students comprehend better when they make
different kinds of connections:
- Text-to-self
- Text-to-text
- Text-to-world
Text-to-self
connections are highly personal connections that a reader makes between a piece
of reading material and the reader’s own experiences or life. An example of a
text-to-self connection might be, "This story reminds me of a vacation we
took to my grandfather’s farm."
Sometimes
when reading, readers are reminded of other things that they have read, other
books by the same author, stories from a similar genre, or perhaps on the same
topic. These types of connections are text-to-text connections. Readers gain
insight during reading by thinking about how the information they are reading
connects to other familiar text. “This character has the same problem that I
read about in a story last year,” would be an example of a text-to-text
connection.
After reading and discussing the text, Wemberly Worried, our class wrote their own Text-to-self connections.
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