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Saturday, May 30, 2020

Extension English: Elective 5 - Intersecting Worlds

Of the five electives on offer for English Extension 1, Intersecting Worlds is the one I've seen teachers talk about the least, which is a shame because it's got some fantastic Prescribed Texts in it. In this elective, students examine the way in which our relationship with nature is represented in texts. This means considering what it is we value about nature and how this comes across in literature, the way in which representations of natural worlds can re-orientate the reader in relation to previously marginalised perspectives, and the sense of anagnorisis felt by the individual as a result of their experience with nature.

There are four novels to pick from - three works of fiction and one non-fiction. This complemented by a poetry option and a film. Of these texts, three are Australian, two are English, and one is American. Looking at the gender breakdown, four are composed by men and two by women. There are no non-Western or Aboriginal perspectives on offer, which is a bit disappointing considering the content of the elective.

Prose Fiction Options

Clay by Melissa Harrison
What is it: TC is a young boy who lives an underprivileged life with his struggling mother in the city. He spends his days truanting from school and exploring the corners of the urban landscape that still yield some connection to nature. His adventuring sees him crossing paths with two other isolated individuals, the elderly Sophia who regularly writes letters to her granddaughter Daisy, and Jozef, a hardworking Polish migrant who yearns for his long-gone rural past.

Scope for Study: Harrison's background as a nature photographer can be felt in her incredibly rich and detailed descriptions of the environment. This is a novel that poses challenging questions about the place of the natural world alongside our increasingly alienated and industrialised modern existence, and students will be able to examine these themes through the lens of each of the novel's major characters.  Clay works well as a text that offers a unique view of the way life endures within the urban cityscapes that have divorced humanity from the wider, non-developed world.

NESA Annotations: Annotations can be found in the 2015-2020 NESA document, where the text was included as an option for the now defunct Advanced English module 'Representation and Text'. These annotations are mostly focused on the novel's style as evoked through characterisation and setting, and mention is made of students having the opportunity to appreciate "the capacity of nature to bring together individuals who ordinarily have difficulties relating to others".

Verdict: The shortest of the three novels offered within this elective but don't let that lull you into a false sense of security. Clay's beautiful language can sometimes feel dense if the reader isn't in a conducive frame of mind, and some contextualisation will be needed in order to assist students in getting on board with what is essentially a very British take on 'the wonder of nature'. Look, it's a nice book but it just doesn't grab me in the same way as The Shipping News did. Also, it's interesting to note that Clay was initially introduced in the aborted 2015-2020 Prescriptions as an Advanced English text. Owing to the unfairness of ditching a brand new text from the list altogether, NESA have instead relegated it to the bookroom backwater of Extension English... let's just say, I feel sorry for any schools who bought whole class set of Clay back in 2016!

Journey to the Stone Country by Alex Miller
What is it: Annabelle Beck, forty-something and married to an academic, retreats to her childhood home in far north Queensland after her husband has an affair with a university student. In the remote, stony wilderness to the west of Townsville, Annabelle takes a journey into her own past as she takes up work surveying the historical significance of sites for mining companies. In the course of this work she makes a connection with Bo Rennie, one of the local Aboriginal people, whose own past is complexly intertwined with her own.

Scope for Study: Students won't have any trouble understanding this novel on a surface level with its sharp, modernist imagery and finely-observed characters. In connecting the text to the elective, the teacher will need to open up the spaces within the narrative through discussion and close analysis. One of the central conceits of Journey to the Stone Country is the issue of communication and the space that needs to be navigated between the European and Aboriginal perspective of the world. Yes, Annabelle and Bo's histories are closely connected, but in a lot of ways they are also incompatible. In considering the 'Intersecting Worlds' Elective, students will need to consider the way in which setting works as a representation of themes and ideas. In this novel in particular, as rife as it is with symbolism, there is also a strong subtext regarding the debates around how land resources in Australia are to be best used. Chief among these is perhaps the way in which Aboriginal communities both suffer and benefit from commercialised development, and the contested histories that threaten to unhinge the present.

NESA Annotations: Annotations for this one can also be found in the 2015-2020 NESA document, where it was included as part of the now-retired Extension 1 Module B Elective 'Texts and Ways of Thinking', where the focus was on context and communication. The annotations make mention of the text's validity as a winner of the prestigious Miles Franklin Award and its origin as a fictionalised account of people that the author knew in his own youth as a cattle station worker in Queensland. It is suggested that students will be engaged by the 'interracial love story' and the contrasting cultural values and attitudes featured throughout the novel. Journey to the Stone Country is also highlighted as a text that deals with the theme of reconciliation, which was (and is) an ongoing contextual concern for both the author and his Australian audience. 

Verdict: It's an enjoyable enough book and no one could deny that it's intellectually stimulating or well-written. Alex Miller has taken the right approach in positioning his narrative from the point of view of the character who is, like himself, of a white and European background. That said, I think the time has passed for having our students examine Aboriginal issues from non-Aboriginal viewpoints. I don't dispute that this book has something worthwhile to say, I just believe that we could do better in selecting books that are better representative of marginalised voices rather than continuing to have already dominant voices dictate the nature and dimensions of these conversations.

The Shipping News by Annie Proulx
What is it: Quoyle is a shambling, aimless doorstop of a man who experiences a series of personal tragedies and finds himself looking after two daughters on his own. Upon meeting his long-lost aunt, Quoyle decides to head to his ancestral home - the icy Canadian island of Newfoundland. In this strange maritime world of pies made from seal meat and men lost to the boundless unforgiving seas, Quoyle finds himself forging a new identity as a writer for the local newspaper, reporting on the comings-and-goings of the various ships that call in to harbour.

Scope for Study: Episodic in nature, The Shipping News reads like a collection of short stories held together in a shared universe by various thematic threads and motifs. Proulx's use of Newfoundlander lore and language creates this whole other epistemology that Extension students should find great enjoyment in learning - a cultural geography of fog and sailor speak and evocative made-up words. The setting itself is a character in The Shipping News; an environment that has a pivotal role in healing Quoyle's misery and gently giving him the gift of self-confidence. Students will do well to pay particular attention to Proulx's use of vocabulary to build both setting and character. 

NESA Annotations: Frustratingly, there are no annotations for this text in any of the last three NESA Annotations documents.

Verdict: I absolutely loved this. At the time of writing I'm about 70% through the entire Prescriptions for Standard/Advanced/Extension and I think this might just be my favourite text in the whole list. Proulx weaves this wonderful tapestry of local histories that tap into the very essence of folklore. It's very easy to see why she won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction with this novel and I think it also stands as an extremely useful example for students in appreciating the role of characterisation, setting, and language in a narrative that eschews a more typical plot structure. Even if you decide not to use this text for this elective, I'd still recommend reading it. You know, for fun.

Nonfiction Options

Island Home by Tim Winton
What is it: In a series of interconnected discursive pieces, Winton recounts his formative years through the lens of Australia's geography - growing up on the Western Australian coast, in industrial towns surrounded by unloved scrubby heath, and in an adolescence characterised by isolation and discovery and awakening environmentalism. Winton contrasts the development of his relationship with the land with a growing awareness of 'Green' ideology, thereby giving the reader a window into the forging of an environmentalist identity.

Scope for Study: Winton's memoir is constructed around the role of geography in shaping identity, allowing students to explore creative non-fiction (or discursive) texts and the use of a thesis to drive one's writing. Students will also be able to explore Winton's use of intertextuality to add depth to his explorations of ideology, the concept of "Australia the place" vs. "Australia the national identity", the role of nostalgia in shaping memory, and the changing face of Australian society.

NESA Annotations: Notes can be found for Island Home in the 2019-2023 Annotations document. Elements singled out as being of interest include: Winton's evocative descriptions of landscapes, the use of vignettes and essays to explore how these landscapes have shaped the author's identity, and the comparisons made between non-Indigenous and Indigenous notions of Country. Students are also positioned to examine the form and style of Winton's essays, rhetoric, and the extended metaphor of family that runs throughout Island Home.

Verdict: I don't hate it. Winton, as always, writes effortlessly and intellectually about our ongoing relationship with the Australian environment, and it's interesting to see the secret, hidden, forgotten, and marginalised histories of conservation and love for country. That said, I don't know if I'd like to teach it though... I think Winton's writing can go over the heads of students more often than not. There are some parts of Island Home that are sharp and incisive, but there are also other parts that are quite dry and obscure.

Poetry Options

The Major Works by William Wordsworth
  • Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey
  • Three years she grew in sun and shower
  • My heart leaps up when I behold
  • Resolution and independence
  • The world is too much with us
  • Ode ('There was a time')
  • The Solitary Reaper
  • The Prelude (1805) - Book Ones, lines 1-67, 271-441
What is it: Wordsworth's poetry explores the human condition via the wonders of nature, echoing sentiments of pathetic fallacy in a range of poetic forms and genres. 'Tintern Abbey' is a long piece in the loco-descriptive mode of the era, 'Three years...' depicts a nature both wondrous and indifferent when it comes to the rise and fall of an individual's life, and the autobiographical 'Prelude' is included in two fragments relevant to the elective. The length of poetry also drastically varies, from the short and simplistic 'My Heart Leaps Up' to the twenty stanza 'Resolution and Independence'.

Scope for Study: There is a lot to cover in this suite of selected poetry and taking a structuralist perspective grounded in context will be helpful in getting students to understand Wordsworth's use of generic conventions. Among the poetic forms sampled here are rhyme royal, the pindaric ode, the aforementioned loco-descriptive genre, and 18th century lyrical poetry, all of which will no doubt need some explaining for your students. Context will be important too, for example, 'Ode' is a poem written in two parts at two different times, so there should be consideration of how it reflects the author's life. 'Tintern Abbey' is also another interesting one as it oddly leaves out any mention of the titular abbey, focusing instead on the natural geography of the area - a geography internalised by the poet and alluding to a world that was slowly slipping (or about to slip) under the encroachment of industrialisation.

NESA Annotations: Some annotations for Wordsworth can be found in the 2015-2020 NESA document in relation to the now defunct Extension 1 Module B Elective on 'Romanticism'. The suite featured there is not exactly the same as the currently Prescribed one but there is some crossover in that five of the current eight poems are the same. The annotations primarily focus on Wordsworth's position as one of the Romantic poets and how his work fits into a larger framework in relation to this genre.

Verdict: This is big, weighty, and ambitious to study. I'm not sure I'd tackle it because it doesn't quite sing to my senses in the way that a lot of the other Prescribed Texts do. But, then again, there's a lot written about Wordsworth's poetry so teaching it would be ably assisted by paratextual reading (or dare I say even some simple Google searching!) As a solid Western canon text it's also got a long history of school study attached to it, so that will help too.

Film Options

The Hunter, directed by Daniel Nettheim
What is it: A foreign biotech company has learned that the extinct Tasmanian Tiger may in fact still exist in the depths of the Tasmanian wilderness. In order to exploit this opportunity to its fullest, the company sends in specialist Martin David (played by Willem Dafoe) to collect genetic material from the creature and to also kill off any remaining Tasmanian Tigers to ensure that the harvested DNA remains unique. While adopting the guise of a university researcher during his journey to the heart of the Apple Isle, David inadvertently finds himself in the middle of an ideological battle between environmentalists and loggers, and is confronted by a landscape both mysterious and haunting in its natural beauty.

Scope for Study: Students will be able to examine the film in terms of its visual design, specifically the way it contrasts a fairly grim premise with the fearsome beauty of a wilderness under threat. Of note is the panoramic helicopter-mounted camera work and the use of wide or extreme shots to capture this environment. Tasmania's nature is depicted as an almost god-like amphitheatre into which Willem Dafoe's gaunt and haunted frame must tread if he is to fulfill the near-Satanic deal he has struck with his employer. Students should also build up a strong contextual knowledge to assist with better understanding the The Hunter's environmental and conservationist themes.

NESA Annotations: Notes can be found in the 2019-2023 Annotations document, which outlines the need to examine the contemporary political context of the film as well as the Tasmanian Tiger as a symbol for the impact of European colonisation. The 'Opportunities for Challenging Teaching and Learning' are highly useful here too as they provide a clear schema that can be used to deconstruct and examine the text in relation to the elective.

Verdict: It's always nice to see Australian films in these lists but The Hunter doesn't really live up to its promise. The Tasmanian Tiger becomes a clumsy sort of metaphor for David in that they're both survivors in a ruthless world, however, aside from Willem Dafoe's great range as an actor, the character just isn't given enough depth by director/writer Daniel Nettheim. Owing to the density of the other texts though I think it would be difficult to undertake the Intersecting Worlds Elective without including The Hunter, and it's a serviceable enough film to use when exploring the representation of nature and the human condition in relation to it, especially with the use of the NESA annotations as a guideline.

Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Book Journeys: Grendel

Beowulf is a famous Anglo-Saxon poem from around the 9th century about a warrior (Beowulf) who slays three monsters - Grendel, Grendel's Mother, and a Dragon. This book by John Gardner is a postmodern retelling of the first part of the story from Grendel's point of view. 

It's said that you need to have read Beowulf, or be familiar with it, to be able to follow Gardner's narrative. The writer certainly intends this, but I think only a passing familiarity is really necessary. The above paragraph of this very blog would probably be all the prior information you would need, I never really knew all that much about the poem/myth ahead of the first time I read this book and I don't think it hindered my enjoyment whatsoever - especially considering that Grendel is one of my all-time favourite novels. 

It's a fairly slight book, more of a novella than a novel, but it's by no means a simple work - it has a certain density and complexity. Gardner uses the basics of medieval myth to deconstruct humanity and some of the philosophies that power the very essence of our civilisation. He does this with a sort of academic wryness that often comes across as blackly humourous. 

Grendel is a brutish and crude figure. He is cruel and ugly and every bit the monster he is portrayed to be in other versions of the tale Beowulf. Gardner has gone to great lengths to keep his protagonist monstrous in both appearance and personality. Grendel is by no means stupid though, he is confused by his own existence and angered by the differences between himself and everyone around him. His own mother is a depraved and loathsome creature that he is unable to communicate with, the local Dragon is all-knowing but nihilistic and does little to help reconcile his point of view with the world, and the village of humans that Grendel spends twelve years of his life observing, molesting, taunting, and waging war on, are so far removed from his own understanding of life that they only fuel his confusion to the point of outright fury.


The 'hero' Beowulf himself doesn't turn up until the last sequences of the novel and remains unnamed, which is fitting considering this narrative has been re-centred from the monster's perspective. Grendel's confrontation with the village's saviour is resoundingly ambivalent and provocative. Grendel is a miserable and bored creature, neither superior or inferior to the little people he torments... he's like an ur-anti-hero, and this book really pulls apart the foundations of concepts like 'heroes' and 'villains' in a big way. 

There's something highly engaging and amusing about Grendel's detached interpretation of the village's growth. His view of its advancement characterises humans as a parasitic and stupid species. The monster's prime motivation for wreaking so much havoc among them is boredom and curiosity, which is perhaps more relatable than most readers would care to admit. 

In terms of style, Gardner uses a lot of stream-of-consciousness to explore Grendel's thoughts and the novel is written mostly in present tense. When I first read Grendel I was quite impressed by the way it sustained a present tense narrative - I'd never much liked present tense before but Gardner converted me into seeing how it can work and I've used it more often in my own writing since.

Anyway, I highly recommend Grendel. If there is such a thing as a canon then I would put this book in it as it has so much that going for it - it's entertaining, intellectually stimulating, intertextual, amusing, tragic, and subversive. I'm yet to find another book even remotely like it.

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Book Journeys: Greybeard


I'm reading a lot of post-apocalyptic fiction at the moment. I've always been drawn to this genre but recent times have pushed me into its arms even further, for better or for worse. As far as the genre goes, I tend to find that the end of the world presented in each of these possible futures falls in one of the five general scenarios:
  1. A virus eradicates most of humanity (The Earth Abides, The Last Man on Earth, Station Eleven)
  2. Nuclear war or some other technology reduces the Earth to a wasteland (A Canticle for Leibowitz, The Last American, The Quiet Earth)
  3. Resource shortages (Dry, Mad Max, Soylent Green)
  4. Natural disaster (The Voyage of QV66, Waterworld, The Drowned Earth)
  5. Alien invasion (A Quiet Place, War of the Worlds)
The novel Greybeard by Brian Aldiss falls into the category of nuclear destruction, which is probably to be expected from a text written during the Cold War. In this vision of the future humanity doomed itself in the early 1980s after exploding experimental nuclear weapons in orbit around the Earth. The dispersion of radiation renders the entire human race and many larger mammals sterile. 

Aldiss has twin narratives running alongside each other. One is set in the 2030s and follows 'Greybeard', a 'young' fifty year old who takes a boat down the Thames to escape the exponentially growing packs of stoats that attack and consume all animals in their path. The other thread moves back through the past in segments to show how the world has changed in the 50 years since 'the Accident'.

It's a very British story with a strong sense of pathos... this is a world where humanity is moving closer and closer to extinction as the last survivors become increasingly geriatric. On every step of his journey Greybeard seeks out hope in the various rumours and folk tales of humanity's potential survival. This is a world, however, where there is no second generation waiting in the wings... a world without children, without a future. 

It's an affecting sci-fi classic.

But now, let's look at the various covers it's had, which have stories of their own to tell...

I like this cover as it has a sort of ethereal quality to it. As a cover for this novel though? The figure on the front does not resemble the main character in any way - the main character is a healthy 50 year old who just happens to have a long grey beard, whereas the guy on the cover looks decrepit. Don't even get me started on what appears to be his wife wandering listlessly in the background... The desert-like environment is also not related to the novel at all either.
A more abstract cover that's suggestive of the theme if not actually that reflective of the novel's content.
I actually don't mind this cover - the dark, evocative illustration feels 'right' in terms of some of the novel's more grotesque elements.
A more straightforward approach. It's not inaccurate but the cartoonish style, while reflective of trends in 1970s science fiction illustration, is just a bit too goofy for my tastes.
The more serious literary approach. Boring.
This one makes it look like a fantasy novel in the style of J.R.R. Tolkien.

A Scandinavian edition - actually a mostly accurate depiction of the character, theme, and tone.
Another Scandinavian edition... this is an appalling idea for a cover because it depicts the final scene in the novel. Why would you give away the book's ending ON THE FRONT COVER?!
I like this one. There's nothing in the novel like this but it kind of works in terms of being suggestive of the novel's theme of nature taking back over the Earth.
I'm struggling with this one. What is even going on here? This has little to do with what happens in the novel.
This one looks like Charles Dickens meets Charles Bronson. Actually, in some ways that's a good description of the book itself...
Does the main character swagger around with a big gun? I'm starting to second-guess myself. I only finished reading this book yesterday but all these covers are gaslighting me into thinking that maybe Greybeard does walk around with a big gun. Even if he does, it isn't the point of the book and he doesn't really shoot it that much.
Every other cover, no matter how ridiculous, is better than this one. Boring.
This very 1980s looking cover is from a German edition. Another 'thematic' approach.
The woman on the front (presumably Greybeard's wife Martha) isn't even remotely close in appearance to any characters in the novel. That aside, this is a pretty accurate depiction... it's how I imagined Greybeard to look and the background seems suggestive of a post-apocalyptic Oxford, which is one of the novel's settings.
Okay. My Dad has this edition and I used to look at it all the time when I was a kid. I would look at it and I would be freaked out by every single element... the weird plants, the mismatched eyes, the random tusks growing out of his cheek and shoulder, the stringy beard, the brick in his throat, the black bird with human hands and a weird human mouth underneath its beak, the lack of sleeves on the guy's shirt. It fired my imagination... what on Earth is going on here? But now that I've read it, 30 years later, I can look at this cover and confidently say that this illustration is absolute bullshit. There is NOTHING in this book that connects to this image. Greybeard has no strange mutations, and there is no half-human half-bird character... in fact, there isn't even a bird in the book! Amazing.

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Focus on Reading and Super Six Strategies


I have to admit that I'm finding it difficult to think pedagogically at the moment. What I mean by that is that I'm usually trying to think and plan ahead into the next term or two. I always want to backward map as much as possible, to frontload students so that when they get to the tricky part of their learning they feel as prepared as possible. It also helps diminish my own anxiety and gives me a clear roadmap to work to - everything is transparent and students know exactly what's coming up throughout each term. Assessment tasks can be given to students far in advance of due dates, and it usually frees up my spare periods to concentrate on head teacher responsibilities, or welfare troubleshooting, helping students 1:1, or any other long projects I might be working on. 

In the age of COVID-19 it just feels impossible trying to plan for anything. Our goalposts are getting moved almost daily... and it isn't anyone's fault, it's just kind of how it is. Being able to plan far ahead has become a privilege rather than a necessity. 

I hate it.

Whenever I get stuck like this I tend to favour a back-to-basics approach. When times are complicated then the work should be simpler. Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (pictured above) makes it pretty clear that students are less likely to be able to engage with curriculum if their basic needs aren't being met and, as this pandemic provokes and fertilises a seemingly neverending range of issues straight out of a post-apocalyptic science fiction novel, I don't blame them. A lot of students are going to find it difficult to take complicated course content on board in order to "become the most that one can be" if they feel that their safety needs are being threatened by a pandemic.

I always come back to the Super Six Literacy strategies. 

Some time in the past, I think it might have been 2013 or 2014, my school undertook the Focus on Reading professional development modules. Others will be able to tell you about this literacy initiative more than me... what I will say instead is that this particular professional learning galvanised my appreciation for teaching literacy skills. The Focus on Reading modules just felt so wonderfully practical and I'm glad to see that the Department of Education is currently working on a new version of it.

I replicate some of the Super Six-related strategies below in the absence of their current availability. 

Here's an example, from Page 8 of Module 1, drawing upon Teaching for Comprehending and Fluency by I. Fountas and G. Pinnell (2006, pp.463-464). This demonstrates some ways in which students can practice independent writing in relation to their reading:

Writing and Drawing About Reading

Using words, phrases or sketches on stick-on notes or in the notebook to note:
  • Place where you made a personal prediction
  • Predictions
  • Place where you found out something about a character
  • Wonderings
  • Place where you learned new information
  • Place that you found confusing
  • Place that you found interesting
  • Memorable language
  • Place that reminded you of another book
Short writing activities - a few sentences or paragraphs produced quickly in a notebook or a long stick-on note that is placed in a notebook:
  • Reaction to the writer's style
  • A prediction
  • Response to a selected quote
  • Response to a peer's thinking
  • Reaction to a character
  • Thoughts about the writer's craft
  • Thoughts about the writer's message
  • Comments on the writer's point of view
  • Thoughts about how the text reveals life issues
  • New understandings or insights
  • Using knowledge of the genre to think about character, plot, theme, setting
  • Links to other texts
  • Story map
Graphic organisers - words, phrases, sketches, or sentences on graphic organisers or drawn in a notebook:
  • Web
  • Time sequence chain
  • Comparison/contrast chart
  • Cause/effect chart
  • Problem/solution chart
  • Grid for comparing elements or taking notes
  • Outline
  • Letter to the teacher with reply (ongoing dialogue about texts)
Longer responses in the notebook elaborating on thinking about one or several texts
  • Double-column entry (two-column responses with material from the text, a category or questions on the left and response or comments on the right)
  • Expansion of thinking from the notes, sketches, short writing, or graphic organisers
  • Letter to author or illustrator study
  • Book recommendation
  • Book review 
Published work - more formal responses to texts that are shared publicly
  • Poem related to a text
  • Picture book on a topic or subject (EG. Biography)
  • Opinion essay
  • Report of an author or illustrator study
  • Examination of a particular theme across texts
  • A character analysis or companion
  • A book critique  
This particular Focus on Reading module notes go on to discuss the interrelated nature of reading and writing - the way in which learning to write should take place alongside learning to read, as one strengthens the other and vice versa.

I came to realise in light of all this that the explicit teaching of reading and writing right up to the end of Year 12 it is a fundamental part of our ongoing ability to understand complex and sustained text. Indeed, even adults need to make these processes explicit to themselves if they are to develop their own critical faculties in relation to the wider world. Learning never stops.


Super Six Literacy Strategies

The strategies mentioned above can be categorised as examples of the Super Six - to be honest, all comprehension essentially fits into this paradigm. The Super Six, in brief, are the following:

Questioning: Learners formulate and respond to questions that clarify meaning. This allows for greater depth of understanding when drilling down into texts.

Visualising: Learners create a mental image from a text. Visualising isn't necessarily a natural skill for everyone and is something that needs to be developed so that imaginative skills are engaged.

Making Connections: Learners make personal connections with the text by linking it to themselves, another text, or the wider world. This process makes use of our ability to recall information from our broader understanding of things - building pathways between different kinds of knowledge and prompting development of our ability to synthesise information.

Monitoring: Learners interrupt the reading process by stopping to check their understanding. This is an important part of comprehension as it forces the learner to develop strategies to cope with obstacles or disrupted meaning during the reading process.

Summarising: Learners identify and gather together the most significant parts of a text, restating this information in their own words. This is another valuable part of the comprehension process as it helps develop our ability to synthesise information, sort and categorise ideas, and discard irrelevant details.

Predicting: Learners use information from one part of the text to construct an idea of what will happen later in the same text. This is a valuable part of our critical thinking in that it makes explicit the way in which we adjust expectations based on the available information.

I always find myself assured that I'm doing something useful by falling back on the above six domains of comprehension while designing learning activities. Students never fail to be able to engage with these strategies and it's almost always useful in a wide range of contexts.

Food for thought :)