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Developmental Trends: Reading at Different Age Levels (page 3)

By T. M McDevitt|J. E. Ormrod
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Implications:

  • Assign age-appropriate reading materials in various content areas; provide scaffolding (e.g., questions to answer) to guide youngsters’ thinking and learning as they read.
  • Begin to explore classic works of poetry and fiction.
  • Use reciprocal teaching to promote poor readers’ comprehension skills.
  • Seek the advice and assistance of specialists to help promote the reading skills of youngsters who lag far behind their peers.

Late Adolescence (14–18)

What You Might Observe:

  • Automatized recognition of many abstract and discipline-specific words
  • Ability to consider multiple viewpoints about a single topic
  • Ability to critically evaluate what is read
  • More sophisticated metacognitive reading strategies

Diversity:

  • Poor readers draw few if any inferences from what they read and use few if any effective metacognitive processes.
  • As classroom learning becomes more dependent on reading textbooks and other written materials, adolescents with reading disabilities may become increasingly frustrated in their attempts to achieve academic success.
  • Girls are more likely than boys to enroll in advanced literature classes.

Implications:

  • Expect that many teenagers can learn effectively from textbooks and other reading materials, but continue to scaffold reading assignments, especially for poor readers.
  • Encourage adolescents to draw inferences and make predictions from what they read.
  • Critically analyze classic works of poetry and fiction.
  • Modify reading materials and paper-pencil assessments for individuals with delayed reading development.
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