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L517: Advanced Study of the Teaching of Secondary School Reading INSTRUCTIONAL READING STRATEGY: DRA (DIRECTED READING ACTIVITY) |

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INDEX OF PAGE CONTENTS
Description of DRADRA (Betts, 1946) is a strategy that provides students with instructional support before, during, and after reading. The teacher takes an active role as he or she prepares students to read the text by preteaching important vocabulary, eliciting prior knowledge, teaching students how to use a specific reading skill, and providing a purpose for reading. During reading, the teacher asks individual students questions about the text to monitor their comprehension. After reading, the teacher engages students in a discussion focusing on the purpose for reading, and follow-up activities that focus on the content of the text and the specific skill that students learned to use. Betts, E. A. (1946). Foundations of reading instruction. New York: American Book Company.
Purpose for Using DRADRA
serves several purposes:
How to Use DRA
DRA: An ExampleSuppose students are reading a text that talks about the history of cars. PRE-TEACH VOCABULARYThe teacher introduces the words “industry” and “economy” to students. For each word, the teacher writes a sentence from the text that includes the word. The teacher includes enough surrounding sentences so that students have sufficient context to figure out what the word might mean.
To help students define the word “industry,” the teacher encourages students to come up with other words that would make sense in place of “industry” in the sentence above. Students might come up with “business” or “enterprise.”
To help students define the word “economy,” the teacher encourages them to find clues in the surrounding sentences that give examples of what an “economy” car might be (i.e., a car that uses less gas and that it is smaller). Also, the teacher asks students what other words they know that sound like “economy.” For example, students may have heard of the word “economic.” The teacher encourages students to tell what they know about this word and what they associate it with (e.g., “money” or “finances”). ELICIT PRIOR KNOWLEDGE The teacher asks:
TEACH STUDENTS A SKILL This text includes numerous headings
that will help students make predictions about what they will be reading about
in the sections following the headings. Therefore, the skill that the teacher
focuses on is “How to use headings to help you understand what you read.”
GIVE STUDENTS A PURPOSE FOR READINGThe teacher says, “Read to find out in what ways the first cars were different from the cars we have now.” HAVE STUDENTS READ SILENTLY As students are reading, the teacher asks individual students comprehension questions. For example, the teacher asks one student, “What is one way in which the auto industry changed during World War II?” AFTER STUDENTS HAVE FINISHED READING, ASK THE PURPOSE-SETTING STATEMENT AS A QUESTION The teacher asks, “In what ways were the first cars different from the cars we have now?” ENGAGE STUDENTS IN FOLLOW-UP ACTIVITIES One activity that the teacher has students do is the following: Students create a time line of the events described in the text. They list the years on their time line that are presented in the text. Then, under the appropriate years on their time line, they briefly write down why that year is important in the history of cars. |

Last updated:
06/07/2006, by Jennifer Conner
URL: http://www.indiana.edu/~l517/DRA.htm
Comments: jmconner@indiana.edu
Copyright 2006, Jennifer Conner