Whenever
I introduce active reading to learners, I like to equate comprehension and the
quest for meaning in a text to hiking in the woods. Having been lost in the
woods a few times (born usually of my own curiosity and ignorance), I like to
ask learners what they would do if they found themselves lost in the woods.
Invariably, learners decide that standing in the middle of the woods and
admitting you are lost is a good start since accepting such a thing can be
difficult. But what if that's all we choose to do - just admit that we are lost
and then wait around for help to arrive? Many readers do the same when they
encounter difficult text - they stop and wait around for someone to help.
Since
many of the classrooms in our building use the rotational model of instruction,
learners are expected to work independently and collaboratively in addition to
the more traditional direct instruction led by the facilitator. Many of our
learners find themselves "lost in the woods" trying to figure out the
content in our classrooms, particularly in the independent and collaborative
rotations. When they acknowledge being lost, the first response is often to
raise a hand or go directly to the facilitator for assistance. While many will
say that this is our job as facilitators, we should wonder if we aren't
teaching these learners that there will always be someone nearby to supply an
answer and/or clarify their confusion. I cannot help but envision someone lost
in the middle of the woods with his/her hand raised in the air and wondering
why no one has arrived to lend aid. Perhaps if they shake their hand and arm
back and forth with vigor it will alter the outcome….
We
are facilitators and as such our job is to facilitate learning. This goes
beyond just our content knowledge to making sure learners first attempt to help
themselves before immediately coming to us. In order for this to happen, it is
necessary for us to help learners understand that the first, second,
third…attempts to correct confusion may not always be successful. We may reread
a portion of text many times, or work to simplify an equation several times, or
even walk in a direction that might actually lead us away from where we want to
be. But what matters is that we are attempting to embrace our confusion by
doing something, by working through the mystery and the unknown in an attempt
to figure it out. This is the essence of learning.
We
all need facilitators in our lives, but the best ones are those who encourage
us to figure it out on our own and provide some tools when needed. Raising our
hand in life does indeed draw attention and illicit assistance, if available.
All we've learned, however, is that we know how to raise our hand for someone
to offer us some assistance - without ever needing to struggle and figure
things out. Learners need this struggle in order for real learning to occur.
When we end up "lost in the woods," a raised hand won't mean much,
but knowing how to think through the situation and take some steps to change it
will.
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