The word "exposition" comes
from 2 Latin words, ex+ponere, literally to place in front of,
or to lay out, to set out, as in a description, explanation or
argument. The content area teacher has two major tasks in teaching
comprehension and composition of expository texts:
1) teaching students to identify the important concepts
2) teaching students to understand their relationships
The realities of teaching expository writing and comprehension of
expository texts are that textbooks generate a significant amount
of the classroom instruction required for teaching these skills.
We'll therefore turn our attention to understanding how textbooks
are designed, and then explore strategies that teachers can use
in combination with this information for executing the two tasks
mentioned above.
UNDERSTANDING TEXTBOOK DESIGN
Unfortunately, the quality of writing found in many content area
texts is considerably weak. It can be poorly organized, packed with
facts, unfriendly, and lacking in concepts. The characteristics
of texts that are more user-friendly and readily comprehensible
are (a) structure, (b) coherence, and (c) audience appropriateness.
We will examine each in turn:
(a) STRUCTURE
Structure refers to how the text is organized and the signals it
gives in connection with such organization. Following are some of
the general textual elements that contribute to good structure:
Titles, Headings, Subheadings, Sections,
Introductions, Summary Statements, Graphics, Signal Words (First,
Second, Then, Therefore), General Format, Table of Contents.
Readers organize their recall of information or their information
processing schemas according to either text structure or background
knowledge. Since students in alternative settings typically do not
have much background knowledge in many of the content areas they
are studying, they need to rely on these text structure elements
for identifying the concepts and information that are important
as well as for understanding expository text. Attention to these
elements of structure also helps students as they try to compose
texts in the expository mode when doing report-writing, summarizing
information, and engaging in other expository tasks.
(b) COHERENCE
Coherence refers to how well the ideas in the text "stick together."
With coherent text, the relationships among concepts are pretty
clear. Skillful use of connective words also help to produce coherent
text. Students rely on models, analogies, empirical reasoning, and
transparent discussion to aid in comprehension of exposition. For
example, learning to recognize the essential elements of a paragraph
in which these rhetorical devices reside as well as expository paragraph
signal words and phrases can help in both writing and understanding
exposition.
Essential Elements of the Expository Paragraph
(Adapted from Kate Kinsella)
The essential elements of a paragraph are the topic, main idea,
topic sentence, and details. The topic is the idea about which the
entire paragraph is written; it is the single unifying factor. The
main idea reflects the author's primary purpose in writing. It is
the most important thought which the author desires to communicate
in the entire paragraph. It may be explicitly stated or inferred.
The topic sentence is the sentence containing the main idea of the
paragraph, which may be stated either at the beginning or end of
the paragraph. The supporting details are subsumed under the main
idea in a paragraph. They are the reasons, facts, and examples that
explain the main idea. While the "bones" are the main
idea as it were, the details are the "meat" on the bones.
Expository Paragraph Signal Words
(Adapted from Kate Kinsella)
Words that signal:
Definition---refers to, consists of, means, in other words, etc.
Examples--for example, for instance, such as, is like, including,
etc.
Listing--also, another, moreover, furthermore, finally, in addition
etc.
Sequential Listing--first, second, later, next, before, then, finally,
following etc.
Analysis--consider, analyze, investigate, examine, this means etc.
Comparison--similarly, just like, in the same way, likewise, in
comparison etc.
Contrast--on the other hand, however, whereas, but, yet, in contrast
etc.
Cause-Effect Relationship--because, for, therefore, hence, as a
result, thus etc.
(c) AUDIENCE APPROPRIATENESS
Audience Appropriateness refers to how well the textbook is suited
to the reader's knowledge, reading and study skills. The inadequacy
of readability level formula techniques drives expository text composition
and selection, so that often texts that are rewritten to meet a
pre-designated readability level lose their coherence and structural
integrity in the process. Ironically, the process which aims to
make complex text simpler, can actually have the opposite effect.
Teachers should therefore screen texts carefully to ensure their
design is sound before assigning reading to students.
STRATEGIES FOR TEACHING EXPOSITION
Aside from understanding how textbooks are designed, and using this
knowledge to teach expository reading and writing skills, there
are some "packaged" strategies that teachers can draw
on for teaching expository reading and writing. They all include
similar elements, and focus students' attention on the process of
interacting and engaging with text to promote a deep understanding
of the content contained therein, as well as increasing the level
of students' comfort zone more generally when reading and writing
in the expository mode. Five such strategies are presented here
as an aid to both teachers and students:
1. The K-W-H-L chart (Ogle 1986) IS a matrix that provides a graphic
organization for students to list what they know about a topic (K),
what they want to learn (W), how the information will be learned
(H), and then finally, what they learned (L). The information is
categorized, mapped, and finally summarized.
2. The QTA or "question the author" strategy (Beck et
al., 1997) is a powerful textbook reading strategy designed to encourage
deep and authentic interaction with texts and discussion with classmates.
It is based on the premise that authors of texts are fallible. The
teacher poses queries about the text content at selected intervals,
and the students respond, refine, and expand their answers through
discussions.
3. The VRG or "visual reading guide" (Moore, Readence
& Rickelman, 1988) introduces students to a passage by examining
the accompanying charts, graphs, diagrams, maps, and illustrations
in order to formulate predictions about information in a text. This
activity helps students draw connections between information presented
in graphic aids, the text, and their prior knowledge.
4. Transactional Strategies Instruction or TSI (Pressley & Woloshyn,
1995) requires students to predict upcoming events in the text--that
is check whether predictions made were consistent with the text
content, react to text --that is, relate ideas to prior knowledge,
construct images, make inferences, slow down, read carefully, check
back, clarify, generate questions, and finally, summarize information
gleaned from the text.
5. Reciprocal Teaching (Brown & Palinscar, 1984) has many of
the thematic elements that run throughout the preceding strategies.
The process involves question generation, summarizing, clarifying,
and predicting, all done by the students, and based on the text
read.
Finally, in addition to understanding textbook design and incorporating
into their teaching specific strategies for expository reading and
writing, teachers could also help students develop good study skills,
and apply the following techniques for successful adaptation of
the textbooks they are assigned or choose to use:
TEXTBOOK ADAPTATIONS
(a) Select compatible reading materials that cover similar content,
but have a lower estimated readability level.
(b) Provide an outline of the text that the students can complete
as they read.
(c) Underline key points and use margin notes to highlight important
information.
(d) Develop a question guide in which the reader is asked to answer
several relevant questions that relate to key sections in the
text.
(e) Tape record vital segments of text using #s 1-4 as a guide.