MTEL Foundations of Reading

Category - Foundations of Reading

Use the information below to answer the question that follow.

A kindergarten teacher regularly elicits oral retellings of stories children have listened to or read as a way to assess their understanding of narrative text structures. The retell protocol the teacher uses has a child retell the story to a stuffed animal, named Storalee, as the teacher records notes and checks off story components. The teacher starts with the prompt, "Tell our friend Storalee the whole story because she has not heard it before." The teacher rates each child's understanding of the text's characters, setting, events, and relationships according to standards-based rubric descriptors for story elements.

Which of the following components should be included in the story elements rubric to ensure that the assessment will provide information about children's understanding of the cause-and-effect relationships found in narrative texts?
  1. Assigning scores for the number of details about events children provide in their responses (e.g., providing who-what-where information about a story event).
  2. Scoring the use of sequence transition words that children use to connect their retelling (e.g., first, next, after that, finally).
  3. Creating a list of generic questions to use as prompts to ensure that children's retellings are as comprehensive as possible.
  4. Identifying evidence of children's use of conjunctions (e.g., because, so, since) to connect the character's motivation to actions taken.
Explanation
Correct Response: D. When children use causal conjunctions, they demonstrate that they understand and can express a causal relationship supported by evidence or a reason (e.g., "She did X because…," "X didn't work, so she did Y."). If children do not explicitly state connections between characters and events, the teacher cannot assume the children understand the causal relationships in the story. Option A is incorrect because details about events do not necessarily demonstrate an understanding about what caused the event or how it affects the characters in the story. Option B is incorrect because the use of sequence words provides evidence of children’s understanding of the chronology or sequence of events in the story but does not provide evidence of their understanding of causal relationships between characters and events in the story. Option C is incorrect because questions direct children's responses. If the teacher asks a question that requires children to think about causality, then the teacher is directing the children to make causal connections. Questioning can be an effective instructional strategy for supporting students in learning how to make connections between characters and events; however, this is not an effective assessment strategy for determining whether children understand the causal relationships in the story on their own, without teacher prompting.
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