The problem of the read-aloud

By readers1  

By Sara Finegan

One of the most frequent questions I get, from special education and general education teachers alike, is how to deal with the fact that their students with autism do not pay attention during story time.  Readers with autism are generally not good listeners and often will not only fail to attend to read-alouds, but may disrupt the experience of others when it is going on.

I like to think of myself as a dynamic and interesting teacher, one who can keep a child’s interest most of the time, even when the subject we are learning isn’t utterly fascinating.   At any rate, that’s what I aim for, and it usually happens that kids are engaged most of the time in my classroom.

I love read-alouds!

One of my favorite events of the day, is the read-aloud.  We read high-level books, often novels related to what we’re studying in history, to bring that world alive and show how dry facts aren’t just words in a textbook.  We also read funny stories, fantasy books, and fables.   I like to use accents and unique voices to represent characters, and incorporate a lot of drama into the reading.   My students are usually captivated.  Except the ones with autism.

It used to be really disconcerting to look up from a particularly scary rendition of a scene in a Goosebumps story to see my student Bobby looking off into space and laughing at shadows or dust motes floating in the air.   I became rather discouraged when my best Draco Malfoy imitation didn’t even seem to have any effect on him, nor did my ancient old-lady-Charlotte-the-dying-spider voice.   If I hadn’t understood him and how he perceives sound, I’d have given up all aspirations of becoming a reader for Books on Tape.

“Wah…wah…wah…”normal_reading_woman

Kids with autism do not tend to be auditory learners and most of them do not respond well to the read-aloud.   In fact, the majority of them drift off into their own worlds when I read aloud to the class.   I am reminded of the Charlie Brown television specials, where the teacher’s voice in class is unintelligible, consisting of droned “Wah…wah…wah….” I imagine that is how my students with autism hear me when I’m reading to them.

It doesn’t matter what tone of voice I use, what accent, or how loudly or softly I intone.  They aren’t really present for the reading.  Not very flattering to any teacher, of course, but even more important, it raises the question of how to support the students’ learning if they aren’t attending to the read-aloud.

What is the purpose of the read-aloud?

If you’re struggling with a reader with autism’s inability to listen to the text, stop for a moment and ask yourself why it’s important.   In evaluating how to handle this situation, it is important to consider the express purpose for the read aloud, and determine whether there are alternative ways to get the objectives met.   So, first consider whether:

  • The read-aloud is used for the primary purpose of exposing kids to necessary and important text that is higher than their own reading level.

Kids who do not read at grade level often need grade-level texts read to them in order to be able to participate in literacy activities such as response to literature, literary discussions, and just accessing the classics.  If the objective is related to cultural literacy, then a child’s ability to attend to and learn from a read-aloud may be important.  I think we’d all like for every child to have read certain books by the time they finish elementary school:  Charlotte’s Web comes to mind, for example.  If the book is higher than the child’s independent reading level, then understanding the story read aloud could be an essential expectation. But…if your student doesn’t read the book, can you show the film in class? And if not, can it wait?

  • The read-aloud is used to expose the kids to the pleasure of the written word.

Reading fluency is not always strong in the early and intermediate process. We need to help kids hear the text in order for them to develop expectations of text and enjoyment of the process. We do want our children to love reading and get pleasure from the written word. It’s good for kids to experience the flow and fluency of text – many of them will not develop the internal voice as readers unless they first hear it externally.

Whether they hear stories on tape or “live,” the fact is that a voice and an auditory experience is important. If the read-aloud is for the purpose of exposing kids to the pleasure of the written word, we may need to accept that for some kids, it’s not going to happen the way we’d like. Maybe your student with autism will enjoy hearing your voice even though  he or she isn’t retaining the words and ideas themselves.  Maybe your student will hear some of the words you are reading and will use his or her imagination to use those words in a different way. And maybe the student will never come to love the sound of the written word, or understand that words are arranged in a pattern that has melody and fluency. There are other things the child will learn that are equally, if not more important this year.

  • The read-aloud is used in writing intruction to show kids how words, the rhythm of language, and rhymes can influence a text.

The use of read-aloud to support lessons in writing instruction is a best practice employed by most literacy teachers. We can tell kids how mood, and setting, and action are influenced and directed by the use of language and rhythm, but they need to hear it as well as hear about it. It gives them ideas and inspiration to try the techniques out on their own.

Now, if the way words sound is the entire point of the read aloud, there may be alternative ways to teach the lesson to a child with autism. Bobby may not be able to listen to and completely understand a story in which repeated words or rhymes convey a message or mood, but he can learn about and use rhymes in songs and nursery rhymes just as well. He didn’t learn anything when I read aloud When I Was Young and In The Mountains, but he was easily able to write a little story using a repeated introduction after we sang “Old McDonald” and “Do You Remember?”

  • The read-aloud is used as a warm-up or cool-down exercise for kids as they prepare to transition to other tasks.

Many teachers have a read-aloud session immediately after recess or lunch to help kids settle down and get ready for active learning again. Reading aloud to kids to help support transitions or to give them a break from written work or intensive intellectual work is a tried and true strategy that many of us have been using for years. It is derived from the bedtime story, and how many of us don’t have memories of drowsing while our parents read us one last book before turning out the lights? This type of read-aloud not only calms the mind and body, but introduces the concept of reading for relaxation to a child.

  • The read-aloud is used as a break from other academic tasks.

Research shows that the best learning is accomplished in cycles of input and output of information. Reading is an excellent respite of intake that can be used after an intensive output of intellectual effort. If reading is for relaxation and transitioning, then a child can gain equivalent results from drawing pictures, rocking, doing a puzzle, or some other pleasurable quiet activity.

While you are doing the reading aloud, your students who are weak in auditory processing can be engaging in separate activities—so long as they are able to do so independently and without disturbing others.  One of my students has always loved to draw dragons, and this is his invariable free choice activity.  When everyone moves to the rug for the read-aloud, he pulls out his sketchbook and begins to draw.  Sometimes his dragon pictures actually end up having something to do with what I’m reading aloud; sometimes they simply express whatever is going on in his own mind.

  • The read-aloud is used to engage kids in bringing a period of history or a certain situation they’ve read about in other contexts to life.

Students studying the pioneer period love hearing the Little House books read to them; I remember how the colonial and revolutionary period came alive for me when I read Johnny Tremaine. I link genre studies to our history units; we read Aesop’s fables when we study Ancient Greece and a number of Native American legends when we study early America. We explore the mystery genre by reading The Golden Goblet and A Place in the Sun when we study Egypt, and similar novels based in Rome and Greece. We study the Coming of Age genre when we study early man by reading Maroo and the Winter Cave, Boy of Painted Cave, and Dar and the Spear Thrower.

Very few of these texts are able to be accessed by my students on their own; hearing them read, with accents and emphasis, drama and even passion, helps the kids visualize and synthesize information they’ve been learning from their social studies textbooks.  It is important that kids learn that history is a live and pulsating thing, no question about that.  The plethora of excellent books for children and young adults about historical people and events is terrific.  Kids who cannot read them on their own will miss out on some wonderful pieces and likely will not be able to truly envision the times and circumstances about which they have studied.

On the other hand, they can gain some insights from more visual resources, including some of the great pictorial books about historical eras, films, and doing arts and crafts projects.  Just because a child doesn’t truly hear the story of how Laura Ingalls’ father built a log cabin doesn’t mean that she or he can’t find out about them by building a replica; we can learn about candlemaking from reading a story about Laura and her mother, or we can dip them ourselves.

When the child’s attention is essential…

If you determine that the child’s attention to the read-aloud is essential, and that you want to support his or her participation in the experience, there are a few things you can do as a part of the routine.

Here is a list of some strategies that have worked with some of my students with autism.   In addition to these, I’ve had great success with several of my students with autism by using a read-aloud in conjunction with exercises related to questioning as we read.   This intervention is discussed in another blog entry.

…five possible solution tipsTip!

  1. Give the student have a copy of the text to follow along with.  Having a visual aid is often helpful in keeping a child’s attention on the read-aloud.
  2. Make finger puppets or paper puppets on a craft stick for the child to hold up when a given character is speaking or discussed.  The child will follow along as you read more easily if he or she is waiting to hear from or about a character.
  3. Ask your students to provide the sound effects for a story.  If you are reading about a storm, set an auditory signal (“sound effects!” or “It sounded like….”) for them to begin making rain or thunder noises. A child with autism will try to pay attention for the opportunity to participate.
  4. Ask your student with autism to draw a picture of what you are reading as she or he listens.
  5. Rewrite passages from the text into a readers’ theater experience and assign your student with autism to one of the parts.   Let the kids practice and then perform for a small group.

No cookie cutter children!Cookie_Cutter_-_Man

Use these modifications sparingly.  If it’s really not important that the child be able to hear the read-aloud, don’t try to force it.  Save the interventions for times when it’s essential.  Readers with autism, by their very nature, do not fit into any cookie-cutter classroom view, and we need to pick and choose the times and methods of required conformance.

Related posts:

  1. When a reader with autism needs to respond to literature…
  2. Hearing the story in your head: The role of expressive reading
  3. Autism and hyperlexia, part 2: Helping Bobby read
  4. Say what? Asking questions as one reads
  5. Intermezzo: A word about the spectrum

8 Comments

  1. Posted July 31, 2010 at 5:37 pm | Permalink

    This is a great blog post with some wonderful suggestions too! Last year, I had a student that was autistic in my class, and I often recorded my read alouds ahead of time on the webcam. I then played the recording on the SMART Board. The SMART Board was a great visual for her (and for the other students too), and I found that this way allowed all of my students to get the most out of my read alouds.

    Next year, I have another student in my class that’s autistic, and I will use some of your suggestions too. Thanks for sharing them!

    Aviva

  2. avatar Allie
    Posted October 2, 2010 at 2:08 pm | Permalink

    I was glad you stressed there are no cookie cutter children. I am a teacher and a mom – a mom of a child with Asperger’s Syndrome. He is on the autism spectrum and loves nothing more than a read aloud. He will often mimic his teacher’s voice in retelling the story. Don’t ever assume when dealing with a child on the spectrum. Strive to meet them where they are.

  3. avatar Sara Finegan
    Posted October 2, 2010 at 3:27 pm | Permalink

    Allie:
    You are absolutely right. We must avoid stereotypes. While there are some characteristics that are common to people on the autism spectrum, this does not mean that all have them or that any have them all. When we focus on the child rather than the disability, we can identify what deficits or reading behaviors to address and won’t “try to fix what ain’t broke.” If, however, we assume that because a child has autism he can’t approach literature like neurotypical readers then we’re not really looking at that child, are we?

  4. avatar Mary Ann Tellock
    Posted October 4, 2010 at 7:23 am | Permalink

    Many autistic children won’t pick up on the abstract parts of a story. Sometimes a non-fiction book about the topic you want to teach will work better with them. Since many autistic children are also ADHD, sitting still is difficult (or impossible for some). They may still be hearing what is read aloud even if they appear to not be paying any attention.
    Being a librarian and mother to an autistic son, it was very difficult not being able to read a story to him. Progress was made when he would sit for a minute or two and we would look at and read the page(s) he was interested in…almost always non-fiction books. Now at age 17, he can browse through a non-fiction book and find parts he wants me to read to him.
    moral… don’t give up on them :)

  5. avatar Julie
    Posted October 15, 2010 at 2:51 pm | Permalink

    I have had some experiences working with children with Autism. I would caution teachers to assume that the child is not attending to the read-a-loud due to a lack of eye contact. At times my students have been attending to the story but not watching intently. Due to language delays and difficulty with generalization, my student’s answers to comprehension questions may seem off the mark. However, when questioned further, the student’s interpretation is colored by his or her vocabulary understanding. At times the student is able to remember minute details from the story and make comparisons at a later date.

    I would include in the tips, attention to vocabulary and particularly idioms in the same way you would for an ELL student.

  6. avatar Sara Finegan
    Posted October 15, 2010 at 3:48 pm | Permalink

    Julie:
    We tend to look to body language to determine whether someone is paying attention, and this is where we can fail our students with autism. They are not going to use expression and eye contact as means of communicating interest or focus, and we cannot expect them to. The fact that a child with autism does not LOOK like he is listening does not mean that he is off in his own world. We need to check for engagement in other ways.

    When body language does not help us to determine whether a child is paying attention, it is a normal human instinct, I think, to start asking questions. Here, again, our tried and true queries may not have the result we expect. Autism is, by its very nature, a disorder involving communication. Difficulty retrieving language for use, or in interpreting it can impair a child’s ability to respond to comprehension questions in ways that help us figure out what they know.

    Most of us realize this once we’ve spent time in a classroom with a student with autism. What we may not grasp so readily is the fact that in addition to all of the above, kids with autism may take longer to process auditory input. When you read me a story, I am attuned to the words and have expectations about what will be a part of it. I may be quietly listening, but my mind is absorbing the words quickly and interpreting the plot as it is woven.

    A child with autism or any other communication deficit may be processing far more slowly. Those words pile up in bunches and need time to slowly drift into order and form patterns in the child’s thoughts. It may be 10 minutes, or an hour, or a day before he or she can digest the words in the story and pull parts back up to talk about. This is not retardation or any other issue related to i.q., but simply a difference in the way language is absorbed and organized.

    I agree with you that preteaching vocabulary and idoms can be helpful. I also think that pre-reading charting and clear, efficient and very focused talk (not a lot of verbage) can help a child with autism prepare for a story by planting expectations in his or her mind.

    For example: This is a fairy tale. What do we know about fairy tales? We will probably see magical creatures. Let’s list some! There will probably be a villain, a bad guy or gal. etc.

    For example: This is a mystery. A mystery is a story where there’s a crime or problem that needs to be solved. The story will have clues that help solve the problem. We will be listening for clues.

    Thanks for your contribution to this topic!
    Sara

  7. avatar william horstman
    Posted December 18, 2010 at 10:52 am | Permalink

    I will try out some of these ideas on my 7 year old daughter Victoria who has high functioning autism and give more feedback when I can thank you for the tips.

  8. avatar Jae Keepers
    Posted August 25, 2011 at 11:13 am | Permalink

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3 Trackbacks

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Keisa Williams, Donna Bills. Donna Bills said: RT @keisawilliams: The problem of the read-aloud http://readerswithautism.com/2009/08/the-problem-of-the-read-aloud/ Great suggestions here! [...]

  2. [...] I had just read The Problem of the Read Aloud last week. In this post at Readerswith Autism.com, Sara Finegan shares some anecdotal situations [...]

  3. [...] The problem of the read-aloud – readerswithautism.com Read Alouds are a vital component of the literacy curriculum, yet many autistic children do not respond well to them. Advice on this issue is from the Readers with Autism blog.  [...]

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