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Showing posts with label CAFE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CAFE. Show all posts

Monday, June 18, 2012

My First Monday Made-It!

I have been enjoying watching everyone's ideas in Tara's Monday Made Its, so I decided to join in the fun this week.  Click on Tara's button to go to the rest of the projects.


I have been busy making things for the new year.  I just can't totally complete anything that I have yet because I won't receive my class list until the week before school.  :(

I know everyone else is sharing cute, craftsy things, and that is my goal for next week, but here's what I have for this week...

I have been working on my "supporting papers" for the classroom.  My school's mascot is the Bears, so that is kind of my theme...(I am not attaching a link to these, but if you would like to have them, just let me know...:))




These are inserts for the front of their Daily 5 BinderNotebook and their portfolio notebook.



These are my new CAFE title pages.  I plan to make some for my 6+1 Writing Menu, too...





These are the labels for their book baskets.



As I have said before,  I am going to try using a math notebook this year.  I made some wonderful little matching inserts using information that I got from Doris over at Third Grade Thinkers.  She had a great post with lots of journaling info and some freebies from her TpT store.

I still have to create some labels, and some other little things, but these were a great thing to get done and out of my hair!  :)  Not that they are really "out of my hair..."  I still have to personalize them, print them and laminate some of them.  :(

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

A Great Start to growing readers and writers!

   I am so pleased with the way our literacy block is working!  These kids are doing a GREAT job!  I have my own little version of the Daily 5, and I continue to tweak it each year to make it stronger.  Students get two 20-25 minutes block per day where they can choose to read to self, write, or work with words.  The rest of our literacy time is used for student sharing, minilesson, Superspeed 100 (a word fluency program), partner reading,  and a group choral reading.  I have students listen to me read at another time of the day, and I do my writing mini-lesson at another time as well.

   In their Daily 5 binders, they mark down their choices for their independent work time.  They are all picking up on the routine of it all very well.  This is the second week that we have really been doing it, and it amazes me each day how well they are doing!  It is so exciting.

   I am also using some ideas I got from The Book Whisperer and Igniting a Passion for Reading, books that I read this summer.  When someone comes in my room to ask a question or some other interruption occurs, my students pick up their books and read.  I am also finding students filling in book recommendation slips to hang on our bulletin board. 

   I am excited about our little reading community, and I am looking forward to its growing stronger.  I am done Fountas and Pinnelling for the 1st Benchmark (We only have to level those who are below level on our screener, but I had 10 who were low or concerned me in other ways.), so now I really get to conference with my students and begin my small groups in earnest.  It is great.  It makes me wish I had even more than my 90 minute block. 

  The little things like this are what remind me of why I became a teacher.  I hope the rest of the year keeps going so smoothly!

 

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Do you use the CAFE Interactive Menu?

This will be my 3rd year using the CAFE in my classroom. I continue to change and tweak little things about it, but in most ways, I stay true to the format discussed in the book.

I do not belong to the website, although I think that this year I am going to go ahead and spend the money. However, I do reference the site regularly for ideas. I also receive the weekly tip from the site.

However, without a doubt, my favorite thing to use on the site is The Interactive CAFE Menu.  It is such a help!  I go there if I am looking for a new book to use which supports a strategy.  Sometimes there are other resources that I find inside each strategy that are available to nonmembers.  When you follow the link, all you have to do is click on the strategy you are interested in, and it will give you a list of resources which might help support that skill.

Even if you are not using the CAFE in your classroom, you should check out this menu.  It is a wonderful resource for all teachers.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Thinking about CAFE

So many people are talking CAFE and Daily 5 right now, it is hard to slow my thoughts down!

One great thing I have found to do: 

It is important to focus on only one strategy when you are doing a minilesson, but it is HARD!  As a good reader, I want to stop and talk about other things I notice, and inevitably, my students do, too! 

As we acquire more and more skills, and our CAFE board starts to look like there is something on the menu, I take a day where we read a new book and see how many of our strategies we use while reading it.  I have little post-its, and when a child uses a strategy on the menu board, he gets to go put a post-it on that strategy.  As students use other strategies, we do the same thing.  When we finish the book, we look to see how many strategies we used, and we discuss the importance of so many strategies.  It is a great lesson, and we do it 2-3 times a year. 

The visual of the CAFE board is a great asset to this whole workshop approach, but for this lesson, it is essential!

Friday, July 8, 2011

Reading workshop that works for me

I have had a couple of people ask about my reading workshop, so I am going to try to explain it.  I have been doing some sort of this for many years, so I just keep tweaking it to adjust to my changes, my students, and my school's expectations.

Every day, my students participate in independent reading, choral reading, partner reading, listening to read-aloud, and writing.  Most days, they also participate in a word work activity.  While I do kind of use the Daily 5, Students only get to choose when to do independent word work, self-selected reading or independent writing.  I typically designate the time where they will partner read and when they will listen to reading.  (I know this is not completely aligned with the Daily 5, but it is what I have found that I am most comfortable with)

Currently, I have an hour and a half of interrupted literacy time daily.  In addition, I have 20 minutes to a half hour dedicated to read-aloud, and another half-hour (4x per week) dedicated to writing/grammar lessons.  Some days, I use my social studies or science time to squeeze in partner reading or word work.

My hour and a half block looks KIND OF like this: 

We start with a 5-10 minute time period where we practice reading aloud a poem or quote that I have chosen for the week.  Throughout the week, we discuss its meaning, rhyme scheme, interesting words, places for expression...as well as reading it as a class.  Some days we read whole group, some days in rounds, some days just boys, some days with partners...you get the idea.  These are usually seasonal or inspirational poems or quotes and really exposes kids to thinking about the meaning and word choice of authors.

Next we have a 25 minute block where students can choose whether they would like to read/write/or do word work.

After this first block, a student (who has been assigned) gets up to share reading and another gets up to share a recent writing.  I keep a calendar of this information so that everyone is responsible for sharing both a reading/writing monthly.  This takes about 5-10 minutes.

Next, I typically do a whole class mini-lesson introducing or reviewing a skill on our CAFE menu.  I often use picture books or articles during this time.  When I am done, students are placed with partners in real text.  Using this text, they are asked to practice the skill that we just talked about.  I use a lot of book excerpts, children's magazines, and comic strips for this partner reading.  All of this takes about 20-25 minutes.

Once we complete this whole class activity, students move into another 25 minute block where they get to choose again whether they are doing word work, self-selected reading, or independent writing.

Some days our 90 minute block runs over just a little.. but not too much.  I hate being too off schedule.  :)

Now-during those 25 minute blocks, I work with CAFE skill groups, word groups, guided reading groups or lit circles, and do individual conferences.  I like my CAFE, because it forces me to make my conferences short and sweet.  I listen to the child read, discuss how he feels about his reading, and review his current focus skill with him.  I schedule about 4-5 conferences a day.  I meet with kids who have higher needs a lot more often than those kids who do not need as much support.  (3x a week versus once every 2 weeks)

In addition, my students have a weekly writing assignment that should be completed prior to independent writing for the week, and a words activity assigned for each week,too.  This year, they will write about reading through kidblog, and they will have various opportunities to do this. When I conference or work with small groups, I often try to support them in these assignments.

Students are encouraged to discuss ideas with partners and to review each other's work, but some are not assertive enough for this, so I often have to "prod them along.."  I do this by occasionally making partner reviews part of the writing process or asking them to think, pair, share during class lessons.

I also use my daily read-aloud time to review/introduce CAFE skills, have book discussions, and to read like a writer.  I like it because it helps to build community.  At the end of each novel, students choose one main character to illustrate.  I choose my favorites to represent each character, and we add them to a classroom display called "What a Character!"  We use this wall all year long to remember previous characters/stories, to compare and contrast characters, and to ponder how certain characters would act in certain situations.

During my daily writing lesson, we discuss things like:   the weekly writing assignment, its challenges, and its rubric and expectations, work on key writing skills including conventions, organization, voice, and word choice, and we also have some days where we just write--by ourselves, with partners, or in small groups.

This may sound like a lot of rambling, but I hope not.  I hope that it kind of gives you an idea of what literacy in my classroom kind-of looks like most days.  Not everything is set in stone, and I do use other elements occasionally, too.  Right now, this works well for me, and my students like it, too.  It is structured, but they have a lot of opporunity for choice.

Things that really haven't changed in 15 years of workshop approach--student choice, student sharing of books and writing, teacher conferences, and teacher listening to students read aloud during independent reading.  Other things come and go or we do more or less of them,but typically these elements have been there from the beginning, and I don't have big plans of them going anywhere!