Showing posts with label Reading Workshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading Workshop. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Notebook Connections
While traveling last week, I had the time to read Aimee Buckner's book Notebook Connections. As I stated earlier, I am really looking to "beef up" my student's reading responses this year. I have done workshop for a long time, and I have had my students respond to their reading, but not to the level that will help them to meet the CCSS. This book was a great read and really broadened my ideas!
I am still considering having the students choose from a variety of writing choices as I discussed in my earlier post, but instead of having them choose one response for me to score, I think that I will use Ms. Buckner's more holistic approach and collect their notebooks every two weeks and give them a grade for variety and depth of entries in the notebook. I will score the notebook and make one response in general to the four-five entries they have written.
Another goal for this year's reading workshop is to do a better job of using the notebooks while conferencing with students. I work hard to meet with students quite frequently, but I do not do a great job of reviewing and discussing their notebook entries with them. I want this to be an area where I grow this year.
I am now going to read Ms. Buckner's writing notebook book called Notebook KnowHow. I am sure that, while it focuses on writing workshop, it will still help me to continue to fine-tune my thoughts on student responses to reading.
Have you read either of these books? Do you have any ideas to share?
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Writing about Reading
What do you do to have your students write about their reading? This is an important part of reading workshop, and I have tried many different ideas. I am working to merge what my district wants with what I feel best about for my students.
My district uses reading and writing workshop for our literacy instruction. I love it! I have implemented reading workshop (in a variety of forms) for about 20 years now. One piece that I am working to make stronger is my students' thoughtful entries. I was having them write one strong blog entry a week plus a comment on another person's blog. This worked well for most, but for some of my students it was just too much.
Last school year, I made it one thoughtful blog entry every two weeks. This seemed more manageable for most of my kids and allowed for more time for them to read! However, about midway through the year, we were told that our kiddos should be completing two thoughtful entries PER WEEK! Ahh! Not only is that a lot of writing, it could also equal up to a lot of grading! Upon further exploration, we were told one should be a thoughtful entry and another could be a graphic organizer or something else that shows good thinking.
SOooooooooo...here I am trying to figure out how to do this and keep my mind. (what little is left of it) I am a huge believer in student choice. So I am going to set my students up in a two week rotation. Every week, half of the class will be responsible for choosing one of the responses they have done in the last two weeks and turn it in to be scored.
My current plan is that each student will have one of these in their binder and will check off as they finish different responses in the two week period. When they choose which one they want to submit for me to score, they will mark it on this chart, too. That way they will be able to see if they are offering me diverse responses to score. (The tweets and book tree options will probably not be offered as scorable opportunities) The blank columns are for weeks when they are given a different type of response option.
This is TOTALLY still a work in progress. Thoughts? Ideas? Do you have a thoughtful response method that you find to be really valuable? I want this to be good learning for the students, but I also want them to have some control, too!
PLEASE...
Share your thoughts and ideas.
My district uses reading and writing workshop for our literacy instruction. I love it! I have implemented reading workshop (in a variety of forms) for about 20 years now. One piece that I am working to make stronger is my students' thoughtful entries. I was having them write one strong blog entry a week plus a comment on another person's blog. This worked well for most, but for some of my students it was just too much.
Last school year, I made it one thoughtful blog entry every two weeks. This seemed more manageable for most of my kids and allowed for more time for them to read! However, about midway through the year, we were told that our kiddos should be completing two thoughtful entries PER WEEK! Ahh! Not only is that a lot of writing, it could also equal up to a lot of grading! Upon further exploration, we were told one should be a thoughtful entry and another could be a graphic organizer or something else that shows good thinking.
SOooooooooo...here I am trying to figure out how to do this and keep my mind. (what little is left of it) I am a huge believer in student choice. So I am going to set my students up in a two week rotation. Every week, half of the class will be responsible for choosing one of the responses they have done in the last two weeks and turn it in to be scored.
My current plan is that each student will have one of these in their binder and will check off as they finish different responses in the two week period. When they choose which one they want to submit for me to score, they will mark it on this chart, too. That way they will be able to see if they are offering me diverse responses to score. (The tweets and book tree options will probably not be offered as scorable opportunities) The blank columns are for weeks when they are given a different type of response option.
This is TOTALLY still a work in progress. Thoughts? Ideas? Do you have a thoughtful response method that you find to be really valuable? I want this to be good learning for the students, but I also want them to have some control, too!
PLEASE...
Share your thoughts and ideas.
Monday, February 20, 2012
A little winter reading...
I have been on a major reading kick lately. I am a reader, and always have been, but sometimes life gets in the way of getting a lot of reading for myself done. However, I have been enjoying the new year by doing a lot of reading just for me!


I then moved into The Report Card by Andrew Clements. I enjoyed this one as well. I liked the message, amd I have always enjoyed this author's voice. I could see many of my students enjoying this one.
The next thing I knew, I was wrapped up in The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel. This 5 (soon to be 6) book series is one that has taken my classroom by storm. I have had the first three books in my library for a couple of years, but I finally picked it up to start in January.

As I began the first in the series, The Alchemyst, I knew that my group of voracious readers would LOVE this series. They had enjoyed reading Harry Potter and Percy Jackson, and in some ways, this series is a marriage of these two ideas. Readers get to enjoy the magic of Harry Potter, but they also get to learn about mythology as they did in Percy Jackson.
For mythology, this book covers most cultures' mythology. It makes it interesting to imagine all of the different gods interacting with each other.

Of course, I knew my kiddos would love the action, and all of the books n this series offer plenty of this. I was pushed to read the books quickly so that I could get them to a boy in the classroom reading it. The next thing I knew, students were checking books out from the library and purchasing copies from bookstores. They have found out that the final book in the series comes out in May, so I will have to get it so we can end our year with this book.

While cleaning recently, I came across Waiting for Normal by Leslie Connor. This was certainly a change from the Nicholas Flamel world that had overtaken my reading. But it was a good one to read and to take me back to why I fell in love with adolescent literature.

The next two I am going to give a go are Fablehaven by Brandon Mull and, in an effort to find something appealing to my more reluctant readers, Dragonbreath: The Curse of the Wereweiner by Ursula Vernon.
Do you find yourself reading children's books a lot, too? Do you have any special ones that you recommend for me or my voracious 3rd graders? It makes my workshop and my conferences much stronger when I can talk books with my students and know exactly what they are talking about in the books they are reading!
Besides that, it makes it a lot easier for me to talk the talk to my kids about the importance of reading when they know I walk the walk!

Sunday, February 19, 2012
Enhancing reading responses with technology
So many of us use reading responses in our classrooms. Over the years, I have tried many ways to get kids to respond to literatures. I began with reading response journals, in which I had students write every day. I then graded them every other week. That was not very effective--for the kids and me--mainly because I am not disciplined enough to sit and grade all of the journals in one sitting. (I find too many other things to do. :))
I have also used letters to the teacher. My students would write me a letter every week telling me about the book and using a thinking stem in their writing.
Currently, I am using kidblog.org . I LOVE IT! It has really helped to build a community of readers in our classroom. Students are required a post per week, but I do allow extra posts for extra credit. Students are just beginning to be required to make a comment per week, but most of them have been making comments from the beginning. (I have the comments set so that I have to approve them.) Typically their writing includes a few lines about the book, and then they break into a thinking stem. They do pretty well with this. Some of my kids give me a much improved response over what they would give me if they were writing. I score the entry in the comments section of the post and mark it so that only the student can see my comments and their score.
Recently, I have begun "mixing it up" by changing the assignment each week. (I have to thank Pat at A Time to Share and Create. She gave me the first idea months ago) I have found some great sites for the kids to respond to their story in a more unique way. They complete the assigned task and then embed it or link it to the blogpost. It has been very popular, and students are even more eager to read each other's posts so that they can see what others are doing.
Here are some of the things we have used or plan to use.
WORDLE: I am a huge Wordle fan. We use it a lot, but due to paper and ink restrictions, it is not feasible to print them out. Using Wordle on the computer, the kids create their wordle about their book or a character in the book and then use the snipping tool to take a picture of it. They save the image on their computer and then insert it into the post.
BOOK TRAILERS/WEBSITES: Students are assigned to find a book trailer about their book or to find a website about the book or author and insert it in their book. (I do have to point out to the students that they are not to use sites that are selling the book like Amazon.) This is a great search for kids, and they have fun looking and watching for book trailers. Scholastic has a good number of book trailers, and many kids found them on School Tube, too. The one below is one I posted in my blog for the kids. They are really into this series right now.
JIGSAW PUZZLES: This is from Classtools.net. It is a jigsaw puzzle where students make statements and connect them to corresponding ideas. The puzzles can be embedded.
VENN DIAGRAMS: Another one from Classtools.net. Just as it sounds, students make a venn diagram and embed it into their blog.
TWISTER: This one creates fake tweets. I haven't used it yet, but I think it would be great for kids to choose a character from their book and have them create a tweet that that person might share with the world if they could. This is also from Classtools.net.
GLOGSTER: Glogster is a great site where kids create a glog ( interactive poster) of their book where they can have images, text, design and media elements. Students just put the link to their glog into the blog post.
VOKI: My students love Voki. They create the avatar and then add the text that they want him/her to say. This would be another good character study activity. The voki can be embedded into their blog.
Not only are my students sharing about their books, but they are also learning so much about web tools and sharing their creations. I also like the creativity and originality that students use in their posts. I try to be sure to assign a more traditional post regularly, too. Do you have any other great reading response ideas to share? I love to hear your ideas/comments!
I have also used letters to the teacher. My students would write me a letter every week telling me about the book and using a thinking stem in their writing.
Currently, I am using kidblog.org . I LOVE IT! It has really helped to build a community of readers in our classroom. Students are required a post per week, but I do allow extra posts for extra credit. Students are just beginning to be required to make a comment per week, but most of them have been making comments from the beginning. (I have the comments set so that I have to approve them.) Typically their writing includes a few lines about the book, and then they break into a thinking stem. They do pretty well with this. Some of my kids give me a much improved response over what they would give me if they were writing. I score the entry in the comments section of the post and mark it so that only the student can see my comments and their score.
Recently, I have begun "mixing it up" by changing the assignment each week. (I have to thank Pat at A Time to Share and Create. She gave me the first idea months ago) I have found some great sites for the kids to respond to their story in a more unique way. They complete the assigned task and then embed it or link it to the blogpost. It has been very popular, and students are even more eager to read each other's posts so that they can see what others are doing.
Here are some of the things we have used or plan to use.
WORDLE: I am a huge Wordle fan. We use it a lot, but due to paper and ink restrictions, it is not feasible to print them out. Using Wordle on the computer, the kids create their wordle about their book or a character in the book and then use the snipping tool to take a picture of it. They save the image on their computer and then insert it into the post.
BOOK TRAILERS/WEBSITES: Students are assigned to find a book trailer about their book or to find a website about the book or author and insert it in their book. (I do have to point out to the students that they are not to use sites that are selling the book like Amazon.) This is a great search for kids, and they have fun looking and watching for book trailers. Scholastic has a good number of book trailers, and many kids found them on School Tube, too. The one below is one I posted in my blog for the kids. They are really into this series right now.
VENN DIAGRAMS: Another one from Classtools.net. Just as it sounds, students make a venn diagram and embed it into their blog.
TWISTER: This one creates fake tweets. I haven't used it yet, but I think it would be great for kids to choose a character from their book and have them create a tweet that that person might share with the world if they could. This is also from Classtools.net.
GLOGSTER: Glogster is a great site where kids create a glog ( interactive poster) of their book where they can have images, text, design and media elements. Students just put the link to their glog into the blog post.
VOKI: My students love Voki. They create the avatar and then add the text that they want him/her to say. This would be another good character study activity. The voki can be embedded into their blog.

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!
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.
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.
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Book Whisperer Chapter 4
Discussion Questions:
1) How do you plan to give your students reading freedom?
2) What are your favourite reading lessons to start the school year with?
3) What would your genre requirement look like? Why would you pick these genres?
4) As we are half way through The Book Whisperer what goals have you made for your reading program for this coming school year?
I am in the habit of giving my students reading freedom. When we conference, I may try to nudge them another way, but I let them go with what they want if they want. I think it is important.
I start the year with a lot of focus on Choosing Good-Fit books. 3rd graders are all over the place in their reading abilities at the beginning of the year, and that is ok. We talk about that point a lot so that everyone is comfortable reading what they need to without embarrassment. We also talk about the different ways a person can read a book. These lessons are designed to really help build community. Depending on the makeup of my class, sometimes these are easy lessons that have to be done only at the beginning of the year, and sometimes we have to review them at different times throughout the year.
I have really thought about this reading requirement. 3rd graders are typically still such novice readers, and I really want to build confidence. However, I also like to set high expectations. I have decided to go with a 40 book requirement, but I am going to be sure to stress to parents that it is not for a grade, and the students will not be punished if they don't meet it. I will review with them the importance of reading for pleasure, the value of reading different genres, and my desire to challenge their children.
Here is my 40 book requirement by genre:
realistic fiction--2
historical fiction--2
graphic novel--2
fantasy--2
science fiction--2
biography/autobiography--2
books recommended by friends--2
informative books--6
picture books--10
free choice books--10
Here are my reasons for some of the choices: I intentionally left poetry out, because we read poetry each week together, and the students do 4-5 poetry recitals a year where they must look through poems, choose one, and read it to the class later in the week. I read them poetry a lot, too, so I feel like they are very exposed.
I added picture books because they are so integral to our classroom, and my students enjoy reading them. They will be an easy way for them to boost their numbers and gain some confidence. Besides, for some of the year, picture books are just-right books for some of my students.
I added a category called books recommended by friends because we spend a lot of time talking about books, and I want them to see how that can carry over. I am going to work harder to remember to share with them who recommended the books that I read. I want it to be a real-world reading thing.
My genre choices are all 2 books. I want them to get more than one taste of a genre, but I didn't want to favor any genre over another. If a student really enjoys a genre, they will have the opportunity to explore it more in their free choices.
My biggest goal for this year is to require more student accountability. I am going to pay more attention to their Daily 5 check ins, conference about their blog entries, and monitor the 40 book requirement with each student. I will have to work to find a good balance between this accountability and the freedom that Ms. Miller describes.
1) How do you plan to give your students reading freedom?
2) What are your favourite reading lessons to start the school year with?
3) What would your genre requirement look like? Why would you pick these genres?
4) As we are half way through The Book Whisperer what goals have you made for your reading program for this coming school year?
I am in the habit of giving my students reading freedom. When we conference, I may try to nudge them another way, but I let them go with what they want if they want. I think it is important.
I start the year with a lot of focus on Choosing Good-Fit books. 3rd graders are all over the place in their reading abilities at the beginning of the year, and that is ok. We talk about that point a lot so that everyone is comfortable reading what they need to without embarrassment. We also talk about the different ways a person can read a book. These lessons are designed to really help build community. Depending on the makeup of my class, sometimes these are easy lessons that have to be done only at the beginning of the year, and sometimes we have to review them at different times throughout the year.
I have really thought about this reading requirement. 3rd graders are typically still such novice readers, and I really want to build confidence. However, I also like to set high expectations. I have decided to go with a 40 book requirement, but I am going to be sure to stress to parents that it is not for a grade, and the students will not be punished if they don't meet it. I will review with them the importance of reading for pleasure, the value of reading different genres, and my desire to challenge their children.
Here is my 40 book requirement by genre:
realistic fiction--2
historical fiction--2
graphic novel--2
fantasy--2
science fiction--2
biography/autobiography--2
books recommended by friends--2
informative books--6
picture books--10
free choice books--10
Here are my reasons for some of the choices: I intentionally left poetry out, because we read poetry each week together, and the students do 4-5 poetry recitals a year where they must look through poems, choose one, and read it to the class later in the week. I read them poetry a lot, too, so I feel like they are very exposed.
I added picture books because they are so integral to our classroom, and my students enjoy reading them. They will be an easy way for them to boost their numbers and gain some confidence. Besides, for some of the year, picture books are just-right books for some of my students.
I added a category called books recommended by friends because we spend a lot of time talking about books, and I want them to see how that can carry over. I am going to work harder to remember to share with them who recommended the books that I read. I want it to be a real-world reading thing.
My genre choices are all 2 books. I want them to get more than one taste of a genre, but I didn't want to favor any genre over another. If a student really enjoys a genre, they will have the opportunity to explore it more in their free choices.
My biggest goal for this year is to require more student accountability. I am going to pay more attention to their Daily 5 check ins, conference about their blog entries, and monitor the 40 book requirement with each student. I will have to work to find a good balance between this accountability and the freedom that Ms. Miller describes.
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!
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!
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!
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