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Motivating Young Readers in Your Classroom
EDC423 Dr. Julie Coiro
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Today’s Learning Objectives
Synthesize key ideas about motivation, classroom culture and literacy instruction Brooke, Bookmarks, John Guthrie, Technology Identify the “main idea” vs. a “big idea” Discuss ways to launch a book (pre-reading activity) to engage readers with the big idea (will carry over to Thursday)
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Housekeeping Return Book Activity 1: Inferring and provide feedback
Additional Resources on the wiki about designing your classroom community
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Think-Aloud: Inferring Example
Model (give multiple examples; ask questions later); Define (give explicit definition) and give a purpose/use for Bear was dressed in his finest coat and vest. He was wearing his best derby hat and his shiniest shoes. “I’m inferring that Bear is trying to impress people and be the best he can be, because I am reading words like “finest” and “best” and thinking that this means something special is coming.
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What is literacy motivation?
The reasons, purposes, and goals for reading and writing - They are multidimensional (many levels and layers) and diverse (many reasons) Do you like to read? Write? Are you good at reading? Writing? What do you read? What do you write? Why do you read? Why do you write?
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Types of motivation Intrinsic motivations Extrinsic motivations
Sweet & Guthrie, 1996 Integrated instruction and self-directed learning Intrinsic motivations Goals that are internal to the learner and guided by personal interests and private experiences (curiosity, involvement, social interaction, and challenge) Extrinsic motivations Goals that originate outside the learner (often guided by parents and/or teachers) - guided by points, stars, external rewards Skill-building in a sequential curriculum
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Why is motivation important?
Cornett, Ch. 6 Intrinsically motivated readers are... more proficient readers more knowledgeable > higher achievers purposeful and goal-directed more likely to see learning as fun willing to work hard Motivating tasks, texts, teachers, and classroom contexts create motivated learners
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How can we foster motivation in our classrooms?
Brooke’s synthesis of webinar Turning K-6 Students Onto Reading and Writing (with Anna Shults, Literacy Specialist from Indiana Department of Education)
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Eight distinct motivations for literacy (Sweet & Guthrie, 1996)
Involvement Curiosity Challenge Social Interaction Compliance motivation Recognition Competition Work Avoidance INTRINSIC MOTIVATION EXTRINSIC MOTIVATION
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John Guthrie (Concept Oriented Reading Instruction) CORI
MOTIVATING Success Thematic Reading Choice Relevance Collaboration Respect, safety, clarity, helpful NOT MOTIVATING Failure & no feedback Fragmented topics No control over choice Hard to relate to Only independent reading Fear, unimportance, unwillingness to scaffold
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John Guthrie, Univ. of Maryland
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My Bookmark for Chapter 6
Students need A, B, C’s …. Achievement Belonging Control Teachers provide IC7Plus… Interesting topics Choice, Control, Challenging Content, Collaboration & Community, Constructive Feedback (I see, I hear, I noticed) Plus technology (diverse multimedia texts)) I C 7 Plus
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Online Reading Locations to Motivate Young Readers
There’s TONS of informational text at a reading level kids can enjoy!
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Identifying the Main Ideas and Big Idea and then
Identifying the Main Ideas and Big Idea and then.. Launching a Book to Engage Readers with The Big Idea
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Main Idea vs. Big Idea Main Idea: Molly’s grandmother teaches her how to stay happy when her friends pick on her Big Idea: Confidence and pride gives you strength when things get hard Extend, Connect, and Engage >> Wilma Rudolph
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Main Idea vs. Big Idea You Try…
Extend, Connect, & Engage >>
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Teachers Modeling Big Ideas
Gr. 3 Each Little Bird That Sings: What do your conversations say about you? Gr. 4 Trumpet of the Swan: How does an important learning experience affect a person’s life?
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Students Crafting Big Ideas
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What quick technique is used to draw readers in?
“I know there’s a way to get the honey from comb into the jar, but I just can’t figure it out but professional beekeepers like Dave Smith can fill a jar like this and a hundred others in no time at all!
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Launching A Book To Engage Readers with The Big Idea
In a neighborhood, you can get to know people who are different than you and end up being great friends.
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How would you launch these books with the big idea in mind?
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Homework Read Chapter 4: Assessing Learners to Plan and Differentiate Instruction Using the Five Factors (learner, task, text, context, and teaching) for Assessment What is Assessment for Learning and how does it relate to differentiated instruction? ** PARTICULAR
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