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Building Literacy for Life™. 2 Riverview Gardens Routines and Rituals Grades 3-6 August 8, 2012 Patty Brinkman.

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Presentation on theme: "Building Literacy for Life™. 2 Riverview Gardens Routines and Rituals Grades 3-6 August 8, 2012 Patty Brinkman."— Presentation transcript:

1 Building Literacy for Life™

2 2 Riverview Gardens Routines and Rituals Grades 3-6 August 8, 2012 Patty Brinkman

3 3 Session Objectives Examine the Gradual Release of Responsibility Model Explore a Community of Learners Examine Environments to Support Independent Learners Identify purpose of mini-lessons Understand characteristics of Independent Reading

4 4 What classroom management challenges do you anticipate when implementing balanced literacy? ? Table Brainstorm

5 5 Building a Community of Learners When you walk into a classroom, how do you know that the teacher has built or is in the process of building a community of learners where every child is valued?

6 6 Community of Learners Activity Think about a classroom where a community of learners has been created. What does this classroom look like? What does this classroom sound like? With your table, create a t-chart. Label one side “Looks Like” and the other side “Sounds Like”. As a table, list your ideas on each side. Choose a reporter and be ready to share.

7 7 Characteristics of a Community of Learners Teachers share their own reading and writing. Teachers stop students when a negative comment is made and redirect the behavior with a positive response. Teachers treat all students with respect. Teachers believe that everyone is a learner and has the ability to teach others what they know. Teachers create situations for students to work together and support each other in their learning.

8 8 Table Activity Number off one to five. Number 1 – Read and present to your table Share Reading and Writing. (p. 4) Number 2 – Read and present to your table Class Meetings. (p. 5) Number 3 – Read and present to your table Conferences. (p. 5) Number 4 – Read and present to your table Accountable Talk. (p.6) Number 5 – Read and present to your table Responding to Literature. (p.6) Tell at least two ways your section of reading will help build a community of learners.

9 9 Classroom Configuration What messages are we sending?

10 10 Traditional Classroom How it looks… What it says… Teacher: “I am the teacher. You will do as I say. Listen to me.” Students: “We are supposed to do what the teacher says. The teacher’s way is THE way” T - Debbie Diller, Spaces & Places, 2008

11 11 Connected Rows How it looks… What it says… Teacher: “I have the information. I want you to be part of my group, but I’m not ready for you to be on your own.” Students: “Watch the teacher. Stay in your seats. That’s where you do your work.” - Debbie Diller, Spaces & Places, 2008 T

12 12 Horseshoe How it looks… What it says… Teacher: “We will work together to learn. I’m not going to be the only one thinking. I’m interested in what you have to say.” Students: “We are going to be expected to think and participate. The teacher will lead our discussions.” - Debbie Diller, Spaces & Places, 2008 T

13 13 Table Groups How it looks… What it says… Teacher: “We will be learning together in lots of ways.” Students: “We are ALL learners and will work together. My ideas are valued here and will be used to help others.” - Debbie Diller, Spaces & Places, 2008 Small Groups Area T Whole Group Area

14 14 Classroom Configuration

15 15 Classroom Configuration

16 16 Classroom Libraries Activity Think, pair, share with your table. Think: What purpose does a classroom library serve? What does a classroom library need to look like? How would my students use a classroom library? Think about the questions with your partner. Share your ideas with your table.

17 17 Five Major Functions of Classroom Libraries Support literacy instruction Help students to learn about books Provide a central location for classroom resources Providing opportunities for independent reading and curricular extensions Serving as a place for students to talk about and interact with books S ource: Reutzel, D. R. & Fawson, P. C. (2002). Your Classroom Library: New Ways to Give it More Teaching Power. S c holastic.

18 18 Books in Classrooms Expand children’s literary experiences (classroom library, wide variety of genres and forms, topics, multicultural) Support research and inquiry (books in centers, big books, content area texts in centers) Promote the development of referencing skills (dictionaries, thesauri, encyclopedia) Aid children’s reading development (small group instructional reading/guided reading) Source: Fountas and Pinnell. Matching Books to Readers.

19 19 Setting Up Your Classroom Library Physical design/location Organization/storage of books and resources Selection criteria of materials for students and teachers

20 20 Classroom Library

21 21 Classroom Library

22 22 Classroom Library

23 23 Classroom Library

24 24 Texts to Include in Classroom Libraries Easy Allow readers to read quickly, focus on the meaning, develop fluency with little attention on decoding The reading is automatic, for most of the words read are known words Just Right Allow readers to learn more about the reading process Offer readers a variety of support in terms of text features with only a few challenges for problem solving activity Allow students to read at least 90% of a given text independently (with good phrasing and fluency) Challenging Most books at this level pose quite a problem for readers When a student is unable to read a text with at least 90% accuracy, the meaning is jeopardized and quickly begins to break down At this point, students may become quite frustrated Source: Fountas and Pinnell. Matching Books to Readers.

25 25 How Many Books in Our Classrooms? Lucy Calkins and Nancie Atwell: at least 20 per child Reutzel and Fawson: 300 to 375 minimum, 1500 to 2000 maximum (120 to 140 leveled texts) Richard Allington: at least 500 per classroom Regie Routman: an adequate classroom library will have at least 200 books, but an excellent library will have more than 1000

26 26 Growing Your Collection Public, School Libraries Book clubs/Bookstores (new and used) Garage Sales Donations (from teachers, families, community) Grants (local, state, federal) Fundraisers (PTA)

27 27 What is a Mini-Lesson? Corner # 1: – What are different purposes of a mini-lesson? (List) Corner # 2: – What is a procedural mini-lesson? (Examples) Corner # 3: – What is a strategies and skills mini-lesson? (Examples) Corner # 4: – What is a literary analysis mini-lesson? (Examples) Discuss and record your ideas. Be ready to share with the group.

28 28 Purpose of mini-lessons Learning about reading Short Interactive (anchor charts, sharing ) Strategies and Skills Metacognitive and comprehension strategies Fluency strategies Word Work Procedural How to manage materials How to work with others How to read independently Mini-Lessons Debrief Literary Analysis Genres Literary elements Book responses

29 29 The First 30 Days of School Find the calendar on p.18 of your Rituals and Routines Handbook. Notice that the first 30 mini-lessons have been planned. With your partner, study the calendar and pp. 19-49. Find an example of each of the three types of mini-lesson (procedural, strategies and skill, and literary analysis.) Be ready to share the lesson with your table. Include the type of the mini-lesson, how it would benefit your students, and how it would benefit you.

30 30 Anchor Chart - Procedural

31 31 Anchor Chart – Strategy/Skill

32 32 Anchor Chart – Literary Analysis

33 33 “For students of every ability and background, it’s the simple, miraculous act of reading a good book that turns them into readers, because even for the least experienced, most reluctant reader, it’s the one good book that changes everything.” -Nancie Atwell

34 34 Book Talks Book talks should include: Brief, enthusiastic endorsement of the book What you loved Rating (1 to 10) and why Key information (title, author, genre, etc.) and synopsis Enticing hint or interesting part

35 35 During independent reading… Reader’s response p.15-16 Conferring p.16 -17 Group share/ evaluation p.17 1.With your group, read assigned pages including any appendix pages. 2.Be prepared to share with the group at least 3 important points about your topic. 3.Record your ideas on chart paper.

36 36 Valuable Lessons Learned from Independent Reading How to self select an appropriate text to read independently Knowledge of the classroom library classification system (organization of texts by genre, subject matter, difficulty level, etc.) The proper care of texts and self management skills with the placement of books back in the appropriate area, section, and basket How to sustain/focus one’s attention on a text The language of writers/authors Motivation, attitudes, and habits of good readers

37 37 Independent Reading

38 38 Independent Reading

39 39 Independent Reading

40 40 Independent Readers Should: be matched to texts they can read and understand with 95% accuracy. read a text they enjoy daily. practice and try out strategies demonstrated during mini-lessons, shared reading and small group instructional reading monitor their reading, apply fix up strategies when the meaning or decoding breaks down. self-select appropriate texts within the range of texts found in the classroom library. talk with friends about selected and read texts (book clubs and discussion groups). periodically respond to their independent reading in writing. Source: Regie Routman. Reading Essentials.

41 41 “Independent reading is one of the most important times of my day, although it wasn’t always so. The turning point for me was realizing that I have to give children more time to read if I really expect them to read better. While I gave this notion lip service before, I didn’t fully understand its power. Learning to read involves applying strategies and skills to real texts, and that requires practice. Lots and lots of practice. In addition, the experience of reading has intrinsic rewards that lead children to want more. And the more they want it, the more they read, and the better they get.” -Sharon Taberski

42 42 What classroom management challenges do you anticipate when implementing balanced literacy? ? Table Brainstorm

43 43 Teacher Student Gradual Release of Responsibility in Reading Read Aloud Shared Reading Small Group Reading Instruction Independent Reading

44 44 Thinking About Instruction Think about the role of Benchmark Literacy in the Gradual Release of Instruction Model for Reading. Talk with your table and list the instructional strategies and resources Benchmark Literacy uses in each component. How does classroom management fit into each of these components? Choose a reporter, and be prepared to share.

45 45 Benchmark Literacy ComponentActivitiesResources Interactive Read-Aloud Shared Reading Small Group Instruction Independent Reading Handout

46 46 Benchmark Literacy ComponentActivitiesResources Interactive Read-Aloud Before Reading During Reading After Reading Getting Started Shared Reading Whole Group mini- lessons TRS Anchor Comprehension Poster Genre Study Reader’s Theater Small Group Instruction Small group Guided Reading Mini-lesson connection Instructional level text TG CTDR card Reader’s Theater Independent Reading Choice student reading at independent reading level Application of mini-lessons Reader’s Response Leveled text Classroom Library Various activities

47 47 Any questions about Benchmark Literacy? ? Benchmark Literacy Questions and Answers


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