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Demystifying Small Group Instruction How to Deliver the Core and More!

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Presentation on theme: "Demystifying Small Group Instruction How to Deliver the Core and More!"— Presentation transcript:

1 Demystifying Small Group Instruction How to Deliver the Core and More!

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3 Meaning VisualStructure Does it make sense? Does it look right? Does it sound right? Can you say it that way? Sources of Information-Cueing Systems Prior Knowledge Sense of story Illustrations Oral language Knowledge of English Language Grammar patterns and language structure Concepts of print Sounds and symbols (Phonics) Link Symbol to Sound - Check Against Meaning - Confirm

4 What Does Small Group Look Like Across A Cycle? 3 Day Cycle Part 1 NBO and First Read w/ Prompting Comprehension Part 2 Rereading for practice strategies and reading for more fluent reading and Word Work Part 3 Reread with Comprehension and Writing (Interactive, Guided or Independent) Part 4 Restart the cycle *Some components may stretch over two days

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6 Recording Small Group Teaching

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8 Effective Teaching Practices Within the Components Comprehensive Literacy Across the Lesson Exposes Students to: Phonics Fluency Vocabulary Comprehension Phonemic Awareness

9 Video Segments to Watch (Teacher Resource Guide -Literacy Wings DVD) New Book Introduction “Jasper the Fat Cat” (What do we notice/ What is being emphasized?) Word Work “Learning the letter u” -different examples of letter work “Breaking a large word apart” (look-ing, go-ing) (What do you notice/ What is being emphasized?) Writing “All About Spiders” “Revisiting the story (reassemble cut up sentence) (What do you notice/ What is being emphasized?)

10 Assessing on the Run Progress Monitoring When do I veer from the sequence or accelerate the lessons? What are signs to move levels or reteach and stay on the level or drop back? Brainstorm Running Record Clip Lit Wings DVD Georgie the Giraffe- Discuss what was seen

11 Practicing Running Records (Optional) See more: http://www.eworkshop.on.ca/edu/core.cfm?p=main&modColour =1&modID=2&m=121&L=1

12 Next Steps… Parking Lot- Post It On Easel Things I Want To TryThings I Would Like To Work On

13 Fluency & Comprehension Phonics Phonemic Awareness Vocabulary and Comprehension

14 Quality Reading Time Reader/text match Access and choice Volume of deliberate practice Literate conversation v. interrogation Useful, explicit strategy instruction Coherence/coordination Allington

15     ’    

16 Reading is a Process Not A Procedure! You process information not check off a procedure.

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27 How Does a Classroom Support SRBI The concert of the class and the intervention

28 Six Steps in a Guided Reading Lesson 1)Introducing the Text 2)Supporting Effective Reading 3)Discussing and Revisiting the Text 4)Teaching for Processing Strategies 5)Extending the Meaning of the Text (optional) 6)Word Work (optional)

29 In Guided Reading, students read the text for themselves with the support of your strong introduction, which is the key to students understanding and successful problem solving on a challenging new text. The most important decisions in Guided Reading center on selecting and introducing the texts to readers. For the reader to use processing strategies to construct meaning, the text must be accessible, comprehensible, and offer the student opportunities to problem-solve and learn.

30 PLAN THE INTRODUCTION Jot down the important ideas that you want to be sure to mention. Notes might include:  1-2 sentences - main idea of the book  vocabulary to introduce and define  info about author, illustrator or genre  processing strategies to reinforce  text features or layout  unusual language structures  length of reading assignment  after-reading assignment

31 Plan for the Appropriate Level of Support The length of the introduction will depend on: complexity of text readers’ background knowledge readers’ experience with text features readers’ understanding of genre reading skills

32 Task: Book Introduction 1. Choose one of the books you brought to today’s session. 2. Applying the information you have just learned, plan a book introduction for your book. 3. Write down some possible ideas and main points for your introduction on the handout. (You may also want to refer to the Guiding Reading Teaching Card that accompanies your book.)


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