So now that we all know that popcorn reading is the worst thing possible, how do you go about getting other teachers to stop doing it. I realize we don't have any control over anyone but ourselves, but when you see teachers practicing popcorn reading is there some way to tactfully tell them that it's a bad idea? Should you drop hints or give suggestions? Some of these teachers have been doing it for years. You would think they would want to know that it isn't the best way to have students practice reading, but these teachers could easily be offended. Do you think it is best to just lead by example and keep your mouth shut?
Monday, July 7, 2008
Group 1 - Leader 5 (I think)
Saturday, July 5, 2008
Group#10 Discussion Leader 5 Thomas Beckom
Is it wise however to block our children's supervised use of this technology? At my work (Don Hayden ES) and through out Clark County children do not get access to blogs or other user generated content for fear of them being exposed to innapropriate material. If the idea of WEB 2.0 user generated content is the wave of the future however are we doing our children a diservice through limiting them? If not how should we limit them? (i.e. district supervised user generated content and the like). Other random thoughts are welcome.
Friday, July 4, 2008
Group#8 Discussion Leader 5 Amanda Smith
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Group 9-different ideas
Another questions that I have been thinking about is reading and math blocks. Most classes have literacy in the morning and math and everything else in the afternoon. Do you think that it makes a difference which time you have these subjects? What do you think about some days mixing it up so there is math in the morning instead of the afternoon and the same with literacy...
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Group 3-Meghan North-New Literacies
Group 10 - Susan Crawford - Distance Education
Group 2 - Ashlee Kleber
The Glass Ceiling: Group 7 -Desiree' Hawkins
I feel as though teachers need to work with their students in taking goals seriously and committing themselves in trying to reach them. I believe that students' level of success will depend not only on the difficulty of the task itself but also on the degree to which you prepare them trough advanced instruction and assist their learning efforts through guidance and feedback.
Does anyone have any other ways they might motivate and engage their students to help them become successful academically?
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Group #6 - Leader #5
In my practicum placement I am in a third grade class comprised of predominantly Hispanic students. Of these students, Spanish was the first language their learned. They speak Spanish at home, with their friends off campus, during recess and lunch at school, and in the classroom when their teacher is out of earshot. Unfortunately, their literacy skills are below third grade average. There are two students in particular that are sent out during language arts and are in an ELL class. In this ELL class, the ELL teacher focuses on writing and the mechanics of grammar. She focuses more on writing than on reading. These two students have been in the ELL program for two years and are not demonstrating sufficient growth and progress. Their English skills are very weak and they can barely read in English. I think a major problem is in the ELL teacher's approach. I think she should be focusing more on reading than on writing. What do you all think? What approaches should the ELL teacher be taking to help these students become literate? What adaptions or modifications can the general education teacher make to the curriculum to help build the students' literacy skills.
- Liana
Group 1-Cara Morville-Creative Literacy Lesson
Monday, June 30, 2008
Group 5 Discussion Leader 5
Motivation and Scripted material
On Monday we were given some articles to read one was Assessing Motivation to Read.
You may want to take a look at the article for these questions.
1. Lets say you administer the motivation to read profile and you now know the motivation level of the student is low. When you begin changing things to motivate this student how do make sure that you aren’t simply:
a. Changing the requirements for required work?
b. Lowering the level of difficulty and not challenging their potential?
An example given in the article was: (If a child indicates on the survey that “reading is very hard” and that “reading is boring,” the teacher can suggest books of particular interest to the child that the child can read with ease. Pg 530)
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The motivation to read survey is designed to “initiate an informal, conversational exchange between the teacher and the student.”(pg 525) This section goes on describe how these interviews are social events that provide depth and valuable information. The conversational interviews are scripted but it’s recommended that the teacher deviate from the script in order to “glean information” that could otherwise be missed. So here’s the question.
2. Schools using scripted lessons are becoming more and more common.
a. Do you think the reasons the article lists for a teacher not to follow the script while
b. That they don’t provide depth, glean information, elicit insight and that they may miss
information?
c. Does a teacher interact and work with the student for their benefit while conducting an
interview in some of the same ways they would teaching a lesson?
d. Can we really compare these two things (conducting a motivation interview from a
script and teaching a scripted lesson)?
Thursday, June 26, 2008
No Parent Left Behind
No Parent Left Behind
These are real notes written by parents in a Tennessee school district.(spellings have been left intact.)
My son is under a doctor's care and should not take PE today. Please execute him.
Please exkuce Lisa for being absent she was sick and i had her shot.
Dear school: please ecsc's john being absent on Jan. 28, 29, 30, 31, 32 and also 33.- Please excuse Gloria from jim today. She is administrating.
- Please excuse Roland from P.E. for a few days. Yesterday he fell out of a tree and misplaced his hip.
- John has been absent because he had two teeth taken out of his face.
- Carlos was absent yesterday because he was playing football. He was hurt in the growing part.
- Megan could not come to school today because she has been bothered by very close veins.
- Chris will not be in school cus he has an acre in his side.
- Please excuse Ray Friday from school. He has very loose vowels.
- Please excuse Pedro from being absent yesterday. He had (diahre, dyrea, direathe), the shits. [Words in ( )'s were crossed out].
- Please excuse Tommy for being absent yesterday. He had diarrhea, and his boots leak.
- Irving was absent yesterday because he missed his bust.
- Please excuse Jimmy for being. It was his father's fault.
- I kept Billie home because she had to go Christmas shopping because I don't know what size she wear.
- Please excuse Jennifer for missing school yesterday. We forgot to get the Sunday paper off the porch, and when we found it Monday We thought it was Sunday.
- Sally won't be in school a week from Friday. We have to attend her funeral.
- My daughter was absent yesterday because she was tired. She spent a weekend with the marines.
- Please excuse Jason for being absent yesterday. He had a cold and could not breed well.
- Please excuse Mary for being absent yesterday. She was in bed with gramps.
- Gloria was absent yesterday as she was having a gangover
- Please excuse Brenda. She has been sick and under the doctor.
- Maryann was absent December 11-16, because she had a fever, sore throat, headache and upset stomach. Her sister was also sick, fever and sore throat, her brother had a low grade fever and ached all over. I wasn't the best either, sore throat and fever. There must be something going around, her father even got hot last night.
Now we know why parents are screaming for better education for our kids.
Group #5 - Discussion Leader #4
Has anyone seen a classroom that has a creative reading area for their students? If so, what did they do?
When we are dealing with small spaces what are some ideas we could use?
Do you think the group table in the back is enough?
Would you replace that table for a bean bag reading area instead?
Group 4: Discussion Leader #5
These tests were very time consuming and I do not see how a teacher could do these one student at a time. There is just not enough time in the day. I think it would probably take about half the year to assess each student on each of these tests if one teacher was doing it him or herself.
My favorite test to give would have to be the running record. I just thought that it was neat to make the marks and listen to how she would read things and how some things could be left out or completely changed. I also enjoyed tallying up the points at the end and making the decision what level she was best at. I just think that these assessments are really important if you want to get to know where your students stand. As a teacher it would help you to accommodate to their needs that way they can actually learn and not just struggle or things be too easy.
Group 2: Dicussion Leader # 4
Athena Ako
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Group 3- Leader #4- older literacy students & attitude
Group 3- older literacy students & attitude
Group 6- Leader #4 Michelle Saxe
I have decided to write about my tutoring experience and an issue that I have faced. Maybe there is some advice out there and some techniques that you could send along to me.
My tutee is a third grade student who will be entering into 4th grade this coming year. My issue with him, among many, is that he has issues in word study with vowels. I started working on long vowels with him, but he seemed to understand them well enough, that I decided to move on to something else. One of the issues that I am noticing with him is that he has trouble sounding out words, to figure out what they are, and he has trouble spelling them as well. I see these two things being related to one another. During the last session we were working on "ow" sound, say owww. But of course the english language is not perfect and so there are some exceptions to that rule, such as "tow" or "bow". So even though I explain it, he still really does not understand the reasoning behind it. Also, he never learned to count his vowels, so that the first one says its alphabet name and the second one is silent. Those kinds of things.
So my question is, how does a teacher or anyone for that matter, approach this kind of issue. Is this the situation where you start instilling these rules into the student?
Another thing is that, when we were writing today. My tutee was writing the word "looked" and he thought that it was "lookT" because of the way it sounds. It seems that he does this with many of his words. I do know that he is in the within word pattern stage, where they use and confuse vowels. But I'm not sure how you move a student like this further into the next level. I have used word builder cards as well as word sorts, but I feel kind of like I am out of ideas.
Thanks Group!! =)
Group 8 Leader # 4 Katie Allred
Group #4 Anila Hylviu
During my tutoring sessions,I have tried to connect reading and writing activities together,by encouraging my tutee to write about 1. something interesting she learned out of a book; 2. make comparisons between one of the characters of the book and family member/or a relative, 3. describe her favorite part of the book and explain why etc. I have noticed that she enjoyes writing the most, especially when she has something to share from her personl life. She feels so excited about that, and is quite eager to quickly jot down her ideas.
As future teachers, we should be cautious about the interests of our students, expose them to books which have meaning in their lives, and best of all provide ample opportunities for them to try to make connections and incorporate them in their writing. Isn't that afterall our job, to be aware of the students ' interests, and find ways to integrate them into literacy activities that are quite relevant and meanningful to the students? What do you others think?
Group 9 Leader # 4 Balyan
I am in a first grade classroom. The teacher of that certain classroom uses only graphic organizers (worksheets) for all subjects. She doesn't teach a lesson. She just hands out the papers and let them to work on their own. The classroom has students with different levels of education and some of them are not able to work alone. And basically they don't learn anything. They need someone who can help them to learn because that's why they come to school. I am worried about the kids in this classroom and all classrooms if they have teachers like the one in this classroom. I would like to know is this another method of teaching reading and writing, and math? She doesn't include social studies and science.
Group 7 - Discussion Leader #4 - Jennifer Moore
The groups consisted of 5 students, each one being assigned a job within the group. They were given laminated cards with their job descriptions on them. The jobs were as follows:
- Discussion Director: Your job is to make a list of "FAT" questions for your group to discuss. A "FAT" question can not be answered with yes or no. Write the discussion questions down in your reading notebook. A few sample questions might be.....What was going through your mind when you read this story? How did you feel while you read this story? What personal experience were you reminded of while you were reading? What suprised you while you read?
- Literary Luminary: Your job is to find several passages from the story that you would like to read aloud. Mark the passages with sticky notes & jot down why you thought the passages were important. A few sample passages might be.....something funny, something interesting, something confusing, something well-written, something new that you learned.
- Concept Connector: Your job is to make real life connections with the story. Look through the selection you read & think of something that the story made you think of. Mark the part of the story with sticky notes & jot down your ideas. A few samples of ideas of connections may be....a trip you have taken, an experience at school, something funny, another book you have read, something sad.
- Word Wizard: Your job is to make a list of interesting words from the story. Put sticky notes under each word you choose. In you reading notebook write the word, the page where it was found, and it's definition. During your sharing meeting, share the words with your literature circle. See if they can predict the meanings. A few kinds of words may be....funny words, unusual words, words used in a new way.
- Artful Artist: Your job is to make an illustration related to the story. Your illustration must be original. Keep your drawing to yourself. At the literature circle meeting, have each group member try to decide what you illustrated. After everyone has had a guess, share your picture. A few sample illustrations may be....a scene from the story, an exciting part of the story, a diagram, a main character's reaction to a problem.
The students were really motivated, they enjoyed being assigned a job and being in charge of that job. I love it when you get to see students really enjoy learning and have fun while they're doing it.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Group 1 - Discussion Leader 4
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Bilingual comprehension difficulties
major difficulties comprehending the second language.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Group 6 Kristi DeBerg
Group 9- Matthew Goode- Read Alouds
Group 1 Discussion Leader
As I was flipping through the book I came across the term “Goldilocks Strategy” developed by Oblhausen and Jepsen (1992). They suggest students choose books by categories “Too Easy” books, “Too Hard” books and “Just Right” books. This model comes from the folktale story book of “The Three Bears”. As I read the information, I thought about the kindergarten students I am observing using this model. Many students are still not reading but do recognize most letters. There are a few who able to read a couple of sentences as I noticed when they do reading activities on the computer. In the class I am in, students are able to pick their own book after all seat work is done. As I have observed, many students flip through their books fast, close the book and go get another one. Other students do take the time to create their own stories as they read. Then there is the neighbor student who just says “You can’t read that one because it’s too hard”. The student may ask why! The neighbor then replies “Look at how big it is”. Listening to their conversation made me think of the term “ Goldilocks Strategy“. I realize that this is not exactly how it’s suppose to work but I found it amusing. When you think its been a long day working with all those kinder students moments like this just help make the day better.
This strategy is suppose to work at all grade levels. Do you see it working out any different than I did for the Kindergarten student?
Group # 5
Group #2 discussion leader
I have a 2 questions to ask. Im in a first grade class and we have this student who is on a behavior plan, and his single parent mother is a elementry school teacher. He loves to prove the teacher wrong and talk back. He loves to get attention, and purposely misbehave. Last week we were doing father day poems to send home. As we were presenting the project the class was very excited. He yells out no , you know I hate doing anything about fathers. The class got silent and my teacher asked me to take him outside. She had a talk with him, but he constantly does things like this. He is a very bright boy but becomes unengaged in alot of the class activities, what could I do to help him become more behaved, and less of a distraction to the class? My next question is on a student who just came in as a new student last friday. He doesnt want to say a word to us, we have tried in english, and in spanish. He usually nods his head if its a yes or no question. He does his work in class, but up to now has not brought any homework back. He dosent talk to his peers either. I have tried talking to him one on one, but he won't budge. We have notified our speech therapist, and prinicpal. What could we do to make him speak it will be a week in 2 days ? We have had testing all this week in math, reading, and today writing. He did awful in math, very well in reading, and he got sick in the middle of his writing test today. We have also tried talking to his parents but they speak very little english, and don't seem to care. We checked his history, and he has been out of school since beginning of May. Any suggestions?
Group #8--PJ Cantwell--Rubrics
My age might show here, but I don't remember ever seeing anything like that when I was in school. (Of course, I went to Catholic school, and there is a great chance that rubrics are forbidden by the Vatican.) I have found that rubrics are extremely helpful because they clearly state what grade may be earned by explaining and articulating what criteria needs to be met. So my question is this: first, am I the only one who has recently been introduced to rubrics? Do you plan on using rubrics in your future classroom? If so, will you seek student input in the creation of your rubric?
Group 10- Justin Materna- Writing in the classroom
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Group 3-Taliah Gipson-Popcorn Reading
Group 4- Laura Brett- Guided Reading
There are five stages to move through with guided reading. From the text and class discussions they are pre-reading, reading, responding, exploring, and applying. I moved through each of these stages with all of my groups. My students seemed to thrive through the use of guided reading. The year before our school just used the basal reader and the whole grade was taught the same story and had to take the same comprehension test every Friday. This did not work well in my classroom because most of not all of my students were English Language Learners (ELL) and their primary language was Spanish. I am so glad our school district is slowly moving towards guided reading which allows teachers to develop more differentiated instruction since our students are each individuals.
As future teachers, will you implement guided reading in your classroom? Pretend a parent comes up to you during parent/teacher conferences and states they think guided reading is pointless because they learned from reading a textbook. What would you tell them to support your views and use of guided reading in your classroom?
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Group 7 Discussion Leader #2
I am tutoring a third grade boy who is reading at a seventh grade level. He has comprehension like you wouldn't believe-but his attention span is very short! My main focus with his is fluency and spelling (complex suffixes are difficult for him), so the familiar reading will help with fluency-but do you have any ideas for spelling that will keep his interest?
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Group 2 Discussion #2 Joan Phillips
I have two pre-K children, and one of my reading tutoring goals is to have them use prior knowledge and picture clues to aid in comprehension. Any ideas on activities and ways to document their progress?
Group 9 Discussion # 2 Monica Stirling
Group 8 Amber Thorsen (2)
Hi everyone,
My tutee is a five year old kindergartner. His teacher requested him to be held back and repeat kindergarten, if he doesn't repeat K, than his teacher is confident that he will need to repeat first grade. Of course, his mother doesn't want this to happen and has provided me with a list of areas he needs to work on. This list has become my goal guideline for lessons. Here are a few of the areas: know beginning and ending consonant letters and sounds, vowel patters, blending sounds, practicing reading using sight words and sounding out words. My question is: He is proficient when it comes to knowing all 26 letters of the alphabet and their individual sounds, but when I have him spell and say the words out loud listening for each beginning or ending sounds, he is not able to correctly answer. He is an ELL student and his mother has a hard time speaking English. Does anyone have any suggestions for activities that his mother could help him with, even though she doesn't speak fluent English?
Group 4-Discussion #2 Samantha Campbell
First, they all start out by prewriting. During this they are to draw a bubble map about one particular subject. The students are able to choose any subject that they want to add a little more creativity to their writing. Once they have made their bubble map they move onto drafting. When they have completed drafting, they move on to conference. The conference takes place with the teacher. The teacher and the student then sit together and discuss the student's writing. Once they both have gone over the story together the teacher gives the students 3 grades. One for genre, conventions, and composition. I found this technique of grading so useful because grading writing can be so hard especially at the primary grade levels. Once the teacher has given the child the grades they return to their seats to work on editing/revising and then they publish their work. Once they have published a story which includes drawing a picture to accompany their writing, they are able to share their stories with the class during sharing which happens right after lunch. The teacher as well as the students all know which stage of the writing process they are at because they are able to move a picture of themselves on a pocket chart located in the front of the classroom labeled Writing Workshop.
The students seem to really enjoy the way this system works. Especially when it is their turn to share. Once the students are finished sharing their story, they call on 3 students to tell them something they enjoyed about their story.
Like I mentioned, I have been learning so many useful techniques and feel as if I will never stop learning from others especially when I become a teacher.
Group 5 Reading Programs
The fist week of my practicum, I was placed in a second grade class and using these Voyager books, all the students did was read and then fill out worksheets. Then they went on break so I got switched to third grade. In this grade, it’s also Voyager but they have more hands-on activities. I have heard many different opinions on reading programs. Some teachers are completely against them and some in favor of them. I am not really familiar with any other reading programs and I wanted to know what you guys think of them.
Group 3 - # 2 reading for enjoyment
Group 10: Discussion #2 Kelly Shea
Group 6, Discussion Leader 2 Katie Yardley, "What is Comprehension?"
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Group 2- Tara Bauman- Phonemic Awareness
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Group 7 - Melissa Bower - Integrating Technology and Literacy
I believe this program is a great way for the students to have fun with the program while learning how to apply technology to their everyday lives, in bother reading and writing. The students can even use this program to create stories with pictures that they find or they create. On the other hand, nothing beats a pencil and paper with the system crashes or files get lost. So my question to you is this: How do you feel about integrating technology into the classroom when it comes to reading and writing? Do you think it is a good idea for each student to be able to access thier own laptop? Last, what would you do, as a teacher, if technology is required in your lessons but, you have a parent that refuses to let thier child use it?
Group 10-Lauren Fraser- Interest Inventory
Group 4—Deb Lim—Assessing Students’ Literacy Development
I was interested in the writing rubric on p. 313 as it very concisely outlines expectations, acting as a reference for both teacher and student. It is difficult to grade writing as opposed to mathematics, science, or another more linear subject because generally speaking, when it comes to language arts, “beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” It is practically impossible to be completely objective when you are reading someone else’s work. The writing may be perfectly coherent and well-expressed to one person and yet be absolutely confusing and senseless to another. That is why a rubric is valuable. It offers a tangible guideline for grading—something that holds both parties accountable. As a sideline, it also provides a safety net for teachers who need to explain their methods of marking to higher authorities or irate parents who believe their child deserved a higher grade.
Group 1-kindergarten-Wendy T.V. "Phonemic Awareness"
The kindergartens from my class are beginning to write simple sentences. Everyday they develop their ability to hear and manipulate the sounds of spoken language. The teacher reinforces their phonemic awareness through dynamic activities that direct their attention to sounds in words, such as rhyming and alliteration games. The teacher also allows them to experiment with the language and create their own rhyming words; however, in the end she makes sure to clarify which ones are make believe words. Everything goes well in the classroom, but when the children go home many of them do not get to practice what they have learned in class for they do not count with support and guidance at home. In addition, many of the children speak a language other than English, and therefore are not exposed to the sounds of the English language enough so as to increase phonemic awareness. How could we help these children to continue practicing in their home? What activities could effectively strengthen their ability to recognize and manipulate sounds of oral language -considering the fact that English is not the primary language spoken in their home?
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Group 6-De'Ana Mauldin-Balanced Literacy
Group 5-Shannon Lively-Reading
Group #8- Nadine Bauer, "Reading Assessments"
Monday, June 2, 2008
Group Three-Alexandria Smith-Interactive Writing
I have noticed, in the morning, with my practicum class that the teacher writes sentences on a white board and have the students correct them. There will be two sentences or one long sentence to correct. The teacher writes how many mistakes are in each sentence. The teacher reads it to them, gives them some clues and then gives them a couple of minutes to correct the mistakes or as many as they can find. The students also rewrite the sentence on a piece of paper that is provided. The teacher then gives them the answer. Do you think that it is a good idea to give out the answer or let some of the students to correct the sentences?