Posts Tagged ‘Guided Reading’

Instructional Technology: E-Books

March 9, 2012 |  by Jennifer Boyle  |  Technology  |  No Comments  |  Share

Reaching our students—easier or more difficult than before? To answer, go back to your first year of teaching or your freshman year of high school when your teachers were reaching you, or trying to.

In the digital era, we may feel like shouting or at least hitting Caps Lock before responding: more difficult!  The sense of competition with digital tools breeds a kind of exasperation—how do I get my students’ attention, much less sustain it for an entire lesson and string enough of these together to cover the standards?

When we leverage the digital tools that define our students as digital residents and make their tools our tools, we get closer to reaching them at the very least. Michael Smith and Jeffrey Wilhelm have long advocated bringing together in-school and out-of-school literacies (Michael W. Smith, Temple University, Jeffrey D. Wilhelm, Boise State University).

The E-Book Experience

Daily independent reading on wide-ranging topics and across varied genres is a key way our students become proficient readers as they increase vocabulary, and apply metacognitive and comprehension strategies, while gaining information.  This is not news to our ears!  Using e-books can bring together our students’ digital residency with best practices we know that align to balanced literacy.  CAN, but how? In conversations I’ve had with teachers in many school districts, I hear the concerns:

How do we provide students with appropriate texts, matched to their specific reading level with e-books? How do we support students, based on their reading levels so that they engage with text successfully? How do we address accountability?

As reading teachers, these questions haunt us—we want students to have the e-book, digital reading experience they will connect most readily to, but we also demand (rightfully so!) the same care we use to select print texts.

Consider an e-library, with precisely leveled texts, such that a student’s virtual library card provides access only to those texts appropriate to the student, taking reading level and (for our ELLs) language level into careful account.

Customization options in e-books are astounding and make differentiating the e-book experience easy and efficient. The ability to place support through virtual sticky notes on virtual pages at the point of use takes differentiation to a new level. You may have taught the vocabulary strategy of using context clues to determine meaning. So, in the e-book you have assigned to a group of students who need to practice this strategy, you notice the text:

Pourquoi tales often point out character flaws, or foibles, that people have, such as being boastful, proud, or impatient.

How helpful would it be to these students to place a virtual sticky note for them right in the margin that reads: “What is another word for “foible”? Give an example.” Students respond on the virtual sticky note.

With this feature, we serve quite a few “masters”: differentiation, strategy application, and accountability.

So, while the e-book experience may not replace the valuable experiences our students have with print books, they open doors that print books can’t and at the same time motivate and engage students, our digital residents who live in the same digital neighborhood as e-books.

You may enjoy perspectives on e-books from  No Shelf Required as well as author Michael Pastore who has recently written, 50 Benefits of Ebooks, A Thinking Person’s Guide to the Digital Reading Revolution.

Quick Tip List for Teachers Implementing Guided Reading

February 13, 2012 |  by Kimberli Kern  |  Balanced Literacy, Differentiated Instruction  |  No Comments  |  Share

I have been working with schools lately regarding Guided Reading, and one principal asked me to put together a list of tips (basically reminders) for teachers who are implementing Guided Reading.  Teachers were so grateful; I thought I might share it with others.  Below is my list!

  • Guided Reading is the heart of Reading Instruction.  It is the time where students apply all the reading strategies taught throughout the literacy block.
  • Students should be reading independently most of the time during Guided Reading, while teachers monitor and make notations of reading behaviors.
  • An instructional leveled text is a text that students can read with 90% to 94% accuracy.  Any percentage below that is frustrational level.  Students reading 95% accuracy or higher are reading on an independent level.
  • Running Records and observations of reading behaviors help teachers determine when students are ready to move to the next level.
  • Running Records should be taken on leveled texts recently read in Guided Reading.  Conducting Running Records on each student weekly allows the teacher to make necessary instructional decisions regularly.
  • Students access fiction and nonfiction texts differently.  Nonfiction is more difficult due to the text features such as captions, tables, graphs, maps, etc.  Students need many opportunities for application of strategies with nonfiction.
  • Selecting an appropriate leveled text plays a vital role in reading instruction.  Teachers must determine the purpose or focus of the lesson based on the needs of students.  Students’ needs are always first priority.
  • For longer texts, teachers should give an introduction to the section of text being read that day.  A discussion should always follow the reading in order to assess comprehension.
  • Meeting with all reading groups daily is definitely ideal.  However, that may not be possible.  Schedule your groups throughout the week, making sure that struggling readers meet daily.  Students on grade level could meet three times a week, while students above grade level could meet twice a week.

More on Guided Reading:

 

You CAN Take it with You! Crossing the Curriculum with Portable Strategies for Guided Reading

Every one of us recognizes the book introduction as a key aspect of the “before” reading component in guided reading.  Imagine you are introducing Native Americans at the Time of the Explorers to a group of 3rd graders.  You activate their schema about Native Americans, tapping into their prior knowledge and making connections to their life experiences.  You frame it this way: “Tell me some things you know about Native Americans.”  Their responses vary, most are on point, a few surprises!  In other words, a typical beginning to your small-group lesson and one that starts your students on their journey of successful reading into the world of Native Americans. All is well, right?

These students most certainly are being set up for success in this reading, of this book, on this particular topic: Native Americans.

Could we be doing more for our students? Could we get more from these instructional minutes? I think so!  And the answer lies in portable strategies, focusing on strategic moves successful readers make whenever they read.

The shift is small.  In addition to the particular book and its theme or focus, what if we also considered the reading behaviors of successful readers at the strategy level? With this small shift in our thinking, changing our focus and language only slightly, we change the game significantly for our students.

Portable Strategies

Let’s keep our lesson and small group-text the same, Native Americans at the Time of the Explorers.  We recognize that good readers think about what they know about a topic before they begin to read a book.  With that consideration in mind, pinpointing a strategic behavior of successful readers, the book introduction to the same group of 3rd grade students now includes this language: “Good readers first identify the topic of the book they’re about to read and think about what they already know about that topic.  So, I want you to practice this. Turn and tell the person sitting next to you something you know about the topic of this book, Native Americans.”

As you listen in, your immediate results are the same: most students giving ideas on point, a few surprises.  The key difference is that you have reinforced for students the portable nature of the strategy—so that whether you, as a student, are in Mrs. Boyle’s English class or Mr. Pedryc’s social studies class, or Ms. Graham’s science class, you carry the strategy with you.

So, the more we include strategy instruction, the better equipped our students will be to engage in strategic reading behaviors.

You CAN take it with you is our message to students into every class, for success across the curriculum!

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