Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Why I love Daily 5...

As I cruise through the two buildings I work in, I love to peek my head inside doors to see Daily 5 in action. You see my role encompasses all things Title I, but I don’t actually have my own classroom of students. Our district became interested in Daily 5 about three years ago, at that point I was out of my own classroom and into my consulting role. I excitedly participated in reading the books, visiting other districts, and helping the teachers research. Last year they dove in headfirst and WOW I am so impressed. The authentic reading, increased stamina, and student conferring just brings a smile to my face. Of course I can’t forget the data-the data is great! We all know that for better, or worse, data is what people look for.
Along the way, there have been bumps in the road. How can we fit in all 5? (We can’t, we get in three.) Where will we get the word work materials? (We get creative and tap every funding resource we can.) My listening center is toast! (We write grants for MP3s, burn CDs, use Audacity, etc…) They will never sit still and read. (They do, we’ve proven it. We have classrooms with 30-40 minutes of stamina!) What about my behavior issue child? (Barometer children; we’ve brainstormed and collaborated as a staff to work this out and share possible solutions.) Our Daily 5 isn’t perfect but it is oh so good…
Students are in good fit books, reading at their level, for a good portion of the day!
Teachers know their students better than ever by conferring.
Authentic work (not busy work) is being done by students, whether it is word work or work on writing.
Our data is growing stronger.
Children are showing a love of reading!
The last reason is so important to me! The teachers I work with have noticed this too. We all know, to get better at an activity we need to practice. For a child to become a better reader, they need to read more. We know this as teachers, but amazingly, it doesn’t always happen in our classrooms. When I peak into a Daily 5 room I see kids reading, authentic meaningful reading. I know they will become better readers for it!

Daily 5 Resources:

The Daily 5/Cafe Site
Mrs. Maiolo's 2nd Grade Website
Daily 5 Pinterest Board
Daily 5 Literacy Connections
Daily 5 Youtube Videos
Awesome Resource Page of Ideas

There are many, many others available!  If you are interested in, or fine tuning, the Daily 5, there are also Wikis, online bulletin boards, chat rooms, Pinterest boards, and Twitter!  So many answers out there, so many resources to tap into, you don't have to go it alone!

My number one suggestion is to visit a Daily 5 room and see for yourself.  There is nothing as amazing (not even the smell of new school supplies)!




Go to "The CAFE Book: Engaging All Students in Daily Literary Assessment and Instruction" page

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Round Robin Reading is Dead! (Or it should be....)

I'm always shocked by the number of classrooms that still use round robin reading as a tool. On the other hand I realize why teachers stick with this tired, and proven to be ineffective, method.

1. We genuinely want to listen to all of our students read aloud. Fluency is important. Accuracy, automaticity, and prosody are necessary.

2. Lesson planning is challenging and time consuming work. Teachers need to cover the standards, develop relevant ideas in all subject areas, prepare for standardized testing, and make everything exciting. Sometimes we just need to have an easy way to read that material whole group.

3. It's what we grew up with and we turned out okay!

Let's blow these thoughts out of the water! First, round robin reading is not going to improve fluency. If I dedicate twenty minutes to round robin reading, my struggling reader may read aloud one minute of that. Instead of listening to the material the other nineteen minutes, that struggling reader has been panicked about the upcoming turn, or same struggling reader has tuned out because their turn has been completed. Second, it sometimes can be tiring thinking of one more way to get content across, while providing relevant reading practice. I’m going to give you some alternatives at the end of this post. Finally, I did participate in round robin reading and survived. I’m an excellent reader. (I even have old report cards to prove it.) Of course, there was little difference between myself and the struggling reader during round robin reading. While waiting for my turn, I strategically figured out when I would read. After my turn I tuned the others out and either read ahead or daydreamed. Below I’ve listed some resources to get this out of your classroom. Please get rid of this “worst practice”. This is one robin you have permission to eliminate!

Echo Reading
Partner Reading
Jigsaw Reading
Shared Reading
Choral Reading
Silent Reading (IF the material is at or below their reading level!)
Guided Small Group Reading
Whisper Reading
Recorded Texts
Read Aloud
Readers Theater
Reading Conference
Trio Reading
 
Recommended Reading:

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

New Year, New Me, New Books

A startling revelation hit me last night as I prepared myself to go back to work. I had not read one book over Christmas break (two weeks mind you) for pure pleasure. Oh I had read definitely. There were back issues of The Reading Teacher to catch up on. I devoured several educational books including What Really Matters for Struggling Readers and Everyday Editing. Being a literacy education geek, these books were fascinating and fun. However, I worried that I was loosing my reading mojo.

Since the beginning of the 2011-12 school year I have read, read, and read books, magazines, articles, websites, and even tweets all centered on education. I’ve stretched my beliefs, expanded my thoughts, and broadened my education network. This is awesome! I love my job! I love learning! But there was something missing. That feeling of settling in with a book, and only a book. That’s right-no highlighter, no pen and paper for notes, and no bending of pages because I just have to show my coworker what I discovered Monday morning.

I spend so much time as a literacy educator thinking of ways to entice children into reading, ignite their passion for books, turn them into lifelong readers. Almost half of all Americans NEVER read for fun! (Scary statistical stuff!) Modeling for my students is key but I had lost balance in my own reading life. So my New Year resolution is to add some frivolous books into my mix. I’m going to get lost in a story. I’m going to cozy up in a chair with a book I can’t put down. I’m going to storm the library looking for titles to add to my repertoire. Perhaps I will even get invited back to my book club (because I’m reading things that don’t need teacher lingo translations)! New Year, New Books, New Me!

My Will-Read List:
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Foer
Catherine the Great by Robert Massie
The Sisters by Nancy Jensen
Blood, Bones, and Butter by Gabrielle Hamilton
The Tiger’s Wife by Tea Obreht

Of course, because I am still an eduwonk at heart, these titles as well:
10 Things Every Writer Needs to Know by Jeff Anderson
Comprehension Going Forward by Various Authors
Catching Readers by Barbara Taylor
Cognitive Coaching: A Foundation for Renaissance Schools by Arthur Costa
Enhancing RTI by Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey