Sunday, March 17, 2013

Teaching Reading Comprehension

Comprehension strategies are conscious plans — sets of steps that good readers use to make sense of text. Comprehension strategy instruction helps students become purposeful, active readers who are in control of their own reading comprehension. The seven strategies here appear to have a firm scientific basis for improving text comprehension: monitoring comprehension, metacognition, graphic and semantic organizers, answering questions, generating questions, recognizing story structure, summarizing, effective comprehension instruction is explicit instruction.

http://www.readingrockets.org/article/3479/

This site explains how Bloom's Taxonomy of higher order thinking can push students to deeper questioning. it also has question prompts to be used for Reading Workshop and all content areas. This is very valuable when differentiating instruction and challenging students to actively engage with the content.

http://www.msad54.org/district/literacyspecialist/pdf/blooms.pdf


Author Podcasts

The internet  opens up our classrooms to author visits. Students love hearing and seeing real authors talk about their books and craft. Motivation is increased and metacognition is activated. Try one today!

Reading Rockets' interviews with top children's book authors and illustrators are an excellent way to introduce students to those who create books kids know and love. Not just for children, these interviews are also enjoyed by parents, teachers, librarians, and other educators who appreciate the value of children's literature and get a kick out of putting a face and voice to the authors and illustrators whose work we enjoy. These interviews are available from ReadingRockets.org in audio and video formats. To see a transcript from these interviews, to find out more about each author, or to watch the full interview, see Reading Rockets' Books & Authors section.

https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/meet-author-reading-rockets/id159653704?mt=2

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Teacher Podcasts

These are free educational podcasts that you can access thru iTunes.
http://www.reading.org/general/publications/podcasts.aspx

  • Creating a home reading program
    Motivate kids and involve parents in an effective at-home reading program to supplement classroom activities
    podcast
    | book
  • Teaching vocabulary in middle and high school
    Research and theory support key ideas about word learning for adolescents
    podcast
    | article | research base
  • Writing to learn across the curriculum
    Writing strategies help upper elementary and middle school students with reading comprehension
    podcast
    | article | research base
  • Phonics through shared reading
    Rimes, onsets, and reading aloud help K–3 children with phonics
    podcast
    | article | research base | 37 rimes
  • Teaching key vocabulary
    Identifying and teaching important words in a text assists with comprehension for intermediate and upper elementary students
    podcast
    | article | research base | lesson plan
  • Understanding the big idea
    Thinking about the important ideas in texts can help reading comprehension
    podcast
    | article | research baserecommended children’s books
  • Supporting struggling adolescent readers
    Teachers and tutors can use these ideas to engage middle and high school students
    podcast
    | article | research base

Reading Rockets provides a wealth of information about reading with advice and resources from various educational experts. The Meet the Experts podcast series provides an opportunity to learn about educational topics directly from authorities in the field. Watch exclusive interviews with prominent professionals, like Drs. Maryanne Wolf and Louisa Moats. Topics include how to identify learning difficulties, develop reading skills early, and the importance of phonics. To view streaming clips and find more interviews and videos about educating children, visit the ReadingRockets.org "Podcasts and Videos" section. Check back frequently for new "Meet the Experts" podcasts!

https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/meet-experts-reading-rockets/id260876675?mt=2

Watch and Learn
Reading Rockets' Watch & Learn podcast series goes inside the classroom to capture the best research-based techniques for teaching reading. The series features the country's top reading experts, a look at different reading strategies, practical advice for parents to help support their children's literacy development, as well as personal stories of children, families, and teachers.

https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/watch-learn-reading-rockets/id253375672?mt=2

Professional Development
Stay up-to-date with the Reading Rockets professional development webcast series. Listen, watch, and learn from top experts in the field of reading. Our webcasts are available anytime that's convenient for you.

Scroll all the way down to the professinal development link:



Senses

Reading with your 5 senses improves comprehension. As students read, they should see, hear, smell. taste and touch what is going on in the book. This helps students remember the story and make connections to the text.

Five Senses Games:  Draw a red line from the sense to the picture.
http://sciencegames.4you4free.com/five_senses.html

 Matching 5 Senses : Matching Game: Learn the 5 senses with fun games. These games will turn on your senses when you read and will help you make connections in all your content area reading.
http://www.sadlier-oxford.com/readers/health/book1/game.htm

Turn the Wheel to Find the Correct Sense: http://www.harcourtschool.com/activity/sense/sense.htm

Sensational Match Up:  Click on the picture and drag to the appropriate sense on the character. 
http://www.harcourtschool.com/activity/senses/index.htm 



Parent Literacy Resources

Stamina
Stamina is an important literacy skill for students to work on and build. It is never too early or too late to work on it. Starting as early as infancy, babies should be read too and kids should see reading as an everyday event, like brushing their teeth. Brushing your teeth daily improves your breath and protects your teeth from cavities. Reading every day protects your child from future struggles with reading, can improve self confidence, reduce the chance of falling below grade level. How can you help your child build stamina?

1) Vary your reading: read to someone, listen to a book on tape, use an e-reader, or listen to someone read.
2) Read books where you get 5 or less words wrong on a page.
3) Set realistic goals. If your child doesn't read at all, start at 5 minutes a day. If your child has never finished a book by them self, then have them finish one book in a realistic amount of time. For older kids, find out how long it takes them to read a page. Time them! Then count the number of pages to figure out how many days it would take them to finish the book.
4) Celebrate their progress! Make it a big deal. Kids love to be rewarded, just like adults at work.

Reading Rockets' Article
 http://www.readingrockets.org/article/51787/

Why My Kid Hates to Read
I hear often from students that they "hate to read". What my years have taught me is not that they hate to read, but that there is a reason they don't want to read. Maybe they have never been exposed to a variety of genres and books that might interest them. Maybe they have always been told what books that they HAVE to read. Maybe the books are too hard for them so they get frustrated and feel stupid. These are all reasons that I have heard from my students. So the next time your student tells you that they hate to read, take the time to find out why and do something about it to change it.

20 Ways to Encourage Reading

We've told you why some kids don't like to read and what other parents believe will not succeed in changing their minds. Now for some ways to turn a young reader's reluctance into enthusiasm:

1. Scout for things your children might like to read. Use their interests and hobbies as starting points.

2. Leave all sorts of reading materials including books, magazines, and colorful catalogs in conspicuous places around your home.

3. Notice what attracts your children's attention, even if they only look at the pictures. Then build on that interest; read a short selection aloud, or simply bring home more information on the same subject.

4. Let your children see you reading for pleasure in your spare time.

5. Take your children to the library regularly. Explore the children's section together. Ask a librarian to suggest books and magazines your children might enjoy.

6. Present reading as an activity with a purposea way to gather useful information for, say, making paper airplanes, identifying a doll or stamp in your child's collection, or planning a family trip.

7. Encourage older children to read to their younger brothers and sisters. Older children enjoy showing off their skills to an admiring audience.

8. Play games that are reading-related. Check your closet for spelling games played with letter tiles or dice, or board games that require players to read spaces, cards, and directions.

9. Perhaps over dinner, while you're running errands, or in another informal setting, share your reactions to things you read, and encourage your children to do likewise.

10. Set aside a regular time for reading in your family, independent of schoolworkthe 20 minutes before lights out, just after dinner, or whatever fits into your household schedule. As little as 10 minutes of free reading a day can help improve your child's skills and habits.

11. Read aloud to your child, especially a child who is discouraged by his or her own poor reading skills. The pleasure of listening to you read, rather than struggling alone, may restore your child's initial enthusiasm for books and reading.

12. Encourage your child to read aloud to you an exciting passage in a book, an interesting tidbit in the newspaper, or a joke in a joke book. When children read aloud, don't feel they have to get every word right. Even good readers skip or mispronounce words now and then.

13. On gift-giving occasions, give books and magazines based on your child's current interests.

14. Set aside a special place for children to keep their own books.

15. Introduce the bookmark. Remind your youngster that you don't have to finish a book in one sitting; you can stop after a few pages, or a chapter, and pick up where you left off at another time. Don't try to persuade your child to finish a book he or she doesn't like. Recommend putting the book aside and trying another.

16. Treat your children to an evening of laughter and entertainment featuring books! Many children (parents, too) regard reading as a serious activity. A joke book, a story told in riddles, or a funny passage read aloud can reveal another side of reading.

17. Extend your child's positive reading experiences. For example, if your youngster enjoyed a book about dinosaurs, follow up with a visit to a natural history museum.

18. Offer other special incentives to encourage your child's reading. Allow your youngster to stay up an extra 15 minutes to finish a chapter; promise to take your child to see a movie after he or she has finished the book on which it was based; relieve your child of a regular chore to free up time for reading.

19. Limit your children's television viewing in an effort to make time for other activities, such as reading. But never use TV as a reward for reading, or a punishment for not reading.

20. Not all reading takes place between the covers of a book. What about menus, road signs, food labels, and sheet music? Take advantage of countless spur-of-the-moment opportunities for reading during the course of your family's busy day.

http://www.rif.org/us/literacy-resources/articles/children-who-can-read-but-dont.htm

Why Read 20 Minutes a Day?
When a student reads every  night from infancy, the gains are real and measurable. There is a misconception that reading is something everyone just learns and can do. Another misconception is that you don't have to worry about your child reading below grade level as they have plenty of time to catch up. The truth is, if students are reading below grade level by the 4rd grade, they will continue to fall behind without a specific course of action. Look at the facts:

Student A reads 5 days a week for 20 minutes.
Student B reads 4 minutes a night or not at all.

Student A reads 100 minutes a week.
Student B reads 20 minutes a week.

Student A reads 400 minutes a month.
Student B reads 80 minutes a month.

Student A reads 3600 minutes a year.
Student B reads 720 minutes a year

Student A will be exposed to more background knowledge and vocabulary that B will not. Student A will most likely never say they "hate reading".

Make the time early in their lives to read and you won't be spending time and money later on trying to get them to read.

http://www.tooter4kids.com/classroom/why_read_for_20_minutes_every_da.htm

Teach a Child To Read

This site is a wealth of information about the early stages of reading, how students learn to read and what preschool and parents of emergent readers can do with their kids to promote early literacy.

http://www.succeedtoread.com/index.html

Decoding Unknown Words

These are strategies for decoding unknown words.
http://www.msrossbec.com/readingstratg.pdf






Thursday, March 7, 2013

Grant Writing

In this day and age when school budgets are tight and the need to keep current is great, grant writing is one possibility to help schools get the resources and training needed to make the difference. Writing a grant is daunting. Research is paramount and can make the difference in a grant being approved. Some grants do not require much and are easier than others. I suggest starting out small.

Getting started:
School Grant Index Examples and and the basics: http://www.k12grants.org/samples/samples_index.htm

Great Grant Ideas Board:
http://www.proteacher.net/discussions/showthread.php?t=171494

Winning Ideas for Classrooms:
http://www.cherylsigmon.com/grantswinner.asp





Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Why My Student Can Read But Doesn't

Here are some great informational articles on why students can read, but don't, and what caregivers can do to promote literacy.

 http://www.rif.org/us/literacy-resources/articles/children-who-can-read-but-dont.htm  
By Rif