Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Week 6
Fluency vs. Comprehension
Reading fluency and comprehension are inherently linked. Without reading fluency, students are unable to make meaning of what they’re reading. In my class, I haven’t seen much reading instruction as of yet: most of our reading instruction has been direction-oriented. In other words, helping students decide how to pick out what questions are asking and whether or not they answered what was requested of them. We finally got through DRA testing each of our students this week and the results were very interesting. We have students at every level imaginable (low: 28 and high: 80), but reading fluency and comprehension seemed to be closely related in the students’ scores. However, some children that had very good comprehension scores (in their writing response/reflection scores) had very low WPM scores. They seemed to read slow and steady, but had some of the best comprehension scores in the class!
This year, I’m not sure how my CT will go about teaching reading strategies. As I mentioned previously, I have observed several lessons in my placement that teach comprehension strategies, however I am uncertain as to how other reading strategies will be addresses. Hopefully a reading curriculum will come to fruition after MEAP testing concludes and I will be able to report back in greater detail!
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Week 6
Reading fluency is the ability to read text accurately and fluently, while reading comprehension is described more as understanding of text or writing. The relationship between them is that in order for reading comprehension to be achieved I think that it is dependent on fluency in being able to read the text and understanding the text in an accurate way. Being able to understand and comprehend reading, a student needs to be able to recognize the words and their meanings in the text.
To assess and teach fluency in my classroom—my CT uses the making meaning curriculum and their assessments. For example, the unit I will be starting is a unit surrounding expository texts and the assessment at the end of the unit is an article considered to be an expository text and then a series of questions. Another way that my teacher assesses reading comprehension and fluency is by using Time for Kids in social studies instruction time. The students receive Time for Kids and they take a multiple-choice ten-question quiz on the various articles from the magazine.
I think that the reading comprehension and fluency of my students’ also need to be understood by listening to them read specific leveled passages aloud and then prompt them with questions on the spot, that could be answered aloud through discussion- to assess comprehension ability.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Online Module Week 5 task 4
Gill 2007: The Forgotten Genre of Children’s Poetry
This piece was about the importance of bringing quality children’s literature into the classroom. The main focus of this piece was the misguided understanding of what children’s poetry is. Many of the poetry anthologies put together for children are really collections of what adults consider to be the “great poems” and are intended for the adult canon. According to Gill, pieces like these “teach children that poems are written by “great poets” which can only be understood and evaluated by academics, whose job it is to tell the rest of us a poem’s meaning” (Gill, 622). In reality, poetry for children is not meant to hold some secret meaning, but instead to show children that “people write poems to share their experiences” (Gill, 623). To help children enjoy poetry, we have to show children “what poetry is:” “a concise and memorable case of language, with intense feeling, imagery, and qualities of sound that bounce pleasingly off the tongue, tickle the ear, and leave the mind something to ponder” (Gill, 623). As Janine Certo advises, poems children read should have “clarity of thought, evidence of technique, and sincerity of tone” and that they should “sensitize young students in their reactions and responses to literature.”
I actually took a course at MSU co-taught by Janine Certo and Laura Apol, which focused on integrating poetry into the literacy curriculum for elementary age children. Because of this, I am excited to work on the fifth grade poetry unit during my internship year! What is somewhat unfortunate however, is that poetry is only addressed in its isolated “poetry unit” as it is in so many only schools and curricula. It is my hope that I may be able to integrate examples of poetry in mini lessons for writing – similar to the topic of “beautiful writing” in Mark White’s fifth grade classroom. It is my opinion that appropriately selected poetry anthologies may be beneficial mentor texts for children on this topic because poetry is all about selecting the “most meaningful” and “descriptive” words (hence, word choice). This article is full of title suggestions for poetry that is written for children, that could in fact be used as mentor texts.
As I mentioned previously, I have already had a semester’s worth of training in integrating poetry into the curriculum and I have created several lesson plans for this purpose in the process. I have not however, been able to determine which poems are appropriate for fifth graders in particular. I am still in contact with my instructors from MSU (Laura Apol in particular) who is always happy to help and offer advice and I plan to utilize her as a resource!
In terms of assessments and this module and how they relate to my unit, I think I need to change how I observe my students. I really need to focus on how I can help my students along this “continuous path” of writing progress and what my students “do well in writing” specifically. Because of MEAP preparation, I really have not had too many opportunities to conference with students. Actually, because my CT does not typically conference with students, it is going to be difficult for me to use her assessment strategies as examples for my own. During my unit, I hope to focus heavily of conferencing with my students as my main point of assessment and I plan to use Mark White as an example of how to assess students effectively so that they too can benefit from the process. Because my unit is not yet set in stone (due to MEAP chaos) I am not yet sure of how much writing my students will be doing during my unit – as much as I would like to implement a writers workshop.
Kovalcik & Certo 2007
I think I could use this approach at my grade level, however I think that the poetry lessons would need to be more advanced- or more detailed, because my students are in the sixth grade. I think that poetry is a valuable thing to incorporate into writing/ reading instruction because it can be so powerful and give the students a chance to feel connected to something so powerful. For my students, I do not know if I would have the cafe setting because it seems like my students would benefit more from something like an "open mic night" or just a day in our classroom where we perform for each other- in a less exaggerated way. Rather, it is just an opportunity to share our poetry if we felt like it. Students would have a few mini-lessons on specific types of poetry and they could write and turn in those poems-- but then also students could have the opportunity to do research on different types of poetry and they could complete a poem of whatever type they choose- and they could have the chance to share one of these and/or other poems in an "open mic" sort of format, so it feels more informal- yet still exciting.
For this approach to work well with my students, I would need to find out and study what types of poetry, if any my students have already studied and what sorts of lessons or formats of studying poetry have they experienced. I would also benefit from talking and visiting with other teachers who teach upper elementary grades to find out how they have incorporated poetry lesson in their literacy instruction.
My unit focuses on expository texts- and I think that I would need to assess how they read different types of text, as well as how they write different types or genres of writing. In the sixth grade they go through a number of differing types of writing. They are beginning with their personal narrative- and through writer's workshop and analysis of student work in this module- I realize there are so many different ways to assess my students in both reading/ writing. As writers, for my unit I think having them write an essay with a prompt question based on one of the expository texts we study, or a prompt from a text given with the prompt would be a valid way to assess them as both readers of expository texts and writers- when thinking about them using a writing process to write about text they had just read.
Monday, October 4, 2010
WEEK 4- Readings Blog Post
From what I have seen thus far in my classroom it is really difficult to determine how similar the assessment structure will be in my classroom in comparisons with Book Club Plus. Even though we have done some preparation for MEAP- it has not taken up all of the time, however I still have not seen any reading assessments done aside from DIEBELS-, Which I facilitated, on a one to one basis with every student on our team. The reading assessment consists of having the students read aloud for one minute, and I time and record how many errors they make in that minute. The Book Club plus talks about the use of self- evaluation. This is the only form that I have seen so far in my classroom aside from the DIEBELS reading assessment that I touched on briefly previously. Every day my students have 30 minutes of individual reading time. “IRG time” IRG stands for Independent Reading Goals, and each trimester the student gets a recording sheet to record to number of ‘Accelerated Reader’ books they complete. Every time they complete an ‘AR’ book they are supposed to take the ‘AR’ test from the Novi Meadows media center, or the link from the website. Also part of this independent reading for each trimester is a reading journal and a goal. The goal is the number of books the student wants to finish by the end of the trimester, and the journal includes 2 to 4 sentences written every day after the student reads their book during silent reading.
I find it really interesting in my class to see that the books in the library are not labeled or in any specific order to show what level they are. And there has not been any evidence of reading based on the different levels of readers we have in the classroom which I find interesting. In past classrooms, I always experienced a teacher having to meet with literature circles because there were various levels. The students do work on writing, and I tested them in reading- however nothing really has been done with the data since which makes it really difficult to relate to the different literacy benchmarks and standards that the chapters in Book Club Plus discuss. I am curious to see when and how this data will be incorporated into the classroom and curriculum framework, however I am also nervous because it seems that since our school has relatively good test scores and MEAP scores that these differing levels of students writing and reading may become abandoned- so I am curious to see what will happen once MEAP is over with.
Book Club Plus Week 4
Book Club Plus Week 4
After reading book club plus, I found it difficult to determine what aspects of the “assessments” and “classroom management [for book club]” are actually used in my placement. As I mentioned previously, much of our academic day is consumed by MEAP preparation; and because of this, it is difficult to picture what a “normal” literacy block will look like until MEAP testing concludes. That said, instead of observing these Book Club Plus elements in action, I simply asked my CT some questions and looked more deeply into our classroom reading and writing curricula in an attempt to find connections.
In terms of assessment and clarity of the literacy standards and benchmarks, my CT has mentioned that she would like to make an effort to make “working towards the big ideas in literacy” a norm in our classroom environment. In my own experience with making the standards and benchmarks a common and well-known goal, it has helped to write the goals in a visibly accessible place (for each lesson) and to say them aloud. This focus on clarity in working towards goals was actually a feature of my TESOL program. In fact, each lesson plan we wrote had to include a language goal along with the content goal and was required to be written in an accessible place (on the board) for students to refer to as well as explained orally. Just as we design our lessons along the lines of meeting clear standards, students should be able to refer to these same benchmarks to mark their progress towards meeting these goals. This in turn helps students to self-evaluate their learning progress within the same set of standards that teachers work within. In other words, we all need to be on the same page – learning goals should not be a secret! I mentioned the “I can…” statements (derived from the standards/benchmarks) to my CT in our discussion, and we are going to try and begin incorporating these statements in our everyday lessons (both in writing and verbally). To her credit, I feel that my CT is very skilled in terms of making her expectations clear (four phases of assessment) - she is very good at explaining the importance (verbally) of being a successful reader/writer and what a successful reader/writer “looks like and sounds like”.
With regard to assessments, the only rubrics/official assessments I’ve observed have been DRAs and a few brief writing samples. Because my CT has mentioned her preference for more “scripted” reading and writing programs, I am interested to see whether or not she ventures to create her own rubrics or writing/reading assessments outside of those prescribed in Making Meaning and Writers Express. The writing samples we’ve collected thus far were mostly short paragraphs based on a writing prompt (i.e. talk about a fall memory using descriptive language). These writing samples have been evaluated very casually using the “six traits of writing” as general rules (not in a rubric form).
At this point, it is really difficult to make any observations on classroom management as it relates to Book Club Plus. We are still in the phase where we are trying to determine which students are at what level. Based on the DRA scores from last year, it appears that we have a group of very low students [for literacy] – one student with a DRA of 28 in fifth grade! We are considering using the Soaring to Success program for book club with these students which focuses on scaffolding reading comprehension, as well as making inferences and summarizing (this program is focused heavily on students “thinking about their own thinking”). In terms of the reading then, differentiated instruction as described in Book Club Plus is well supported by the diversity of reading and writing programs used within our classroom. I hope to be able to draw more connections from my placement as MEAP testing concludes.