Sunday, September 30, 2012

Blog for 10/4: Review Response

I chose to review Sarah’s response for Inquiry two, Part A. First off, I really like that you mentioned the importance of relating content to the children’s lives. No matter what age, students need this type of support because they need to make sense of why we have them learn the things we do. With this being said, I think you should focus on modeling a lot of your thinking and interpretation of writing. Kids love to here how we feel about writing or what experiences we have had. The more you involve them in your life, the more they seem to want to do things because it helps them formulate meaning and ideas. I did a writing lesson last week, and my students worked really hard on thinking of ideas to write about. I shared with them my ideas and how awesome I thought it was that they get to write every day! I focused on pre-writing strategies, and modeling that part of the writing process really seemed to get them excited.

Revision and editing is also very important. However, be careful. As I read through Routman’s chapter 10, something really stuck out to me and I found I could connect it to your piece. She says, “Of course we depend on correct conventions and form. That’s a given. But the inspiration isn’t in that; its in the language, they way the piece flows and is organized, the impact the words have on the reader” (pp.239). This is great to keep in mind as you prepare to work with your students on revising and editing. These strategies are very important, but do not let it take away from the student’s thoughts and ideas. Try to support students and give them positive feedback, and mention the key components of editing and revising they could work on as you read through their writing. Maybe not fixing every mistake and see how they react to the major aspects you point out. Another thing that really stuck out to me in this chapter was her idea of keeping focused on effective writing. I hate using a checklist for young writers because I don’t want to lose focus on what the child is trying to say.

Try to make the classroom talk fun and exciting! I love observing my teacher talk with the students for pre writing activities and literacy lessons in general. If you think your students can handle it, let a student play the “teacher” role about a topic you would like them to write about or something you want them to make a connection to. My class seems to love that and it really helps get the students to feel more comfortable with sharing ideas. Editing and revising may be a little more tricky, but maybe make silly mistakes and see if they catch you? They feel really smart when they catch a teacher making mistakes, and they get a kick out of it. At the same time, they are learning from fixing your mistake without even realizing it! A lot of my ideas involve making it fun for students because then they will look forward to this discussion and writing time.

I loved how you mentioned the norms you would like to build within the classroom! I think the core practice you want to focus on is perfect as well. I do not know your classroom environment, but my students get bored of writing sometimes or complain that they write too much. So focusing on creating authentic, meaningful writing tasks for a real audience will help you promote creative writing activities. I think you are going to do a great job. Our readings really support your writing idea and you do a great job of relating these ideas to your own thoughts. I hope some of my comments are clear and helpful or interesting to you. I am excited to hear what you come up with :).

2 comments:

  1. So I read Karly's target area questions. At this point in my teaching I hate to give advice because it implies that I know it all and I'm really trying to break myself of that habit. I will share what I noticed, what questions I have, and what has worked for my mentor. Hopefully that helps you just as much, if not more. Good luck. Hope it goes well.

    I'm glad at least one of us chose reading as the area to focus on. Hopefully that will help us all in the long run. I also agree that comprehension is a great place to start and something I also want to work on helping my students with as I get better as a teacher. One of the words that I didn't see much in your pre-plan was modeling. The only place I noticed it specifically was when the students model to the others how they are going through their grapich organizers. It is possible I missed it though. When I read through the chapter on modeling I had a hard time not getting caught up in my background knowledge. I took a trip in my mind and realized just how much my MT explains his thinking out loud to the students as the chapter suggests. I realized this is something that I really want to improve on as a teacher. Have you put much thought into that aspect of helping with comprehension? I agree that sometimes students just need to hear our thinking to know where to go themselves.

    I also agree with you in your comments above. If we can put a part of ourselves into our lessons that can be one more thing to grab our student's interest. I'm trying to follow my mentor once again in this endeavor. He often tells stories to our class about his life as a third grader to help illustrate the point he is trying to make. I happen to have a third grader and I've found that relating stories to the class about him helps the class see that we have something in common.

    I'll share one final thing that my mentor uses to help with comprehension and maybe it will help you too. We often look for the main aspects of the story we read by summarizing it at the end. We do it with a pretty formulaic sheet that the students fill out. It still makes them think a lot, but it gives them a framework to do that thinking in. The summary always follows the following framework: Someone (fill in the main character here) wanted (this lets the reader describe the sitution) but (tell what problem occured) so (tell what the character did to address the problem) then (here we get the resolution for the problem.) I don't know if this will work in your lessons and it doesn't always in ours, but it may.

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  2. I read through Karly’s unit planning. I think that your point with comprehension being extremely important is a great point because you’re right it is needed in every aspect of their lives in school and outside of school. This is a great strategy to focus on.
    You said that you were planning on focusing on picking out important events in stories and summarizing. You also talked about incorporating both teacher-led and student-led methods to your daily routine. Are you going to use this method as a whole class or are you going to work in small groups so that you can differentiate the books you use based on their reading skills and abilities? It sounds like you do not separate your students based on reading levels. I think that peer-to-peer help is great, but how will you make sure that students are not reading above their level and get frustrated and make sure that your higher-level readers will not get bored?

    I think it is really cool that you will be incorporating technology/online resources into your lessons, because I agree with you that it may become boring for them to just fill out graphic organizers. It would be neat if they did some sort of project where they do a re-tell of the story they read to a group who did not read the same story. They could do some sort of presentation to “teach” another group which would get the student led teaching in your lesson.

    It sounds like you guys already have a lot of systems in place and that your kids are doing a lot of great student led lessons which I think is awesome. It sounds like your classroom community is really supportive and I think you should really monopolize on that! I am really interested to hear about the activities that you come up with because comprehension is so important at every level. I am also really interested to hear how these lessons go and how your students do with learning comprehension skills!

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