Have you read Teaching Your Students to Read Like Detectives? It's a close up look at training students how to analyze and dive deeper into the text, as well as learn how to discuss text in a meaningful way. I heard someone recently say, "When you teach kids to read like this, it's more like scuba diving, than water skiing."
My teachers and I pulled together for a book study so that we could better prepare ourselves for Common Core and teaching kids to read more rigorous text with a purpose. We had some fun along the way and I'd love to share the highlights.
Valuable lesson #1: We decided it's important to create not only a text dependent classroom, but a SAFE, text discussion-based classroom! By setting the stage early, you can foster a classroom where everyone's opinion, comments, expertise, learning, etc. has value. The book discusses some key components to creating this type of environment. I created an acronym to post on an Anchor chart to help remind our students what type of Reading classroom we would be!
Valuable lesson #2 and key "take-away" from the book was the importance of keeping kids IN the text. OH, how easy it is for them (and us) to jump into personal schema and bring what WE know (or think we know) to the text, instead of keeping our conversations centered around what the AUTHOR wanted us to focus on. The book gives some great question stems to help guide teachers BACK to the text when students start to stray.
Valuable lesson #3: Teaching Narrative text (fiction) is still VERY RELEVANT and EXTREMELY IMPORTANT! When Common Core came along, one of my very first introductions to it was someone who said that Non-fiction was here to take over the world. Okay, maybe not that extreme, but I began to wonder where literature would fit into all this Common Core stuff. It didn't GO anywhere! It's still as relevant and crucial to teach as it ever was!
Valuable lesson #4: Expository Text IS making a bigger splash! There are many cool non-fiction genres to expose children to. The book gives a list of some signal words that help lead students to a better understanding of how text can be organized. I put them on Anchor Charts to help alert children to some of the different types of expository text they would be exposed to! They're NEW, but my ultimate goal is that they will carry over into the different genres of writing. If students are writing a compare/contrast piece, the "signal" words on the anchor chart can also be used in their writing to assist them in keeping it a true compare/contrast!
Finally, Valuable lesson #5: Collecting evidence from the text can be fun! I've included a FREEBIE template that can be used in your Common Core Reading classroom. As you do a 'Close Read' of a text, you can have students scour the text for a variety of information you want them to focus on. There are lots of suggestions in the Teaching Your Students to Read Like a Detective book. Our teachers will simply add the labels to the magnifying glass handles for what evidence they want the students to locate in the book. Students will record in the magnifying glass circles and share. Click on the image to grab the freebie template! :-)
If you're an educator and are teaching Common Core, this book is an excellent resource for your professional library! If your faculty is into book studies, this one is a quick read and provides teachers with some essential tools for tackling the Common Core in Reading.
Bananas for anything that helps my students become better readers,
7 comments:
Thank you so much for sharing with us (me). Very useful ~ even to my little Kinders.
Hi Michelle--Love your Blog name! That is exactly what I feel like some days. Your blog is really cute and I love your book study. I am reading Genre Connection by Tanny McGregor. I love it but I'm also finished. I might try the book you suggest next. Thanks for the great post. Beth from whoisreadytoteach.blogspot.com
Thanks, friends! :-)
Michelle, do you feel this would help me with my 6th graders, or is it geared more toward elementary?
I DO think it would be beneficial. Some of the examples in there are actually from a HIGH school classroom. When I led the book study on this, I had to actually gear it DOWN for my Elementary teachers. The anchor charts with the clue words came from the book. The S.A.F.E. anchor chart was my own idea, however, adapted from ideas given in the book for setting up an accountable talk safe classroom. There's enough "philosophy" in the book that you can make it fit your classroom needs. Hope this helps!
Michelle
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