In Heidi Mills and Jean Anne Clyde’s article Children’s Success as Readers and Writers:
It’s the Teacher’s Beliefs That Make the Difference, I was able to see some
things that I could look for with my reading students. I teach the corrective level of reading to my
fifth graders. Even though they were
using examples from first grade classes, it totally hit home and made
sense.
Not all teachers teach the same. Even when you have teachers teaching the
exact same curriculum. Different teachers are going to put their own spin on
how it is taught. Some students struggle
in reading. I am constantly trying to
find ways to get concepts to make sense for my students. We try scripted stories, novel studies,
independent reading, guided reading, and many other strategies to help the
students to be more fluent and comprehend what they are reading. I try not to focus on the fact that some can
read more fluently or comprehend better than others. I try very hard to individualize it for each
student. What I see most by the time
they reach the fifth grade, is that their confidence in reading is not where it
should be. Mills and Clyde said, Children with a foundation of confidence and
literary skills are better off than they would be without both, regardless of
what comes next. Yes, we try all things in order to improve their skills,
but I want their confidence to be where it needs to be too.
I tried something a little different after reading this
article. Instead of having the students
write a response in paragraph form of what they thought two characters would
say to one another, like the curriculum suggested, we did something else. I noticed that some of my students were
having trouble writing in dialogue. We
instead used thought bubbles with drawings.
This seemed to make it a little more understandable for the students. They drew a scene from the story and used the
thought bubbles to show what the characters would say. The article mentioned this with the young boy
Matt. They urged teachers to see
different methods beyond the traditional in order to teach. I appreciated that this article encouraged us
to think outside of the box when teaching reading and writing.
Teachers must always be willing to monitor and adjust their curriculum. What works for one student will not work for others. What worked one year may not work the next. I like how you took something you read about and applied it to your teaching.
ReplyDeleteI like the way you think Allison! Thinking outside the box insn't just for students! We as teachers have to be willing to change the way we do things to see the growth in the students as well as for the students to see their growth. Many students in 5th grade do have a poor self-concept when thinking of themselves as readers. If students don't feel successful, then growth is much more labored. However, if we emphasis and praise students for their starting level and scaffold along the way, students may begin to develop better concepts about reading.
ReplyDeleteAllison you are doing your students such a service by looking for ways to build their confidence and grow as readers and writers! Kidwatching, noticing, analyzing and applying - that is what you are doing.
ReplyDeleteAllison, we as teachers must step out of our comfort zones and change our thinking and lesson planning. I love how you took your students needs and altered your lesson to meet them where they are. We must grow and learn while the sweet students are as well.
ReplyDeleteHi Allison,
ReplyDeleteI appreciate how you are providing your students with learning opportunities that will build their confidence as readers and will also meet them where they are by targeting their areas to focus growth and building off of their strengths. Thank you! Dawn