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Class Reflection
June 24, 2009 at 10:06 pm (Uncategorized)
This has been a very informative class. I have been introduced to blogging (which I found out that I love!). I love being able to read my classmates thoughts and see the projects they have created. Although we have been together for almost two years now, I have still found a lot of insight in reading my classmates’ blogs. Many of the lesson plans I reviewed during the class, including my first Twilight lesson plan posted for this Unit, was found by reading teachers’ personal blogs. The work I’ve done this semester has convinced me that blogging is a great tool for the classroom. It is a very easy way to keep everyone connected.
Dr. Trathen has given us an endless amount of research tools for materials, instructional strategies and lesson plans that will serve us well in our classrooms. Each of the lessons we created in this class can be taken directly from our blog and put into use in the classroom. Not only do we have our own to use but all of those posted by our classmates too. I am very proud of all that we have created in this short semester!
My favorite reading was Pirates in Historical Fiction and Nonfiction: A Twin-Text Unit of Study. It showed first hand how much fun teachers can make the curriculum for their students when they have the proper tools. I also loved www.teachertube.com. I had never used it before this class. I know that I can use it to find lots of resources for my classroom one day
Twilight Lesson Plan #2-Integrative Lesson Plan adaptable for 6-9th Grades
June 24, 2009 at 9:34 pm (Uncategorized)
In keeping with the Twilight theme, this lesson integrates language arts, social studies, geography and mythology. It was written for middles grades but can be tweaked for any grade since it contains US History, World History, etc. I love the idea of taking a text the students are already excited about and show them that although the book is fiction, many of the ideas presented are based on truth. I would actually like to combine some of the activities from this lesson plan with the first one I posted.
There is a sub-lesson plan that I think would incorporate very nicely with this lesson. It is found at: http://www.ncmuseumofhistory.org/workshops/AI/PotteryLessonPlan.htm This lesson plan integrates art, cultural studies, social studies and mythology.
Twilight Lesson Plan for 9th Grade Language Arts
June 24, 2009 at 8:47 pm (Uncategorized)
http://thereadingzone.wordpress.com/2008/11/25/point-of-view-twilight-lesson/
This lesson plan is based on a portion of Twilight in the very popular Twilight Saga series. The lesson is structured to show how the author’s point of view can alter the story. The students will read several scenes from Twilight told from Bella’s perspective as well as the same scenes as told from Edward’s point of view in Midnight Sun. This lesson can also be structured to be used in conjunction with Romeo and Juliet. I believe, by comparing characteristics of the two works, the students will see the underlying similarities and will help bring a classic to life for students. It also opens the door to look at legends and mythology discussed in the book and as well as the important role they play in the story. Hopefully, and most importantly, the small portion the students read will encourage them to read the entire book.
Also, as a side note, I feel incorporating an “I” poem would be very beneficial to the class since the lesson plan deals mainly with the point of view of the narrator.
Competency Goal 5
The learner will demonstrate understanding of various literary genres, concepts, elements, and terms.
5.01 Read and analyze various literary works by:
• explaining how point of view is developed and its effect on literary texts.
• determining a character’s traits from his/her actions, speech, appearance, or what others say about him or her.
• explaining how the writer creates character, setting, motif, theme, and other elements.
• making thematic connections among literary texts and media and contemporary issues.
• understanding the importance of cultural and historical impact on literary texts.
Article 3: A Professional Development Initiative for Developing Approaches to Vocabulary Instruction With Secondary Mathematics, Art, Science, and English Teachers
June 24, 2009 at 6:30 pm (Uncategorized)
Vocabulary development is the backbone of any subject. Unfortunately, vocabulary development is not normally thought about outside of Language Arts. This article shows the importance of incorporating grammar into every classroom. If a student doesn’t understand or fully comprehend a word then they can’t move forward no matter whether the subject is language arts, geometry or social studies. The vocabulary workshop sessions presented a lot of useful information to the teachers which they used to create their own activities. It is obvious how much these teachers grew professionally from the workshops and how their students benefited from their efforts in the classroom. My favorite example provided was from Mr. Lucas Pasley. I love how he was committed to showing the entire form of a word to his students, especially the etymology. Learning in this type of environment provides students with knowledge that they carry with them to the next classroom. Knowing the history and roots of words brings “vocabulary” full circle, showing its importance. This article provides us all with information we can take directly to our classrooms.
The Multigenre Paper: Increasing Interest, Motivation and Functionality in Research
June 23, 2009 at 10:29 pm (Uncategorized)
It is easy to teach a student to read facts and to put them into their own words as a traditional research paper requires. To offer a multi-genre research approach of instruction requires a lot of effort from both the teacher and the student. Many of the approaches offered in the article were new to me and therefore exciting! These teachers are thinking outside of the box by allowing students to research a topic and present it from a unique point of view. This type of learning gets students excited and encourages creativity. By having an open mind in reference to topics, research styles and presentation styles, teachers are showing their students a different way to think. I don’t think there is any doubt that this type of approach to a research paper would provide the curriculum required skills. Of these many different approaches listed in the article, all of them require more of the student that the traditional research paper. Students still learn the basics such as how to research, how to cite sources and how create bibliography pages. The key is to make students want to probe deeper into a topic and find interesting ways to present that topic. Research writing does not have to be separate from creative writing when students are allowed to creatively express themselves. Of all the problems Moulton referred to in the article, she also provided compromises that worked for the teacher as well as the student.
I was completely amazed at the examples of the students’ papers. It is obvious the amount of time and research that went into them. Everyone benefits when teachers utilize the approaches talked outlined by Moulton and apply them to their classroom. I couldn’t help but smile when I read what the student said who wrote on the Beatles: “It never occurred to me that writing could be so much fun!” I agree!
Question #1
Is it more important for students to learn the traditional five paragraph essay or is it more important for them to become familiar with “real life” writing of memos, letters, maps, directions, flyers, etc.?
Question #2
What is the best way to present the idea of multi-genre paper verses the traditional research paper to more conventional teachers when asking them to allow their students to be proactive in their presentation of the research material?
Question #3
How easy or difficult would it be to integrate the multi-genre research paper in classes other than language arts?
Article 1: “I” poems: Invitations for Students to Deepen Literacy Understanding by Linda Kucan
June 23, 2009 at 8:11 pm (Uncategorized)
A teacher must find ways to be creative in order to encourage students to become more engaged in classroom activities. “I” poems: Invitations for Students to Deepen Literacy Understanding by Linda Kucan shows how teachers can incorporate “I” poems into pre-reading, during reading and post-reading activities. The “I” poem is very adaptable and can be structured in writing activities for students of all ages. By asking a student to write from the first-person point of view, you are asking the student to find the “essence” of the speaker whether it be a person, an inanimate object or a place. This requires the student to get to know their subject. The “I am” format is a great tool to help students ask themselves questions to get to know their subject in an intimate way. A great pre-reading activity to help the students develop a deeper understanding of their subject (the material), as demonstrated in the article, is to have the students perform research particular subjects of the reading material. I loved the idea of having the students do research on particular environments, including in the search animals, plants and weather. Each student’s individual research can then be collectively shared with all the students, increasing each student’s knowledge of the material.
I love how the article provided practical uses for the “I” poem in the classroom. I will definitely use it in my classroom.
Question #1
How can students benefit from researching the characters, setting, plot, etc. of the reading material to create an “I” poem?
Question #2
What are the benefits to teaching students to look at writing “as a knowledge transforming process, a process in which the writer’s thoughts come into existence through the composing process itself” verses the standard five paragraph essay taught in many classrooms today?
Question #3
If Dewey’s notion (1934) was right, that “learning or understanding depends upon opportunities to engage in reflective self disclosure”, then why is it we still look at standardized testing as the best fit for education since this type of testing promotes memorization and regurgitation of facts?
Instructional Strategy #4
June 17, 2009 at 12:13 am (Uncategorized)
Name of Strategy: Guided Reading
Source (Where did this come from?): Instructional Strategies Online
Link to the Strategy:
Guided reading is a strategy that helps students become good readers. The teacher provides support for small groups of readers as they learn to use various reading strategies (context clues, letter and sound relationships, word structure, and so forth). Although guided reading has been traditionally associated with primary grades it can be modified and used successfully in all grade levels. For example, older students may need to learn new strategies to understand how to read an information book in a way that is going to give them access to the information they are seeking.
Although the approach to guided reading is going to depend somewhat on your class size and grade level, the following suggestions can be used to provide an initial framework.
- Students should be divided into small groups (4-6 students). The younger the students the smaller the groups.
- Guided reading lessons are to be about 15-20 minutes in duration.
- Appropriately leveled reading materials must be selected for the group and each child should have his/her own copy of the literature.
- Pre-Reading: The teacher establishes a purpose for reading through prediction making, vocabulary introduction, or discussing ideas that will provide the readers with the background knowledge required for the text.
- Reading: The teacher observes the students as they read the text softly or silently to themselves. The teacher provides guidance and coaching to individuals based on her/his observations by providing prompts, asking questions, and encouraging attempts at reading strategy application.
- Post Reading: The teacher asks questions to ensure that the text has been comprehended by the readers and praises their efforts. Further, the teacher may observe gaps in strategy application and address these gaps following the reading in a mini-lesson format.
- When you teach guided reading you are busy observing and instructing a small group of students. The other students in your class must be kept engage in a literacy activity while you are with your GR group. *To ensure success of guided reading, be prepared to invest time upfront teaching your students the procedures you would like them to follow while you are busy with the GR groups. Once you are certain that the students can follow the procedures THEN focus on actually teaching guided reading.
Explain what part of the standard course of study is addressed by this activity.
| Competency Goal 2 | The learner will explain meaning, describe processes, and answer research questions to inform an audience. |
2.01 Demonstrate the ability to read, listen to and view a variety of increasingly complex print and non-print informational texts appropriate to grade level and course literary focus, by:
|
Explain why you think this strategy will work. How does the strategy help your students learn?
When the proper books are selected, students are able to read with approximately 90% accuracy. This enables the students to enjoy the story because there is not an overwhelming amount of “road blocks” that interfere with comprehension. Students focus on the meaning of the story and application of various reading strategies to problem solve when they do hit a road block in their knowledge or reading ability. By providing small groups of students the opportunity to learn various reading strategies with guidance from the teacher, they will possess the skills and knowledge required to read increasingly more difficult texts on their own. Independent reading is the GOAL – guided reading provides the framework to ensure that students are able to apply strategies to make meaning from print.
Instructional Strategy #3
June 16, 2009 at 11:37 pm (Uncategorized)
Name of Strategy: Concept Mapping
Source (Where did this come from?): Instructional Strategies Online http://olc.spsd.sk.ca/de/pd/instr/index.html
Link to the Strategy: http://olc.spsd.sk.ca/de/pd/instr/strats/conceptmap/index.html and http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jmargeru/conceptmap/types.htm (both found from source)
Give a thorough description of the strategy and how it will be implemented. This should be a summary of the strategy according to the original source:
A concept map is a special form of a web diagram for exploring knowledge and gathering and sharing information which can be used in various pre-writing exercises. Concept mapping is the strategy employed to develop a concept map. A concept map consists of nodes or cells that contain a concept, item or question and links.
The following are examples of different types of concept maps:
Problem-Solution Map
When you plan a prewriting activity in which you want students to write a problem-solution essay, you could define the terms to be used or the structure for the map. In this, students have a problem statement, definition, causes, and effects, leading to a possible solution. Depending on your goals, you’ll provide more or less structure.
Persuasive Argument
This type is a fairly common type of theme for students, in which they present a persuasive argument. The example shown is highly structured, but your assignment might potentially not be.
Research Topic
A more research-y take on description asks students to research a topic, adding to the map in who, what, when, where, why, how fashion leading toward the significance of a topic.
Narrative Story Line
A narrative story line might look like this, with a setting, set of characters, problem, set of alternative attempts to solve the problem, and a resolution. The map shown is a traditional setting, cast of characters, problem, attempts at solutions, and finally, resolution.
Explain what part of the standard course of study is addressed by this activity.
| Competency Goal 2 | The learner will explain meaning, describe processes, and answer research questions to inform an audience. |
2.01 Demonstrate the ability to read, listen to and view a variety of increasingly complex print and non-print informational texts appropriate to grade level and course literary focus, by:
|
Explain why you think this strategy will work. How does the strategy help your students learn?
Concepts maps can be used to:
- Develop an understanding of a body of knowledge.
- Explore new information and relationships.
- Access prior knowledge.
- Gather new knowledge and information.
- Share knowledge and information generated.
- Design structures or processes such as written documents, constructions, web sites, web search, multimedia presentations.
- Problem-solve options
Instructional Strategy #2
June 16, 2009 at 10:57 pm (Uncategorized)
Name of Strategy: Literature Circles
Source (Where did this come from?): Instructional Strategies Online http://olc.spsd.sk.ca/de/pd/instr/index.html
Link to the Strategy: http://olc.spsd.sk.ca/de/pd/instr/strats/literaturecircles/index.html
Give a thorough description of the strategy and how it will be implemented. This should be a summary of the strategy according to the original source:
In literature circles, small groups of students gather together to discuss a piece of literature in depth. The discussion is guided by students’ response to what they have read. Literature circles provide a way for students to engage in critical thinking and reflection as they read, discuss, and respond to books. Collaboration is at the heart of this approach. Students reshape and add onto their understanding as they construct meaning with other readers. Finally, literature circles guide students to deeper understanding of what they read through structured discussion and extended written and artistic response.
Literature circles can be implemented in the classroom by:
1. Selecting members for the Literature Circles (discussion groups).
2. Assigning roles for the members of each circle.
3. Assigning reading to be completed by the circles inside or outside of class.
4. Selecting circle meeting dates.
5. Helping students prepare for their roles in their circle.
6. Acting as a facilitator for the circles.
Some roles may be:
• discussion director – develops questions for the group to discuss
• passage picker or literary luminary – chooses a selection that the group rereads and discusses because it is interesting, informative, the climax, well written….
• vocabulary enricher – chooses words that are difficult or used in an unfamiliar way
• connector – finds a connection between the story and another book, event in their personal life or the outside world
• illustrator – draws a picture related to the reading
• summarizer – prepares a brief summary of the passage read that day
• travel tracer – tracks the movement when the characters move a lot
• investigator – looks up background information related to the book
Explain what part of the standard course of study is addressed by this activity.
Competency Goal 1 The learner will express reflections and reactions to print and non-print text and personal experiences.
1.02 Respond reflectively (individually and in groups) to a variety of expressive texts (e.g., memoirs, vignettes, narratives, diaries, monologues, personal responses) in a way that offers an audience:
• an understanding of the student’s personal reaction to the text.
• a sense of how the reaction results from a careful consideration of the text.
• an awareness of how personal and cultural influences affect the response.
Explain why you think this strategy will work. How does the strategy help your students learn?
As teachers evaluate a discussion group, they should monitor that students are not only progressing in reading and writing strategies but also in discussion etiquette:
• attending to the topic.
• participating actively in the group.
• asking questions.
• “piggybacking” on others’ comments.
• allowing all members of the group opportunity to participate.
• disagreeing constructively.
• supporting opinions with evidence.