Image Map

Summer Reading


For the past few years my staff has done an optional educational book study during the summer. We organize a chapter reading schedule at the beginning of the summer and a wiki is created as a place to respond to the readings.
 Here are the books that we have read:

This year we read
Comprehension From the Ground Up
by Sharon Taberski

I have loved every book that we have read, not only for the content 
but because of the opportunity to read it with my colleagues. 
Here are some highlights from Comprehension From the Ground Up:
  • Sharon's pillars of reading: comprehension is the roof and talking, writing and reading are the foundation
  • see the components of a balanced literacy program as a menu, not a checklist
  • independent reading is one of the most important components of a balanced literacy program, not an extra
  • independent reading promotes accurate fluent reading, builds background knowledge, improves vocabulary, enhances familiarity with language structures, provides time to practice skills and strategies and helps children fall in love with books
  • help students choose books for independent reading that have a purpose
  • have a reader share chair to encourage children to share the books they are reading with their peers
  • "look books" are books children can't read on their own, but they can look through them and learn
  • prior knowledge is the sum total of all that we've experienced throughout our lives and background knowledge is the knowledge of the world we've accrued through our formal education and our understanding of the world
  • for every fictional picture book you prop up to entice kids to read, sitting right alongside it should be an informational text
  • organize your nonfiction read-alouds starting with the simplest and progressing to the most difficult
  • comparing "what's in the book" to "what's in my head"
  • ideas for using a reading/writing notebook
  • difference between skills and strategies: skills are automatic and strategies are deliberately applied
  • don't try to teach all the strategies, doing fewer practices well is better than silencing children as you rush to check off items on your teaching to-do list
  • great ideas and resources for the use of reader's theater
  • teachers need to consciously build vocabulary for children
  • there are two types of ABC books, those that teach content and those that teach concepts
  • slow down, don't assume that children know things and dive deeper into concepts
  • think about who does most of the talking in your classroom?
  • schools should have discussions about what their repertoire of strategies are and how they are used at each grade level
  • our best teaching occurs when we respond to what we observe students needing instead of just moving through items in the curriculum
I had the pleasure of spending a week with Sharon Taberski at the Lakota Literacy View this summer...
she was such an inspiration.


Mrs. Bell

No comments:

Post a Comment