Inquiry Two, Part A:
Discuss Your Target Area and ‘Core
Practice’ for Guided Lead Teaching
Talk
with your MT about your idea, and use the information you gained from Inquiry
One to respond to the following guiding questions listed below. Upload
to Angel and blog before our Week 4 class (Oct. 2) AND post them on your book
club blog:
1.
Describe your target area for guided
lead teaching.
My
focus for guided lead teaching will be comprehension strategy instruction and
assessment. I will discuss with my students strategies for questioning, making
connections, making predictions and summarizing.
2.
Approximately how much time per day is
allotted for your instruction in this area?
Approximately
60 minutes is allotted for reader’s workshop each day.
3.
Which Common Core State Standard(s)
will you work toward?
RI.
4.2: Determine the main idea of a text and explain how it is supported by key
details; summarize the text.
RL.
4.2:Determine a theme of a story, drama, or poem from details in the text;
summarize the text.
RF.
4.4: Read with accuracy and fluency to support comprehension.
4.
How will teaching in this target area
provide opportunities for students to
learn important content and/or skills that relate to their lives? In what ways does this learning include learning literacy, learning about literacy, and/or learning
through literacy?
Students
will need strong reading skills from here on out in their education journey.
They will use comprehension strategies to help support their reading every day
in a meaningful way. Their learning will be determining what is important to do
while reading. Students will learn ways to manipulate literature for
information and how to focus their thoughts on the main idea or important
aspects to a story. Students will be learning these strategies through
literature itself.
5.
What types of classroom talk take place
within this target area? To what extent is the talk teacher-led, student-led,
or focused on higher-level thinking? What norms for interaction would you like
to build within your classroom as you teach in this target area (e.g., see
ideas in Chapter 6 of Strategies that
Work, the Berne & Clark 2008 article, or draw from some of the readings
done in TE 402 on classroom talk)?
So
far this year, talk about comprehension strategies has been in the form of
mini-lessons in a reader’s workshop. I will continue that trend. When in reader’s
workshop, we discuss as a class: What are strategies to use to aid
comprehension? What are important things to do while reading? The teacher
leading the mini-lesson will ask questions and encourage discussion amongst the
students. Student lead themselves in partner talk, such as turn-and-talk
discussion with a neighbor and my students love to share! They will be happy to
tell you about their text-to-self connections and experiences. We foster
higher-level thinking in that we ask students to think beyond the book we were
reading during the lesson and to think about a book they are reading for IDR or
at home; how would the skill from the mini-lesson transfer? I will plan on
making it clear I would like students to have enough time to have meaningful
conversations about the book we are reading, not talking over other students, I
expect all students to participate in any way they can, modeling how to use
sticky notes while I read to note my questions or connections, encouraging
inner dialogue while reading and having students read-write-think; not to just
sit and absorb a lesson, but to apply it and reflect on what it means for them
to use it.
6.
Which ‘core practice’ do you want to
work on developing/improving as you teach in this target area (refer to
document “Resources for Developing Core Practices”)? How will focusing on this
core practice contribute to your own
professional learning?
My
chosen core practice is monitoring comprehension. I will ask myself: How are my
students comprehending now? What works for them? Is it different from student
to student? How do I account for this? I’ve had a lot of experience with
read-alouds and now I want to delve into making reading meaningful. I want to
know how to help my students get the most out of their reading experience and
see how that helps them with their literacy learning.
7.
What resources within the community,
neighborhood, school district, school or classroom do you have to work with in
this target area?
I
have several outlets for mentor texts: classroom library, school library,
Walled Lake or Novi Public Library. My mentor teacher is the Language Arts guru
for fourth grade and she has given me numerous resources from lists of picture
books to activity ideas to templates for mini-lesson instruction. I also have
the CCSS to reference when determining what fourth graders should be learning.
8.
What additional resources do you need
to obtain?
I
will need to create either classroom anchor charts or individual, student
manipulatives to help my students remember, recall and practice the strategies
we will go over. I do not necessarily want worksheets, so resources to
developing a different outlet would be helpful.
9.
How will you pre-assess your students
in your target area?
I
will ask my students before each mini-lesson about the target strategy/ skill
for that day. Can they identify the strategy? Have they used it before? Why is
it helpful? I will also ask my students how they think about a story while
reading it. I want to see what they are already doing without prompt from a
teacher.
10. What else will you need to find out about all students in
your class to help you develop lesson plans for your Guided Lead Teaching?
I
want to take into account my student’s likes and dislikes; this will help me
chose books to use as mentor texts. I need to know the special needs of all of
my students. I have a few ESL students; what can I do to make my instruction
make sense? I have several students who have trouble focusing for extended
periods of time; what are ways I can let them shake off energy to aid in
hindering distractions? I want to make sure I reach all learners visually and
verbally.
11. What else do you need/want to learn
about the ‘core practice’ to support your planning and teaching?
Assessment:
Would more formative assessment be appropriate for monitoring comprehension? I’m
in the process of determining how comprehension is individualized. I therefore
do not see a universal way to assess comprehension. Is there a particular
sequence I should be teaching these comprehension strategies? How do they build
off of each other?
12. What concerns, if any, do you have about planning and
teaching your unit?
I’m concerned about showing my
students the difference between “fake reading” and meaningful reading. I worry
they are already stuck in the habit of reading without thinking and I want to
make sure they come away from my instruction with go-to strategies that will eventually
be second nature. Classroom management is something that always concerns me.
How can I make this guided lead teaching transition as smooth as possible for
my students?
All this looks great and well thought out. My only question would be what are you going to have the students do to monitor their reading and comprehension. Think about what types about what strategies you want the students to use as they are reading, I assume that is what the anchor charts are for.
ReplyDeleteFor pre-assessing your students about the target area, aren't we supposed to pick one for the entire unit? Do you mean before every lesson you would ask them about the strategy for comprehension that they would use that day?
I see that you mentioned text-to-self connections, I think that using an anchor chart for text to text, self and world connections would be a great way to teach the students.
A possible way to get students to think while reading is to have them take notes. Have them write down something they found interesting, still have a question about and, any predictions they may have.