Monday, October 27, 2014
Every Mark on the Page
I
really enjoy the article, “Every Mark on the Page: Educating Family and Community
Members about Young Children’s Writing” because it talks about teachers working
with parents. I think it is very important for teachers and parents/guardians
to always be in strong communication. When it comes to literacy, I think it is
important for parents to understand literacy terms and reading levels, as well
as, the teacher’s methods for teaching literacy and the reasoning for those
methods. Then, parents could better assist and work with their child at home if
they understand what is happening in the classroom. Also, parents may be more willing
to work with the teacher if they see that the teacher wants to involve parents
and that the teacher wants the parents to see what their child is doing in
class. Parents/guardians can be a valuable resource outside of class for
helping students with their literacy.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Phonics
From Phonics to Fluency and Teaching Phonemic Awareness were both
helpful articles in regards to teaching phonics to elementary students. I
thought the words and definitions in From
Phonics to Fluency were interesting. For instance, there were some words I
had never heard before. Also, there were words I heard before, but I did not
know the definition or I did not know the correct definition. Reading this
article helped me with my understanding of phonics terminology and the meaning
of the terminology.
Teaching Phonemic Awareness was helpful
by explaining how to teach and assess students’ phonics. The article mentioned
many texts and games/activities that can help with teaching phonics awareness.
My favorite part of the article was the section about assessing phonemic
awareness. I have learned some strategies and activities for teaching phonics,
but I do not know how I would assess the students’ progress. The article
mentioned administering The Yopp-Singer Test of Phonemic Segmentation to assess
students’ phonemic awareness (45). The author, also, mentions that there is a
correlation between phonemic awareness and students’ reading skills (45). This
would be important to consider with assessments because a teacher could
correlate a phonemic assessment into a reading assessment in many different
ways. Both the articles helped me with understanding how to teach phonics, how
to assess phonics, and important words/definitions that I should know about
phonics.
Monday, October 13, 2014
Making Decisions for Individual Learners within a Small-Group Setting
The webcast,
“Making Decisions for Individual Learners within a Small-Group Setting”
contained many familiar ideas to me, but, also, new concepts about familiar
topics. For example, one of the speakers
discusses that there are three sources of information which helps readers with their
reading process. These include meaning, syntactic, and visual cues. Having
skills in all three of these categories can help readings with solve words. This
is a familiar idea to me, as well as, how teachers prompt students to use these
three sources. A new idea was built upon my previous knowledge when the speaker
mentioned examples in which teachers can prompt students to use one or many of
the three sources of information. There are many ways in which teachers can
prompt students depending on the student and there are the student needs
prompted with. Hearing more examples of how teachers can prompt students in
different scenarios helps me with feeling more well-rounded and prepared to
prompt students on my own.
The
speaker gave another idea about small groups which I found was interested. The
speaker mentioned that teachers should not teach the book in small group
readings. Rather, teacher should teach the reader. At first, I was confused
about this idea because it was new to me. I used to think that one of the
purposes of small group reading was to give students more individualize help
with understanding a concept of the book. Now I know that that could be a goal,
but the main purpose of small groups is for teachers to teach and help readers.
Teachers can work with the skills readers need by using a book or other reading
in a small group setting. This made me think of what I will do with small
groups when I become a teacher.
When I become a teacher, I plan on
grouping students in small groups by a reading skill or strategies they need to
work on. I can choose a book that would be helpful with learning a specific
lesson. In the small groups, I can work with students on a skill they are
struggling with or learning through the book. As students start to gain skills
and learn new ones, the groups will change based upon student’s skill levels in
reading.
Another idea about small groups
that I found interesting and important is that small groups allow support in
reading. When students are reading in small groups, they should feel supported
by their peers and teacher. When I’m a teacher, I will want to enforce peers to
support each other. On the first day of working with a small, I will talk about
respect and treating others the way you want to be treated. I would talk about
being supportive, as well, to establish ground rules of the small group before
we begin. I’m hoping that discussion will help create a supportive small group
environment.
What is Guided Reading?
“What
is Guided Reading?” is an article by the New Zealand Department of Education
about guided reading and its importance for new readers. According to the
article, the importance of guided reading is to help readers develop their skills,
give readers a supportive environment for their development, readers can
develop reading strategies, students can have positive experiences with
reading, and teachers can observe students’ skills (1). After reading this
section, I observed the importance of guided reading in an educational setting.
I would like to use guided reading practices in my classroom to help students
with their reading. I want my students to enjoy reading and have practice with
reading in a supportive environment. This article showed me that guided reading
can help me with my classroom desire. Also, guided reading practices in the classroom
would help me assess students’ knowledge and skill base with reading and
reading comprehension.
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