Friday, October 24, 2014

Friday, October 24, 2014

Anne and I are going out for a much needed "Girls Night Out" with our teacher friends.  We will be back on line next Friday with lots of fun things to share with you about spinning tops and our Force and Motion science unit.

Have a great weekend!
Kim and Anne

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Summarizing, Science, and Book Reviews

Sunday, October 20, 2014

This week was filled with tons of new and exciting learning opportunities.  We spent a lot of time digging deeply into the narrative poems The Spider and the Fly and Dogku.

The Spider and the Fly group did a close read on individual stanzas and tried to summarize them in everyday language.  This was a challenge, but it felt good to accomplish this task.




Later in the week, the students went to the website Spaghetti Book Club--Book Review and read several of the reviews.  Their task was to determine what the book reviews had in common.  They found that each review included a summary of the text, an opinion about or connection to the text, and a recommendation for the text.  It was then the students turn to write a poem review about The Spider and the Fly.  They persevered through this challenge, and impressed us with their writing.  In fact, one student said he felt like he was in junior high after doing this activity.


Our Dogku group completed a similar task.  They also did a close read of the stanzas and had to summarize them in everyday language.  This group then compared and contrasted this narrative poem to  When Charlie McButton Lost Power, another narrative poem.  This activity was not preplanned.  It came about during a discussion about the mood of Dogku.  The students naturally noticed similarities between the moods of each poem.



Our science lesson this week was a combination of reading, writing, and scientific discovery.  We began our force and motion unit by making observations of spinning tops.  The students recorded their observations, as well as questions they had about the tops.  These observations led to discovering our key concepts of force, friction, gravity, position and change direction.  Then the students participated in a sorting activity.  We gave them the key words from our science text, and they had to group the words how they predicted they would be grouped together in the text.  As soon as they were done sorting, we read the text and resorted the words.  We didn't have that much resorting to do because their predictions were accurate.  We think the hands-on top activity was responsible for this.  To wrap the lesson up, students wrote a reflection of what they had learned about force and motion in their science journals.  Surprisingly every student understands that a force is a push or a pull.  Next week we are going to extend our spinning top activity and have students design their own tops.  Their tops will be required to spin a minimum of 30 seconds.  We'll see how it goes and report back next week.











Have a great week.

Kim and Anne

Friday, October 10, 2014

Close Reads and Narrative Poems

October 10, 2014

It's SIP day here for us. The morning began with a presentation from Pat Donahue from Mawi Learning. He was outstanding and talked all about a growth mindset, which is our school's theme this year. We thought we would share some of our activities this week during our lunch break now. With that in mind, please have a growth mindset with some of the student work this week.

After all of our poetry reading, and learning about some poetry devices we introduced a new genre of poetry to the students- narrative poems. These poems tell a story and have literary elements as well as poetic devices. The first narrative poem we read was called, Wonton, A Cat Tale Told in Haiku by Lee Ward. We used this book to talk about point of view. Our discussions led to understanding not only the main character's point of view, but also a minor character's point of view. After a close reading to infer what the boy, who was the minor character was thinking, we wrote a haiku from his point of view. The students loved trying to brainstorm phrases that matched 5-7-5 syllable pattern.



From that narrative poem we moved on to When Charlie McButton Lost Power, another narrative poem. This was a challenging text, and it took awhile for the students to realize that this was a narrative poem. After much discussion, we identified literary elements and poetic devices. We used the literary elements to write a story pyramid. This was a fun way for the students to reformat the literary elements to solidify their understanding.




We aren't ready to post this yet, but this week we also split our students into two different shared reading groups to read more complex narrative poetry. The students were required to do several close readings of different stanzas to understand what was happening and what the characters' points of view were. We will finish that project next week and share it with you.

Kim came across an article titled, "How to Choose the Perfect Passage for Close Reading" from the site  We Are Teachers. Close reading lends itself well to shorter texts, but there is so much quality literature that we still want our students exposed to. There are many places or parts of the story where it still important for students to close read to gain a deeper understanding of what is happening, and a deeper connection to the characters. A close read also allows the reader to think about the craft and structure of the literature. We think the ideas in this article can be adapted to any grade level.

Well, we are off to our afternoon meetings! Have a great long weekend if you celebrate Columbus Day on Monday!

Kim and Anne


Sunday, October 5, 2014

Illinois Reading Council Conference

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Anne and I spent Thursday and Friday of last week at the IRC Reading Conference.  Maria Walther and Steven Layne were two speakers who inspired us with their reading and writing ideas, as well as their professional book suggestions.

Maria Walther teaches first grade, but many of her ideas about reading and writing can be adapted to any grade level.  We plan on implementing several of her suggestions in our third grade classrooms.  Her main message on Thursday was,"... reading aloud to students is a must if we are going to transform literacy instruction.  The Common Core State Standards states teachers need to read aloud and do a lot of it."  In her classroom, Maria kept a tally of all of the read aloud experiences she and her first graders had last year.  At the final count they had 794 read aloud experiences!  That's huge.  This is something we would like to try beginning on Monday.

Maria spent the hour presenting book titles that would engage students in collaborative conversations and get them thinking deeper about the story or the craft and structure of the book.  Some good book titles included Peanut Butter and Jellyfish by J. J. Krosoczka, which is a good for encouraging students to noticing amazing vocabulary words.  Tough Boris by Mem Fox is great for modeling a close reading of a text.  The illustrations have something entirely different happening in them than what is going on in the text.  It is a short book and easy to read aloud several times for different purposes.  The Secret Message by M. Javaherbin is great for helping students infer the big idea.  They really have to think about what happened throughout the entire book and use their background knowledge to understand what the secret message is at the end.  This book seems good to use with higher-level readers.

To get students' conversations going, Maria created anchor charts with them.  They include:
When we think and share we...
*Look at one another.
*Keep quiet while one person talks.
*Stay still.

I can link my thinking by saying...
*Tell me more about your thinking.
*I have the same thinking because...
*My thinking is different because...

I can link my thinking by asking...
*What do you think?
*Tell me more about your thinking.
*Thanks, you really made me think today.

Maria said many of these wording ideas came from two professional reading books by Peter H. Johnston.  One is called Choice Words and the other is called Opening Minds.  According to Johnston, it's how teachers word their questions and their conversations that help students grow in their reading and writing potential.  These are two titles we are definitely checking out.

If you are interested in anything we've mentioned above, you can find Maria Walther's handouts at her website under the calendar tab.  The handout we received at the IRC is up there now.  It might also be a good idea to follow her on Twitter.  She always has some inspiring little tid bit to share.




Steven Layne's presentation was similar to Maria's.  He talked about using picture books as spring boards for literacy activities.  Again, he shared the importance of reading aloud to students of any age.  He currently teaches undergraduate and graduate students at Judson University, but in the past he has used these ideas with students as young as third grade up to students in high school.  

One of our favorite ideas for concept reinforcement was using the book Q is for Duck by Mary Elting and Michael Folsom.  It's an alphabet book, but it's not written with the typical organization of an alphabet book.  The letters of the alphabet have an unusual way of matching a concept.  For example, the book begins-- "A is for zoo.  Why?  Because animals live in the zoo."  Teachers can easily use this organizational format to have students create alphabet books based on any concept being studied.  As Steven Layne stated, "You have to know why concepts are important before you can add them to the book."  This activity would really encourage students to think about what they've learned and write about it in another way.  This goes back to Kristina Smeken's idea that students need to reformat information they have learned through their reading.  It is how they get to higher level thinking and understanding.



Another idea we want to take back to our classrooms is rewriting text.  Layne used the poem Sarah Cynthia Silvia Stout Would Not Take the Garbage Out, by Shel Silverstein to model how students could rewrite text.  He asked the question, "Why do we like this poem? Because Silverstein took a job no one wants to do and exaggerated what would happen if it didn't get done."  He encouraged his students to brainstorm a white board full of "yucky" jobs.  Then students would create poems that would explain what would happen if no one did them.  This activity seems fun and challenging.

Thought squares was a final idea that we thought could be easily incorporated into our reading activities.  It's what we already do with one minor difference.  Thought squares involve students in writing down their thinking as they are reading or listening to a story read aloud.  However, instead of having them write whatever thoughts pop into their heads, Layne suggests asking focus questions along the way, and having students write down their thoughts to those questions.  We liked this because sometimes students miss what we think is important, and we have to go back and discuss those after they share their thoughts.  Focusing their thoughts, at times, would help them notice important points in the text right away.

If you are interested in any of the ideas by Steven Layne you can learn more about them at his website, stevelayne.com

The reading conference kept us away from our classrooms for longer than we like, but hopefully incorporating some of the above activities will prove it was worth it.

Kim and Anne