
Sunday, September 27, 2009
When Sheep Sleep

The Jellybeans and the Big Dance

Monday, September 21, 2009
Ch3
This chapter is important because reading doesn't serve a purpose if you can't understand what you've read. While learning to read is important, even more important is being able to comprehend what has been read. All students won't get the same meaning from the same text however that is okay. What is important is that they recieve some meaning from it. Personal meaning from liteature is based on individual beliefs and experiencs however educators also want to be sure students gain the basic meaning behind the text as well as comprehension.
The textbook talks about the steps to building better reading comprehension which are:
1. Activating or supplying prior knowledge
2. Guiding reading
3. Reinforcing concepts
4. Encouraging critical thinking and inquiry
In order to guide the student's understanding teachers should choose books that are at the student's appropriate reading levels. It is important to have different literature so that each reading level has materials available.
Another way to work on reading comprehension is to have discussions before and after the reading to get a better undestanding of the story and vocabulary. The teacher should ask literal as well as other types of questions, such as asking them to compare, predict, and infter parts of the story. For example in the story of the three little pigs the teacher could ask:
- How did the pigs feel after their house was knocked down?
- What do you think would happen next in the story?
- Why did the wolf blow their houses down?
I like the idea the text had about doing a "picture walk" for younger students to look at photos and predict what they think will happen. It causes them to think and makes the story more exciting to them.
Acting out stories or using puppets is also a good idea to encourage comprehension and understanding. Both are activities students of all learning levels even special ed can participate in.
Sunday, September 20, 2009
The Last Leaf To Fall

Monday, September 14, 2009
Chapter 2- Culturally Responsive Classrooms
Chapter two talks about how our classrooms today are more diverse than ever. It is our jobs as teachers to get to know all the different cultures in our classroom and base our instruction on the student's needs. The most important comment I got out of the chapter was where they stated that many students can't and don't make cultural shifts to adjust to schools. I thought this was important because often when students aren't being successful in a new classroom the adults say it is because they are still adjusting and transitioning into a new environment. Instruction will become more effective if the teacher is knowledgable about different cultures most importantly those cultures that make up their classroom. If a student's culture doesn't fit in with that of the rest of classroom he/she could feel isolated. The classroom is a community and if a student feels unwelcome it is likely their grades will be low.
It is important for the classroom library as well as the curriculum to be multicultural so that all students can have a sense of familiarity in the literature provided for them. This includes not just the heritages that are in the classroom but different cultures as well. Doing this lets students learn about different cultures and enables them to be more accepting.
Who Will Go To School Today?

This book is good for students in early elementary grades. It talks about a boy named Sam who wants to send his stuffed monkey to school in his place. After describing all of his daily activities Sam decides he would doesn't want to miss the fun at school.
It is a good story for children on the first day of school because it decribes what their day will be like and would help calm the nerves of aprehensive students.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
3321
My favorite is kidsread.com/authors/authors.asp
The site lists a ton of authors and by clicking on the author name it gives you a short biography and the book they've written.
Some even contain transcript interviews with the author and book excerpts.
Another interesting site is http://www.childrensauthorsnetwork.com/author/BB.htm
They also have a list of authors with their biographies as well as fun facts about them. You can also click on freebies and there are free teacher ideas for the classroom.