Sunday, July 8, 2012

Giving Them the Words

I love teaching reading strategies like making connections.  I  have also always been VERY frustrated by the fact that though they seemed to understand how making connections helped them as a reader, so many of my students could not consistently and clearly express meaningful connections independently. This last year the amazing and talented ladies of the literacy staff in our building gave my class the words they needed to share oral and written connections.

The focus of the lesson on sharing a connection focused on three areas.
    1) Citing the specific reference from their book
    2) Sharing the personal experience that related to that passage
    3) Including how comprehension was improved

The Relatives CameOne of the books we read during this lesson was The Relatives Came.  Then gave the students a form that looked like this.


Name ________________     Date ____________________ # ___
                Title of Book: _____________________________________
When I read the part about ________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
it reminded me of _______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________.
This helped my comprehension because _______________________________
_____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________.

 We practiced and shared several times. We did a lot of sharing and discussing what made a Proficient connection and what made a Basic connection. We then transitioned from the form to just having a chart with the format posted. (I am TOTALLY kicking myself I never took a picture of the chart, it was actually rather cute.) I like the the structure of the lesson and it seemed to go well. At the same time I wondered if we had been too structured with it. I was not sure it would work long term.
Product Details   About 2 weeks later, my student teacher did an amazing lesson with Don't Laugh At Me. It was after this lesson that I first began to realize I was seeing results. EVERY member of the class used the format and wrote at least one meaningful connection to this book. (EVEN my IEP students who read and wrote at 1st grade level!) I was beginning to get excited.
Product Details Then came the day, three months later, when our school counselor came in to do her monthly lesson. She shared the book The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig. (This was perfect because we had just worked on compare and contrast using different versions of The Three Little Pigs, but that is for another blog.) When she finished, the class began to share and reflect with her. She called on one of my low academic and severely ADHD girls who had a real tendency to give rude and inappropriate comments. I held my breath. The student, in a big strong confident voice said "When you read the part about how the pig's heart changed, it reminded me of  the movie "How the Grinch Stole Christmas". That is what happened to the Grinch's heart too, and that made me understand the lesson in this book."
I was completely BLOWN AWAY. When we started I had worried that we were limiting their thinking. Now I realized that we had instead given them a voice. They had the words and could clearly share their thinking.

If you are interested in our form here is a google docs link. https://docs.google.com/open?id=0Bwb_DZiUmtR7MS0yQy12VzZnTWM

We also created a rubric for scoring connections. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AVnXum_fnDm3ixDp01F_AuuUdhuesNKeO4bWu2sBckI/edit


6 comments:

  1. I LOVE "The Relatives Came." What a great book for showing the closeness of a family and how it's so wonderful to "just be" when you get together-nothing fancy, just normal life and loving it. I want to use parts of it to teach "Small Moment Stories" in writing workshop this year-everyday life is full of stories:)

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  2. Hi Karen! Thanks for linking up. I think this is the post you meant for Fiction Friday, so I hope I am leaving a comment in the right place. If not, you can resubmit a link directly to the post instead of to your blog homepage. If you get stuck, pop me an email. I love your form your making connections and your story about how it helped your young readers find their voice is so inspiring. I am definitely using something like this next year. Great idea! Also, if you have a chance I would really appreciate it if you would grab my linky button for your post and link back to my blog. That would be awesome! :)

    Amanda
    The Teaching Thief

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  3. Oh-no! I tried to download your form, but the link wasn't working. Has anyone else had this problem?

    Amanda
    The Teaching Thief

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    Replies
    1. I think I have the problems fixed. I'm new to all of this, so sorry for not having everything working correctly.

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  4. I can't wait to try this out...my students have the hardest time with this. I think it a lot of it is because they lack in experience, but the other part is that they don't know the words to use. This si GREAT, thank you.
    I too, am having trouble with the link though...I will try making one though.
    Thank you for the idea:)
    -Abby
    Mrs. Saunders' Lovelies

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think I have the problems fixed. I'm new to all of this, so sorry for not having everything working correctly.

      Delete