LitCircles
Transcription
LitCircles
Literature Circles The Faye Brownlie model Why Literature Circles? Six Ts of Exemplary Elementary Reading Instruction Time—more guided reading, more independent reading, more content reading; reading and writing for half the day Texts—students have books they can read successfully; all students rarely have the same book Teaching—explicit demonstrations of cognitive strategies are modeled; whole group, small group, side-by-side balanced Talk—more conversational than interrogational; discussion is purposeful and personalized Tasks—greater use of longer assignments, substantive work with more complexity, similar but different tasks Testing—rubrics shift responsibility for improvement to the students Richard Allington, What Really Matters for Struggling Readers, 2005, p. 184 Literacy Quotes “No skill is more crucial to the future of a child, or to a democratic and prosperous society, than literacy.” - Los Angeles Times, "A Child Literacy Initiative for the Greater Los Angeles Area “The goal in fluency instruction is not fast reading, although that happens to be a by-product of the instruction, but fluent meaning-filled reading.” - International Reading “Association Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.” - Groucho Marx Discussion Groups Clearly identify the behaviours and expectations Guide the conversation and model behaviour Group size: 4-7 Limit 20 minutes Other students reading and responding Response Journals Model the double- entry journal Develop criteria and have students practice Self, peer, and teacher feedback (descriptive) Don’t mark all entries! Assessment Overview of Sequence Introduce books with a ‘book talk’; choice with guidance Teach “Say Something” strategy with a simple text Begin reading; keep track of books on a poster or sheet Develop criteria for discussion groups and begin Develop criteria for response journals and begin Assess with criteria (self and peer); teacher assessment Optional comprehension activities and wrap-up Student Samples Literature Circles and the ELA Learning Outcomes Resources District Resource Center: Multiple copies of many books at various levels Four kits: Grade 2/3, 4/5/6, and 7/8, and 9/10 Grand Conversations, Thoughtful Responses: A Unique Approach to Literature Circles by Faye Brownlie