Our first lesson (on Tuesday) was on 2 ways to read a book. I chose a level 2 reader from my leveled books called The Picnic.
This book have very simple (and fast!) text, and the pictures add a new dimension that is not in the words with ants stealing the picnic food.
I believe this book came from the Avenues set... |
The goal is to show students that the pictures are just as important as the words, and that the pictures can tell a story all by themselves.
First, I "read" the pictures. I played up the silly idea that the ants are taking the food, and really tried to get them involved in the story.
Next, I went back to the beginning and read the words. We noticed that the words did not tell us about the ants, so we needed to read those pictures to see the funny part!
Lesson 2 (Wednesday) was learning the third way to read. I retold the story (with the kids' help!), remembering where the funny ants were, and when we called the picture "the orange juice" and the words just said the juice. How interesting! I wrote the basic ideas on a chart. This whole piece was very FAST - we needed our attention for the next piece.
I used little icons and gestures to help my non-readers remember what was on the chart. |
I got these boxes at Ikea - packs of 5 for $1.99. It's the best deal I've found. I reinforced the front with fancy duct tape, and then added a name sticker on top. |
These books have just pictures of items and a single word that begins with the title letter. |
I made an I-chart (but I forgot the I!). I talked with my students about what it looks and sounds like for everyone to read to themselves. We had a few children model the correct way. I tried to have a student model the incorrect way, but he was very focused on showing me he could do it correctly!
We got ready, went to our reading spots and . . . lasted about a minute. One just got up to put his book box away, a few started laughing about pictures in their books, and others were moving around the room. I wanted to stay positive, so we charted 3 minutes on our Stamina graph. Like the book says, they can't tell time!
Lesson 3, we reviewed, reviewed and reviewed, modeled, modeled, modeled. I added a second letter book to their book boxes to help them have more to read, and reminded them that they could read a book again! We were ready and . . . two minutes. Maybe. Again, kids were talking, getting up and sharing books.
We aren't doing Daily 5 on Fridays, so we had a little break.
This morning, we were ready. I added a third book (a non-fiction book from my classroom library - more pictures, more interesting!) to their book boxes. We reviewed, we modeled. We read our charts. I introduced my timer, which beeps when the time is up. I made sure they knew what they were listening for. Then . . . 90 seconds. Put the book boxes back, came back to the carpet to break it down. I asked them what went wrong, and they knew exactly what (and who) needed a fix. We reviewed again and . . . 2 minutes.
I was really hoping to make it today, I decided to go for it. We reviewed. This time, they felt like others were talking to them, so they had to tell them to be quiet, and therefore it wasn't their fault! I quickly taught them to silently remind a friend to be quiet by putting their finger in front of their lips (without a SHHHH sound). We modeled that, too. Then, I told them that if they could do 3 minutes, they would get to choose their OWN books for their book boxes . . . oooh!! We were psyched!!
They did it!!
They "read" (or sat quietly) for 3 minutes, per my timer. I ignored one bathroom trip, and one student with special needs who still struggles to not talk (though his neighbors silently reminded him).
Everyone got a smelly sticker, and tomorrow we will learn about picking a Just Right book!
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