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Karen Chichester

Create a Text Message Exchange Between Fictional Characters - 0 views

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    Richard Byrne's post about a tool to create text messages between characters. (classtools.net)
Karen Chichester

Literacy Builders: Weighing the Options: Alternatives to Round Robin Reading - 0 views

  • One option teachers have is to read the text aloud. The benefits of reading aloud to children are well documented. Unlike round robin reading which has many strikes against it, reading aloud has many benefits, including:  It models what expert reading sounds like. It helps kids know and love many different authors. It exposes children to many genres. It actively engages children in thinking and meaning making while enjoying the piece being shared. It conditions the brain to associate reading with pleasure. It creates background knowledge. It builds vocabulary.
  • If the issue remains that we want our students to do the reading, then why not have them read it silently? Teachers often worry that student won’t actually read or might not understand what they read. If that’s the case, we’ve got to consider the underlying issues. Are they not reading because they don’t have the stamina they need to get through the text? Are they not reading because the text is too hard? It is only through honest reflection that we are able to answer these questions and in answering them, we inevitably find our way to better alternatives to round robin reading.
  • Research on round robin reading tells us: It slows down reading rates. It lowers the quantity of reading students do. (Research estimates that students actually read between two to six minutes in a typical round robin reading session. Any way you slice it, it’s not much.) It is ineffectual at improving reading comprehension. When reading aloud, pronunciation is emphasized over meaning. In turn, text is often read slowly and disfluently which interferes with meaning making. It is detrimental to fluency because children are often asked to read texts that are too difficult which leads to choppy models of what reading sounds like. It highlights the displeasures of reading leaving children feeling disinclined to pick up books and read on their own.
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    Article about the ineffectivenss of popcorn or round robin reading.Author suggests alternatives.
Karen Chichester

Speech to Text in Google Chrome - 0 views

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    From Free Technology for Teachers Blog: Chrome Speech Recognizer for Speech to Text. App ois in the Chrome Web Store.
Karen Chichester

What Texts does the Common Core REQUIRE Students to Read? « Teaching the Core - 0 views

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    Original Source documents that the Common Core requires tstudents to analyze.
Karen Chichester

How social media improved writing - FT.com - 0 views

  • Day by day, prose is becoming blessedly more like speech. Social media, blogs and emails have hugely improved the way we write.
  • Before the internet, only professional writers wrote
  • Email kicked off an unprecedented expansion in writing.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • We’re now in the most literate age in history.
  • Clare Wood, development psychologist at Coventry University
  • Her own study of primary schoolchildren suggested that texting improved their reading ability.
  • Texters, after all, are constantly practising reading and spelling. Sure, children tend not to punctuate text messages. But most of them grasp that this genre has different rules from, say, school exams.
  • George Orwell in 1944 lamented the divide between wordy, stilted written English, and much livelier speech. “Spoken English is full of slang,” he wrote, “it is abbreviated wherever possible, and people of all social classes treat its grammar and syntax in a slovenly way.” His ideal was writing that sounded like speech. We’re getting there at last.
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    From the Financial Times. Discusses how the use of email and social media changed and (in the author's opinion) improved the way we write.
Karen Chichester

"Point, Quote, Connect" | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day… - 0 views

  • PQC” (Point, Quote, Connect or Comment).
  • 1) Make a point 2) Quote from the text supporting your point 3) Make a connection to your personal experience, another text, or some other knowledge
  • similar acronym I learned from Kelly — “ABC.” It stands for: 1) Answer the Question 2) Back up your answer with evidence or facts. 3) Comment from a more personal opinion or perspective
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    Nice strategy to help students learn to support their positions using quotes or evidence.
Karen Chichester

Book Buddies: Lucie deLaBruer... - 0 views

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    Using Google Presentations. 1st grade students and their older book buddies produce a digital storybook. They also use a free drawing program to create images for their stories. The younger students tell their  stories while their book buddies type the text.
Karen Chichester

Cinch - Create and share micro podcasts, images and text updates on CinchCast.com - 0 views

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    Another (currently) free podcast creator. you can call and create a short podcast. From the folks at Blog Talk Radio
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