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Anna Scott

Literacy & Learning: Reading in the Content Areas - 0 views

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    This site contains lessons and techniques to use in grades 5-8.  It provides you with ideas how to help students improve reading skills. Although strategies are targets to one content area most of them can be used in several.  This site gives a lot of the same strategies that were given in chapter 5 of our textbook.
anonymous

Education World: Reading Coach: Addressing the Forgotten Element: Improving Fluency in ... - 0 views

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    By Cathy Puett Miller Of the five key reading components identified as essential by the National Reading Panel, fluency is the stepchild. It certainly gets less attention than the others, perhaps, in part, because its exact meaning often is cloudy. Many educators seem even less certain about how to teach it effectively. This article provides a three step approach and some tips on how to increase fluency. It's a short read with some great ideas... I hope you enjoy it!
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    Fluency has recently come more to the forefront. Some say it's a good proxy for comprehension, which makes sense, because if you are spending all or most of your brain power just figuring out what the text says, there isn't much left to figure out what it means. +2
Monica Orlando

T4 - Talking to the Text - 1 views

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    This is a rubric on the T4 strategy. It discusses what T4 is, how to use it as an assessment tool, what concepts teachers' should model, and gives a rubric for assessing the strategy. Very helpful if you are interested in teaching your students this strategy.
Dianna Morrison

Reading Rockets: Authors: Allington | Reading Rockets - 0 views

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    By: Richard Allington (2002) This article by Richard Allington provides a clear-eyed view of what he believes matters most in teaching kids to read - effective and expert teachers. It seems that, finally, those who make educational policy - at the local, state, and federal levels - have begun to recognize just how much good teachers matter. I found this article interesting. A few things were new to me, but never am against being reminded of "best practices" and things we know make good teachers, but tend to forget in our busy lives.
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Wendy Morales

Reading Graphic Organizers and Printables - 0 views

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    This handy site provides various graphic organizers you can use with your reading selections. They are available for download and as printables in either Word or PDF formats.
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    This handy site provides various graphic organizers you can use with your reading selections. They are available for download and as printables in either Word or PDF formats.
Linda Clinton

Kelly Gallagher - Resources - 0 views

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    "Part of the reason my students have such a hard time reading is because they bring little prior knowledge and background to the written page. They can decode the words, but the words remain meaningless without a foundation of knowledge. To help build my students' prior knowledge, I assign them an "Article of the Week" every Monday morning. By the end of the school year I want them to have read 35 to 40 articles about what is going on in the world. It is not enough to simply teach my students to recognize theme in a given novel; if my students are to become literate, they must broaden their reading experiences into real-world text." Includes links to articles used as well as articles used in previous years.
Linda Clinton

More Reading Strategies - 2 views

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    A plethora of before, during, and after reading, hands-on activities.
LeAnn Maynard

Book Review: "The Way They Learn: How to discover and teach to your child's strengths... - 2 views

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    I really enjoyed this book, and it gave me great insights into how students are wired. How do they take in information and how do students use that information. There are four styles of students. The book goes into different ways of working with students and talks about how students concentrate, remember, and understand information. I liked the book because it provided useful information and tips on how to interact with students. I realize that learning styles have gotten a bad rap by some educators. Now having said that learning styles do present an interesting piece of the puzzle to how students learn. It is important to note that a learning style is a preference rather than an ability to learn. Individuals have a tendency to like information or processing to be done a certain way because there is a familiarity and comfort level. The awareness of a learning style can assist educators in setting students up for success by phrasing information in certain ways or pointing out that this information may be more uncomfortable for individuals to learn because of the way it is presented. The book is organized by learning style category and then by subject areas like concentration, understanding and remembering. The first six chapters focus on learning styles, and the remaining six chapters delve into specific topic areas as each relates to learning styles. The main topics of the book are learning styles, and three central topic areas related to learning. The topic areas are concentration, remembering, and understanding. The overall message of the book is that every person may have a dominant learning style, however each person has a certain amount of each learning styles' characteristics. Moreover as students, parents, and teachers become aware of their learning style it is meant to help them achieve and adapt to others who are not wired that way, not to be used as an excuse for poor performance or I can not do something.
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    You raise some important points, LeAnn. I think also it is important to help students (and ourselves?) learn to tap into other styles to further develop them.
Linda Clinton

Book Review: 99 Ideas and Activities for Teaching English Learners with The SIOP Model ... - 2 views

"I have found it easiest to focus on using one strategy at a time and practice using it until it becomes part of my routine." This is excellent advice for applying almost anything new in the classr...

TEMS520 strategies ESL education

Linda Clinton

Journal #2 Words Made Flesh: Fusing Imagery and Language in a Polymorphic Literacy - 5 views

Another fascinating article. I appreciate how you share your thinking about your own literacy experiences, and what you hope to bring to students.

TEMS520 reading literacy

Lauren Scherr

Book Review: Teaching Text Structures (A Key to Nonfiction Reading Success) - 4 views

This is a phenomenal book for teaching text structures. For those who aren't familiar with text structure, it's basically the format that an author chooses to write a text in. Text structure is usu...

TEMS520 reading literacy strategies comprehension ELA text structures nonfiction

LeAnn Maynard

Journal Article #3: Recommendations for Improving Adolescent Literacy - 1 views

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    This article provides five strategies for improving adolescent literacy. The first stragegy is to help students with explicit vocabulary instructions, and then on to comprehension strategies like being careful about what text you select and showing them the strategies to use for that type of text. The third strategy was providing extended forum for discussing vocabulary and text, and that is something that I need to work on with my ninth graders. One of the goals of this article is to improve adolescent literacy and the strategy is to increase student motivation and engagement, which I latched on to right away. One of the ways this article suggest doing it is by making "literacy experiences more relevant to student interests, everyday life, or important current events." I am using this technique in my Ninth-Grade Civics class this semester. Students are learning that the way you read a newspaper is different than reading a textbook. Each week they must select a current event related to Civics and write a brief report about it. Three students are randomly selected to give information on their current event each week. I use a form to help guide them through current event articles, and focus on textual evidence in articles. In other words, what statistics and facts are the writers using to make his/her point? Also, what adjectives, adverbs, nouns, and verbs does the writer use to convey a message or tone of the article? The students' vocabulary and reading are increasing, and they are becoming more informed citizens. It brings Civics alive for them and into the present day.
Linda Clinton

Combining Dictogloss and Cooperative Learning to Promote Language Learning - 2 views

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    "This article describes dictogloss, an integrated skills technique for language learning in which students work together to create a reconstructed version of a text read to them by their teacher."
Linda Clinton

The Florida Center for Reading Research - 2 views

FCRR also has great ideas for interventions as well as links to research. +2

TEMS520 reading Literacy strategies elementary

Lori Losinski

The Reading Lady - 0 views

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    The is a website that I used often when teaching. I think this is a valuable website because it has a lot of information and resources on comprehension strategies that were helpful in the classroom. The site also has a great section on readers theater with tons of scripts to download.
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Carolyn Beyer

Racist Hunger Games Fans Are Very Disappointed - 2 views

    • Carolyn Beyer
       
      Thought this was an interesting article that deals with two issues: social racism and reading comprehension. Many teenagers have read Hunger Games (we took a poll in my 9th grade class today and over half of the class had read the books and about a third had seen the movie) and many are also going to see the movie that was just recently released on Friday. It's interesting to talk to students about the differences between the two, but this article points out an even deeper issue when people do not read closely. It's fascinating, and the racist issues this article presents are disgusting, but it is something that we may deal with as teachers in a diverse world.
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LeAnn Maynard

Provide direct and explicit comprehension strategy instruction - 0 views

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    This website was helpful in looking at different strategies for getting students to comprehend what they are reading. This tends to be a problem for students, especially those who favor skim and scan strategy for reading. I use a lot of these strategies for my US History class.
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