READING
Reading is the sole means by which we slip, involuntarily, often
helplessly, into another’s skin, another’s voice, another’s soul.
-- Joyce Carol Oates
Third and fourth grades are vital years for developing a lifelong habit and enjoyment
of reading. Our main goals for the reading program are to immerse the children in
different kinds of literature and to increase their depth of understanding of, connection
to and appreciation for books. We provide children with the opportunity to read
self-selected books, as well as curriculum related, non-fiction books and literature
books of various genres. Through the components of our reading program, we hope
to promote reading development on the individual level and also to create a “community
of readers” who read and listen together, share their responses to what they have
read, and recommend books to one another. The following is a list and description
of the components of our reading program:
READER’S WORKSHOP
We will meet for Reader’s Workshop
2-4 times a week, sometimes as a whole class and sometimes in half groups. Reader’s
Workshop is divided into three sub-components: Independent Reading, Guided Reading
and Literature Study. Unlike “quiet reading” or “free reading,”
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Independent Reading is framed by instruction. It begins
with regular mini-lessons to model how we read and react to text. While the children
are reading, we circulate and confer with individuals to support and assess reading,
as well as to teach to individual needs. Periodically, children are also asked to
respond in writing to what they are reading. Independent Reading is usually followed
by a form of sharing and evaluation.
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Guided Reading is used to pull together small, temporary
groups to teach more explicit reading strategies for processing text. We usually
introduce shorter texts at this time.
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Literature Study is a time to discuss books that we
have all already read. At this time, we encourage children to share their thoughtful
responses to specific passages and to listen attentively to their classmate’s ideas.
Discussions might include making predictions, examining character development, asking
questions, considering literary devices, or thinking about an author’s intent. Sometimes
we use Literature Study to dramatize a scene from the book together.
READ ALOUD
A teacher reads aloud from an ongoing chapter book or from a picture book. This
is a time when the whole class can take pleasure in enjoying a story together. We
discuss particular issues found in a book and what is being studied in Theme. It
is also an opportunity for teachers to model fluent, expressive reading.
CURRICULUM AREA READING
For each theme we study, children read fiction and non-fiction material in order
to gather information. Children read in small groups, in pairs, or individually.
Follow-up activities might include making a poster to display information, teaching
a lesson to the rest of the class on the topic, or answering questions which have
the children reflect, synthesize information or make hypotheses.
SPECIAL FRIENDS
Each student from our class will be paired up with a “special friend” from Meg and
Cindy’s Kindergarten class. As part of our bi-monthly meetings, the students will
be asked to select and practice reading books they will share with their special
friends.
NIGHTLY READING
As part of their homework, students are asked to read a minimum of 20 minutes a
night. This may involve children reading on their own, parents and children reading
aloud together, or a combination of both. Children should fill out a nightly reading
log during the week to help keep track of the books that they are reading at home,
both for themselves and their teachers.
WRITING
Writing happens across the curriculum in areas of study including writer’s workshop,
literature group, theme, spelling, math, weekly reflection, and homework. We aim
to guide the children toward fluency, clarity, comfort and enjoyment of the writing
process. We focus on helping children develop the qualities of a good writer, including
coming up with ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, conventions
and presentation.
We have Writer’s Workshop for 45 minutes 3 times a week, with two of those sessions
in smaller half groups. Writer’s workshop is usually used for creative writing-
children’s self initiated fiction and nonfiction stories and poetry- and other times
used for theme related writing in which students choose a specific topic within
an area of study. Just as in literature the children are exposed to a range of genres,
writing assignments are designed to provide writing experiences in several genres.
The Workshop is often structured with a mini-lesson at the beginning, a quiet writing
period, and sharing of work with feedback for the author when time allows. Mini-lessons
focus on a particular aspect of writing; such as drafting a strong lead, creating
a vivid setting, describing a character or brainstorming alternatives for overused
words. Teachers model writing for the children and talk aloud writing challenges
along the process so that the children can see that it is normal to “get stuck”
and then discuss, as a group, strategies to overcome these challenges. We are very
much a community of writers and children often share their personal frustrations
or triumphs to inspire fellow writers. Having children share works-in-progress and
final “published” works gradually helps them to recognize and value clarity, descriptive
detail and depth in their own writing.
We guide children through the writing process that author’s follow: planning, writing
a first draft, revising, editing, and making a final draft or “publishing”. For
many students, this is the first time in which they are introduced to the concept
of multiple drafts. We encourage the students to really experiment with their first
drafts and to see writing as a process. Therefore, students are not expected to
use conventional spelling in their first drafts. For many students, this allows
them to focus solely on idea development. Revision is the stage in the writing process
when children use a different color pencil to add detail, explanation, or make any
other stylistic improvements. Editing is the stage of writing in which the student
checks and corrects grammar, punctuation, and now spelling. It is at this stage
in the process when students will be expected to correctly spell all “word wall
words.” When children reach the revising and editing stages, they often use an editing
checklist to help them focus on different aspects of their writing including clarity,
order of ideas, use of description, capitalization, punctuation, spelling and for
those who are ready, quotations and paragraphing. Students independently keep track
of their individual progress through the writing steps, consulting with their advisor
throughout. After children edit, their advisor makes final edits and suggestions
for the final draft. Not all pieces of pieces of writing get revised or reach the
publishing stage, but we encourage children to select some pieces that they have
been especially invested in to follow through to publishing. Creating a final, polished
piece of writing to share with friends and family provides a natural, authentic
purpose for children to revise and edit their writing skills.
Throughout the year students will write for many purposes: to entertain, to inform,
to persuade or to retell.
SPELLING
We will do word work three times a week in thirty minute blocks. The children will
be divided by grade level at this time.
Patricia Cunningham and Dorothy Hall’s Making Big Words and Month-By-Month Phonics
will provide many of the activities we will use to “play” with words. The purpose
of these activities is to give the children practice recognizing and applying conventional
English spelling patterns, as well an opportunity for them to construct their own
understanding of basic spelling rules (such as changing the –y to -i, or doubling
the last consonant in a CVC verb before adding the –ing ending). Some examples of
the activities include using letter manipulatives to generate lists of all the small
words that can be made out of a longer word, sorting those words for spelling patterns,
and transferring the patterns to other words that follow the same pattern. In their
book Month-By-Month Phonics, Cunningham and Hall assert the following:
“Phonics – the relationships between letters and sounds—makes sense in English,
but only if you know to look for patterns of letter rather than individual letters.
These patterns determine the sounds for consonant letters as well as vowels. Psychologists
tell us that the brain is a “pattern detector” and that separate, short, unknown
words are separated by the brain into two patterns. These patterns are onsets (all
the letters up to the vowel) and rimes (the vowel and letters following it). The
first time we ever saw the words spew, mite, and phrase, we separated their onsets
– s-p, m, p-h-r – from their rimes – ew, ite and ase – and then used what we knew
about consonants and vowel patterns to come up with sounds for each part and combine
them. To be good decoders and spellers, children need to learn to quickly separate
words into these parts, think of sounds associated with the patterns, and recombine
them. Because of the nature of English and the fact that the brain is a pattern
detector, the most useful approach to phonics instruction is one that teaches students
to look for patterns from words they know and then use these patterns to read and
spell unknown words.”
The essence of spelling in this classroom is that students use words and patterns
that they are familiar with to inform their spelling of similar words. For instance,
if the children know the conventional spelling of the word should, they can transfer
their knowledge to the conventional spelling of the words could and would.
Patricia Cunninghman’s Word Wall is a list of high frequency words that are permanently
displayed in our classroom. irregularly spelled words, including common compounds,
contractions, and homophones. Some of these words don’t follow conventional spelling
patterns, some of these words contain frequently occurring prefixes, suffixes, compounds,
contractions or easily confused homophones. A copy of both September’s Word Wall
and last June’s Word Wall is attached to this document to help you get a sense of
these words. New words will gradually be added to the Word Wall each month.
The children will keep an updated hard copy of the Word Wall in their writing folders
and their homework folders. We want the children to use their Word Walls as a reference
tool. Our goal is for them to build automaticity over time with the correct spelling
of Word Wall Words. If Word Wall Words are not spelled correctly in their writing,
we will point this out. We believe that spelling practice in a meaningful context
with a limited number of carefully selected words will help the children become
stronger conventional spellers.
Finally, each child has been provided with his or her own Spelling Notebook, as
a place to keep track of words that we have “played with” together, and also any
words that he or she is working on individually.
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