Kendall Children's Lit. 2014 discussion

This topic is about
The Book Whisperer
The Book Whisperer
>
Key Ideas to Remember
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Deb
(new)
Mar 02, 2014 12:01PM

reply
|
flag



Readers can be developed if encouraged by finding what interests them.
Reading should be done regularly every day to become a good habit.
Developing readers need to feel successful.
Students should not read just to pass tests.
Readers should have good role models.
All readers should be given a choice in what to read.

Sometimes you read something that is a “no brainer” and think, why haven’t the experts been pushing this concept in school. The way Miller was able to help Kelsey was perfect. As I said in my other post, I struggled in reading in elementary school so I know how thrilling it was for Kelsey to be able to succeed after such a long struggle. As a future teacher what I look forward to the most is to be able to help students in their struggles in school.


I know that in high school, I often found myself at a "lull" when the books we were reading were done in sections and we had to go over parts of the book and what they meant. But other times we had group discussions and were allowed to, in a way, debate what we thought about the book and that was always my favorite. I liked to debate points of view because it was a good way to bring up points and ideas that I sometimes didn't get out of reading the book. But, like Miller said, sometimes I just read the book because it was required and it was not always a book I liked, so for certain books it would become a chore to read instead of a pleasure. And I know that many of my classmates felt the same.
Not everyone likes to read as much as I do, and in my senior AP lit class, one of our activities was to pick a book of our own to read (on a list of 100 books) and do activities with it. Everyone in my class loved the chance to finally choose one book that we personally had an interest in and delve into it how we each saw fit.

It is a good idea to make my classroom comfortable for all three different types of readers. What I mean by this is to not assign reading an uncomfortable amount and to assign the perfect amount of reading. I would also like my student's to have the option to choose what they would like to read for book reports or alternatives to book reports. In grade school we were forced to read books that were not intriguing for the entire class. It would have been nice to choose books or topics that interested me.

Another big thing for me was to remember that if a student is already ahead of the curb and just loves to read, it helps to adapt as a teacher in order for the student to get the most out of the class as possible. Do not try to force a student to change what they read or how they read in order to complete an assignment. We can find a way to work with it. That is what being a teacher seems to be about. Find what level a student is at and go with it.


I also loved her positive way to start the year. I love that each year they start out with a “book frenzy” where everyone gets excited to rent books from the classroom and they talk over some of the books and recommend them to each other. It sounds like so much fun!


From that another key idea would be kids should not just be reading to past the test. This should be something that they should enjoy a lot of us especially for me just read to past the test. Reading is a wonderful thing and something that we can enjoy.




No matter what type of reader your students are, you need to encourage them to read everyday. You could help to facilitate this by building time into your lesson plan where students could read books of their choice and not assigned material.
For the development readers, you need to make sure they feel success to keep them motivated to read.
One key idea that I feel is very important is keeping the underground readers involved and motivated in the class and not only focusing on the developing readers.
An example of this is Randy’s story. He was always carrying a massive book around and you knew he was a great reader, but he didn’t do his homework. Based on this, it was suggested that he should be placed into the after school-tutoring program since his grades were low.





