Skip to main content

Topic: Teach Reading

Topic: Teach Reading

There are four components that help us as a teacher to structure reading instruction in a classroom.

• Modelled Reading
• Shared Reading
• Guided Reading
• Independent Reading

These four components are woven into our weekly instruction to help our students work on different skills through their reading journey. 

The purpose behind the gradual release of responsibility is to ensure that students understand what they need to do.  When we slowly show them how to do things and work on making the doing of the work more under their control then they are better prepared to show us the skills they have learned over time to master the concepts we are trying to teach them.

With this framework in reading it allows us as teachers to model much of the reading process explicitly to our students.  Sharing with them the thinking skills and strategies of good readers.  Especially when some will just figure it out and others are left with the mystery of what is actually happening.

Within this framework, we engage in all four of these activities each week.

So what happens in each of the four stages of instruction?

Let’s take a deeper look at these four stages and how they practically relate to everyday life in the classroom.
🍁

Modelled Reading

Modelled Reading involves the teacher showing students how to do something.

In reading, this means that the teacher is demonstrating for students how to read.  The teacher is modelling how good readers read.

The teacher will choose a text.  For many teachers, this really is a choice between a novel and a picture book.   These picture books lend themselves well to complex themes that we can review within a short time frame.  They also help students to see and hear a wider variety of writing styles.

Before Teaching:

To prepare for your modelled reading portion of your lesson planning your first step will be to select a text.

You should always pre-read the text and while reading use sticky notes to mark places where you can

• ask questions
• make connections
• make inferences
• have students discuss a concept
• make a prediction
• analyze the author’s purpose or intent
• comment of adherence to text form.

You don’t need to do all of these in each book but focus on a few strategies that make sense for the text.

What you want to avoid is only focusing on one comprehension skill at a time and ignoring all others if they make sense.  For many books, there may be a dominant focus on one comprehension strategy over another but we would avoid simply focusing on only one strategy since this is not something that would actually happen when students are authentically reading.

During Teaching

Allow students to sit close enough to you so that they can focus on the picture book.  You may also allow them to bring their notebook to record their thoughts while reading.  we wouldn’t, however, allow them to do other tasks not related to their reading skills.

Begin to read the book.  Conduct the think-alouds that you have preplanned.  However, you may want to skip a few so as to not stop the flow of reading. You want to focus on the key ideas of your own thinking and aim to stop once every 2-3 pages.

At important parts, you may also want to break up your own reading to give students a chance to turn and talk about the book.

(I also think that because this process of stopping to explicitly share your thoughts when you are reading takes more time.  I often can not spend longer than 20 minutes doing any one thing at a time.  So, for this reason, I will often spread my read aloud over two or even possibly three days.)

After Reading

Leave the book out so that students can re-read it during independent reading activities.  Encourage some of my students to find the ‘YouTube version’ of the books I read so that they can listen to it.  This helps students to practice what you did and re-reading a text is never a bad thing if it aids in better comprehension
🍁

Shared Reading

In this portion of the gradual release of responsibility model, the teacher is teaching alongside the students.  The teacher is the one doing the work but the students are helping.  Sometimes this may mean the students guide the teacher

Read a text three ways

• To Get the Gist
• To Understand the Purpose
• To Think Deeply
🍁

Guided reading

Not round-robin reading

• To focus on comprehension, fluency, and decoding
• To learn how to do something in a small group way – find evidence
• To learn how to be a good reader while the teacher guides you.
🍁

Independent Reading

• To learn to love reading
• To share what they think about reading

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why Schools should create social responsibility to drive change?

Why Schools should create social responsibility to drive change? A school plays a vital role in the child’s development. Children get their formal education in a school. Schools need to promote the education which is meaningful and has to be fit into the framework of the society. Today’s children will grow up and become future adults of our society. Hence if today’s children are not made aware of their social responsibility towards the community then the social issues or problem will grow more and more. There is an urgent need to foster strong mental and social health amongst today’s children so that they can connect with their peers, their elders, the community, the environment, etc. School education must empower children to be active citizens, caring, responsible and compassionate human beings. As the children spend most of the time in school, hence schools must promote the activities to sensitize children towards social responsibility to bring positive change in the soci

Preparedness: Development of Disaster Management Skills in students 

Preparedness: Development of Disaster Management Skills in students  Education is not only assimilation of information and imparting bookish knowledge to students but that information and knowledge must be applied either for earning livelihood or saving life from any unforeseen disaster. Our curriculum covers all areas of learning through skilful education. With this purpose a textbook on disaster management, “Together towards safer India Part-III” is applied in class X course. We teach all kinds of drills such as fire evacuation, earthquake evacuation, flood evacuation etc. We explain and demonstrate all survival skills, safe construction practices, communication during disasters and sharing responsibilities. Schools are giving emphasis on practical drills while teaching such content. In past we have witnessed many unforeseen fire tragedies where the children were being involved, like the fire tragedy of Kumbakonam in which 93 children charred to death, Dabwali fire acciden

mlearning: An Innovative Pedagogical Tool

Blog write up by Mrs Suman Purohit Das mlearning: An Innovative Pedagogical Tool With the advancement of educational technology, our teaching-learning process has faced the utmost changing trends. The classroom technology trends are changing so swiftly and speedily that the teachers and educators have to keep themselves equipped to meet the expectations of a diverse classroom for optimum learning. 21st century Gen Z is born with technology in hand, that’s why these children are known as “Digital Natives”. If we do not bring innovative technology to the classrooms then our classrooms will be dull, boring and it will be difficult to engage and excite children for learning in future. Teachers have to embed technology into their innovative instructional planning. Around 5 years back on the name of educational technology, most of the schools had started changing their chalk & black boards into digital/interactive boards so called “Smart Boards”. But that also got out dat