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Balanced Literacy

Balanced Literacy. Cathy Mrla Jen Mahan-Deitte. Reading is the cornerstone of all learning . In every subject area , the ability to read and comprehend written material is of the highest importance.

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Balanced Literacy

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  1. Balanced Literacy Cathy Mrla Jen Mahan-Deitte

  2. Reading is the cornerstone of all learning. In every subject area, the ability to read and comprehend written material is of the highest importance. Supporting the development of capable readers at every level is our goal as educators, parents, and as a community. Why the emphasis on Reading Well?

  3. Early intervention is critical to ensuring all students are developing successfully as readers. Beyond 3rd grade, it becomes increasingly more difficult to ‘catch-up’ with their peers. Why the emphasis on Reading Well?

  4. Literacy refers to the ability to read for knowledge, write coherently and think critically about the written word. Literacy defined

  5. TEACHERS… • read aloud to children – allowing them to hear and discuss complex vocabulary and story structure in literature and non-fiction • explicitly model strategies STUDENTS… • listen actively to stories, strategies, and skills presented/modeled • discuss elements of the story using vocabulary from the text • pose questions to teacher when confused or curious Read Aloud(you do/they watch)

  6. TEACHERS… • read to students aloud and students follow with eyes and join in with voice at appropriate places STUDENTS… • listen actively to stories and skills presented/modeled • read aloud portions of the text, either along with the teacher or independently • Identify, orally, main elements of the story (character, plot, setting, conflict, and resolution) • discuss elements of the story using vocabulary from the text • pose questions to teacher when confused or curious Shared Reading(you do/they do)

  7. TEACHERS… • listen to children read a book independently within a small group, after teacher gives a supportive book introduction. Teacher moves among the children to coach as they read – instructional level text STUDENTS… • read aloud leveled text at his/her instructional level independently while teacher coaches student at appropriate times • identify, orally or in writing, main elements of the story (character, plot, setting, conflict, and resolution) • discuss elements of the story using vocabulary from the text • pose questions to teacher when confused or curious • respond, orally or in writing, to prompts from the teacher – demonstrating comprehension of the strategy or skill being taught Guided Reading(they do/you help)

  8. TEACHERS… • observe children reading at their independent levelfor sustained amounts of time STUDENTS… • read in whisper voice, or silently, for sustained amounts of time – books that are either familiar or cold reads that are at their independent level Independent Reading(they do/you watch)

  9. HANDOUTS Balanced Reading Approaches andReading Block

  10. Teachers… Students… • Explicit Instruction – show students how to write • Be metacognitive – thinking aloud – as you model writing for students every stage of the writing process • Prewrite/brainstorming • Draft • Revise • Edit • Publish • Listen in as you explain your thinking and planning before you write and while you write • Get ideas for writing and composing Writing Aloud(you do/they watch)

  11. Teachers… Students… • Compose collaboratively • Demonstrate, guide, and negotiate the creation of meaningful text, focusing on the craft of writing as well as the conventions. • transcribe • Focus on meaningful message making • Offer ideas without the pressure of having to write them down • Hear your and peers’ thinking and ideas • Observe the parts of the whole • Reinforce and rethink content or concepts • Receive needed support Shared Writing(you do/they do)

  12. Teachers… Students… • Meet with table groups, rotate to tables as students work • Meet with targeted skill groups (i.e. lead sentence or summarizing) • Explore and try out ideas with support • Receive coaching and appropriate materials to ensure success Guided Writing(they do/you help)

  13. Teachers… Students… • Observe • Confer with individual students • Write independently in a particular form or genre • Have the skills and confidence to be successful Independent Writing(they do/you watch)

  14. Strong research link between reading and writing • At least 45 min/4 days a week • Double the amount of writing time at every grade level – some at home Writing requires a Daily Commitment

  15. Scaffolded Instruction Scaffolding is the gradual release of responsibility from the teacher to the student…sometimes teachers make the mistake of not spending enough time on a concept so the students truly understand and move from describing the content to asking students to independently use the information. Marzano cited 24 as the number of times students must be meaningfully exposed to information before they can move to a level of independent mastery. Independent mastery is understanding 80% of the text being read.

  16. Core Elements of Curriculum Phonemic Awareness, Phonics, Fluency, Vocabulary, and Comprehension

  17. Can help students learn to read and spell • The relationship between phonemic awareness and learning to read and spell is reciprocal • The most important forms of phonemic awareness to teach are blending and segmentation Phonemic awareness

  18. Systematic and explicit phonics instruction is more effective • Phonics instruction significantly improves kindergarten and first grade student’s word recognition, spelling, and comprehension • “The best way to get children to refine and extend their knowledge of letter-sound correspondences is through repeated opportunities to read.” – Becoming a Nation of Readers Phonics

  19. Fluency rates depend on decoding strategies, text structure, difficulty of text, and reader’s attentiveness to the text • Fluency is more than reading fast • More fluent readers focus their attention on making connections among the ideas in the text and between these ideas and their background knowledge fluency

  20. Children use words in their oral vocabulary to make sense of the words they see in print • Students need to have 80,000 words in their vocabulary by the time they graduate from high school • Vocabulary is important in reading comprehension. Readers cannot understand what they are reading unless they know what most of the words mean. vocabulary

  21. The reason for reading • If readers can read the words but do not understand, they are not really reading • Instruction in comprehension can help students understand what they read, remember what they read, and communicate with others about what they read comprehension

  22. What is reading? Reading doesn’t occur until there is comprehension.

  23. BALANCED LITERACY • Involves the use of observation and assessment to make instructional decisions • Conducted in an environment that is productive and organized – well managed classroom! • Includes a belief that all students can learn to read and write • Has clearly aligned instructional goals and assessments • Uses a variety of instructional tools, resources, and strategies

  24. POSSIBLE SUPPORT NEEDED:Parent EngagementPeer CoachingSmall Group InstructionData Analysis & ApplicationAssessmentUnpacking the StandardsLiteracy BlockTechnology IntegrationStudent EngagementGrade-Level CollaborationOther

  25. Day 2: October 26 (Marshall Coop) ‘Quality Core Instruction’ Next Meeting

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