210 likes | 359 Views
Poetry is Reading! February 1 & 2, 2010. Presented by: Alison Schriver and Michelle Crouthamel Spring Grove Area School District. Paradise Elementary. Title 1 school 368 students enrolled Located in a rural community One of three elementary schools in district
E N D
Poetry is Reading!February 1 & 2, 2010 Presented by: Alison Schriverand Michelle Crouthamel Spring Grove Area School District
Paradise Elementary • Title 1 school • 368 students enrolled • Located in a rural community • One of three elementary schools in district • Highest free and reduced lunch recipients • 2 Reading Specialists (Title 1 instructors) • 50 identified Title 1 students for reading (based on three Basic or Below Basic scores on district reading assessments)
What can poetry do for students? • Practice reading with expression • Increase reading fluency • Build overall speaking skills • Enhance vocabulary knowledge • Reinforce basic sight words • Provide opportunities to read with/or to others • Quick reads and informal assessment
How we use it in our Title 1 program? • Opening activity to model fluent reading • Student will practice fluent reading with the class, a buddy, or someone at home • Identify rhyming words, vowel sounds and patterns, color words, sight words, and style of poetry • Author’s craft
First Grade • Focus of these poems are sight words • Poems are aligned with our intervention program • Students practice two sight word poems per week • Revisit poems for nightly homework • Share poems by reading to the homeroom students
Second Grade • Focus of these poems are on content and vocabulary • Riddles are also read and solved to increase vocabulary and comprehension (monthly themes) • Students read these poems nightly for homework • For extensions: students write their own riddles • Students also share their favorites by reading to the class
Third and Fourth Grade • Focus of these poems are on content and vocabulary • Students read a variety of poetry styles • Discussion of the author’s purpose and the meaning of the poem • Students read these poems nightly for homework • Students also share their favorites by reading to the class
Ways to Engage Students with Poetry • Use swizzle sticks to track words • Paint brushes to demonstrate fluency and speed • Stickers to motivate students to read with expression, phrasing, and speed • Highlight punctuation • “Swat” the focus words in that poem • Markers and crayons to add pizzazz to their poem after they have mastered it
What does this data tell us? • Students are slowing down their reading rate to understand and think about the text • Students’ comprehension increases as fluency increases • Knowledge of sight words and vocabulary will increase understanding and fluency • As students develop their reading skills with poetry, their fluency and comprehension improve
In the future… • Poetry response journal • Poetry Club – to bring in parents and community members to read and practice poems with students and culminate with a poetry tea where students can recite some of their favorite poems
How do we incorporate poetry in our school? • Read and model how to write a original poems (acrostic, limerick, haiku, couplet, diamante, cinquain) • Across grade levels • Poetry breaks during reading celebration weeks • During Poetry Week – students practice and read their poem on the morning announcements
Professional Books and Resources • Playing With Poems: Word Study Lessons for Shared Readings, K-2 by Zoe Ryder White, Heinemann: Portsmouth, NH 2008 • The Daily 5, by Gail Boushey and Joan Moser, Stenhouse Publishers: Portland, Main 2006 • Sight Word Poetry Pages, by Rozanne Williams, Scholastic: New York, NY 2005 • Riddle Poem of the Day, by Betsy Franco, Scholastic: New York, NY 2005 • Poem of the Week, by Maria Flemming, Scholastic: New York, NY • Poem A Day, by Helen H. Moore, Scholastic: New York, NY 1997 • Playing With Poems, by Zoe Ryder White, Heinemann: Portsmouth, NH ISBN -13978-0-325-01735-8 • Nursery Rhyme Mini-Book Plays, by Nancy I. Sanders, Scholastic: New York, NY 2003
Professional Books and Resources • Circle-Time Poetry Science, By Jodi Simpson, Scholastic: New York, NY 2005 • Circle-Time Poetry Around the Year, by Jodi Simpson, Scholastic: New York, NY 2005 • Circle-Time Poetry Math, by Jodi Simpson, Scholastic: New York, NY 2005 • Perfect Poems With Strategies for Building Fluency Grades 1-2, Teaching Resources: Scholastic, New York, NY 2004 • Perfect Poems With Strategies for Building Fluency Grades 3-4, Teaching Resources: Scholastic, New York, NY 2004 • Perfect Poems for Teaching Phonics, by Deborah Ellermeyer and Judi Hechtman, Scholastic: New York, NY 1999
Websites • www.poetryteachers.com • www.poetryarchive.org • www.findpoetry.com • www.gigglepoetry.com • www.readinga-z.com (membership needed)
How do you use poetry with your students? Discussion time in small groups Grade level, specific examples of using poetry
Make and Take • Choose a grade level poetry packet • Think of a way to incorporate the poems into your daily instruction • Complete the outline of how you will use the poem(s) • Gallery walk to view how others will implement poetry • Share ideas that you saw and thought were helpful
Where can you find our information? • https://poetryisreading.wikispaces.com
Thank you! • Please complete an evaluation form • Enjoy the rest of your conference!