Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Week 7


 What texts and materials do teachers have in their classrooms that support students' development of fluent reading? The texts and materials teachers have in their classroom to support students development of fluent reading include having a classroom library categorized by genre and worksheets

 How do they select vocabulary to teach in all areas of your curriculum? In accordance to the lesson being taught.

 How much time do they allocate to word study? 5- 10 minutes per week

 What word study routines do they teach and encourage their students to use? They utilize multiple word routines that include the following: breaking apart words, word clues and sounding out words.

 

 How do they differentiate instruction and tasks based on their students' needs? Instruction is differentiated by assigning tasks to students in accordance to their ability level. For example, in reading easier texts are assigned to weaker readers and more difficult texts are assigned to stronger readers.

 

1.     How can you ensure that your struggling readers have access to texts they can easily read? Having an array of books with a balance of a ability levels.
 

2. How can you foster a learning environment in which students have many opportunities to practice reading? Maintaining a classroom library and incorporating reading activities

3. Describe ways in which you can model fluent reading in your classroom throughout the day. Do read alouds, and side by side activities

 

1.     Explain the three levels of words and how you can use word levels to decide which words

Look, bed, run :familiar words

Hurricane, democracy, freeway: need to teach

Legislature, words from chemistry and biology: technical words

 
2. How do you teach your students to "chunk" words as a strategy for decoding unfamiliar words? When do you provide this instruction? Tear apart words, when students have difficulty with the meaning of the words.

3. Based on Professor Allington's comments and the classroom examples, what are some ways you might foster word study in your classroom? Word clues and group sessions of learning prefixes of words.


 

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

week 6


Candidate’s Name: Karenia Mitchell

Grade Level: 3

Title of the lesson: Phonics , reading comprehension and word recognition

Length of the lesson:  2 days @ 1 hour each

 

Central focus of the lesson: To improve reading fluency, phonics and reading comprehension
 
Key questions:
  • what do you want your students to learn?
Phonics, word recognition, reading comprehension
 
Knowledge of students to inform teaching
 
  • Phonemic awareness, letter sounds, the alphabet, sounds of letters, vowel sounds, reading fluency
 
Common Core State Standards (List the number and text of the standard. If only a portion of a standard is being addressed, then only list the relevant part[s].)
 
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.3.1
Ask and 
answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the text as the basis for the answers.
 
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.3.4
Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language.
 
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.3.7
Explain how specific aspects of a text's illustrations contribute to what is conveyed by the words in a story (e.g., create mood, emphasize aspects of a character or setting)
Support literacy development through language (academic language)
 
  • Identify one language function :interpret
  • Identify a key learning task from your plans that provide students opportunities to practice using the language function.
  • Describe language demands (written or oral) students need to understand and/or use.
 
Vocabulary
  • General academic terms:  explain, interpret
 
 
Learning objectives
 
 
  1. Student will learn to decode efficiently and quickly
  2. Students will be able to recognize and correctly identify words
  3.  Students will recognize the sounds of letters and words
Formal and informal assessment (including type[s] of assessment and what is being assessed)
 
 To ensure that students have mastered the objective of this lesson, they will be asked to complete a worksheet
 
Informal assessment : students will be evaluated on their participation and collaboration with their peers during the THINK-PAIR-SHARE exercise
 
Instructional procedure: Instructional strategies and learning tasks
 
 
Strategic Lesson Plan:
  • Engage students in a read aloud and a  brief discussion of the book, MERCY WATSON TO THE RESCUE   
  •  Have students work in a think-pair- share discussion in pairs of 4
  •  Have students read independently and while students are reading, offer support if needed and making note of those students struggling with the material
  • Once students have finished reading the text, together as a class  to engage them in a discussion about the book
  • To extend the activity, students will engage in a choral theater script based on the book to improve reading fluency thru repetition.
  • Speed Drill: Allow students two minutes to underline the target syllable or spelling pattern. For example, if the skill is words ending in consonant +le, have students underline ble, cle, and ple in any words containing these common patterns. If the skill is to recognize vowel teams, have them underline those letters. When finished, have students use their speed-drill sheet to read the marked words. Help students pronounce the common syllables or spelling patterns
 
 
 
 
 
Consider all students, including students with IEPs, ELLs, struggling readers, and/or gifted students.
Modifications:
 For students that are struggling the lesson they would be engaged in a word web mini lesson  and guided reading and taking a running record as each student to reads to  know the focus of their difficulty.
 
Instructional resources and materials used to engage students in learning.
 
MERCY WATSON TO THE RESCUE e-book on TumbleBookLibrary
SmartBoard or other interactive white board
 
Reflection
  • Did your instruction support learning for the whole class and the students who need great support or challenge? yes
  • What changes would you make to support better student learning of the central focus? No change
  • Why do you think these changes would improve student learning? Support your explanation from evidence of research and/or theory. n/a

 

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Week 5


Objective: To improve reading strategies using close reading techniques

Lesson time : 20 minutes

Students will:

1.      Students read the entire main selection text independently.

2.      Teacher reads the main selection text aloud with students following along.

3.      Students and teacher re-read the text while stopping to respond to and discuss the questions and returning to the text

Activity:

Think –Pair Share

 Students develop an understanding of the reading  and  develop the ability to  draw conclusions from the reading, teacher asks questions about the text and students think about what they have learned from the text, each student works with another student and discuss ideas and ask questions. The grouped students share by having a discussion 

 When students are overconfident they tend to make mistakes when reading and read words that are not there.

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Week 4 assignment


Strengths:

·         student reads a steady pace, makes attempts to correct errors, strong willed to continue reading the passage
Weaknesses:

·         student needs improvement in reading, expresses needed a good amount of teacher guidance

·         student had 18 errors which indicates improvement is needed, reading was choppy, needs improvement in vocabulary to aid in comprehension/meaning