Hi Everyone,

I usually lurk on this e-mail group and have learned a great deal from all 
of you.

Several weeks ago, the director of Elementary Education in my district 
called me at home.  I had gone to see Ellen at a workshop in NJ back in 
January and had filed a report to her office (Something we're suppose to do 
when we get professional leave time).  Anyway, she asked me to do a workshop 
with one of our reading specialists on Critical Reading and we have a big 
hour and 15 minutes to do it!!!!!!

So we've been planning and we decided to introduce all the strategies and 
then focus on one.  We decided to do questioning because it lends itself to 
both fiction and non-fiction and I felt it could apply to other subject 
areas.

I'd like your opinion on our agenda for tomorrow and please let me know if 
we've left anything out.

1.  We'll talk about the need for deeper comprehension instruction and give 
a brief overview of the 7 key strategies.  We have a handout on the 
strategies and also the beanie baby bookmarks.

2.  We'll give a brief overview of the gradual release model.  There's a 
handout on this too taken from the Wisconsin Public Education site we all 
like.

3.  With the poster taken from Readinglady.com showing a child and stating 
that we should ask questions before, during and after, my colleague will do 
a think-aloud with How Many Days to America?

4.  Then I have a copy on a non-fiction piece about Penguins that came from 
an encyclopedia to model guided practice.  Instead of sticky notes, we're 
going to try the open door strategy (it's like a flip book turned sideways, 
questions go on the flaps and answers if found go underneath).

5. Finally we'll discuss how you can apply this to our reading anthology and 
hopefully have time for questions/discussions/sharing.

Is this too ambitious for such a short period of time?

What do you think?  I'll be checking back every hour or so to see what you 
think.  And since I'll probably not sleep tonight (nerves), I check early 
tomorrow morning before I leave for school.

TIA for all your help.

You guys are the best!!!

Felicia

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Keith Mack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group'" 
<mosaic@literacyworkshop.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2007 4:26 PM
Subject: [MOSAIC] RSS Feed for list (digesters' dreams answered)


> About a month ago a member that lurks on the list asked me about RSS feeds
> for our listserv. I just now happened across the URL that provides this:
> http://snipurl.com/mosaicrss.
>
> WHO WOULD USE RSS FEED OF OUR LIST?
> If you know and use RSS feeds for news services and other websites/blogs
> that frequently update content, then you might want to add this to your
> feeds. Those of you looking for a better alternative to the digest might
> look into subscribing to the RSS feed. It's perfect for scanning through
> recent posts and then even bookmarking/saving things of interest.
>
> HAVE NO IDEA ABOUT RSS?
> Take the link <http://snipurl.com/mosaicrss> and you'll see what the 
> list's
> RSS feed looks like. Up at the top of the page you'll see links that will
> help you to "Subscribe" and to "Learn More About Feeds".
>
> DO I HAVE TO BE A LIST MEMBER TO GET THE RSS FEED?
> The RSS Feed is linked to a public archive of our list. You do not have to
> be a list member to subscribe to the feed. Remember that with RSS you'll
> only be able to read the posts, not reply to them. To post to the list you
> must be a member.
>
> HOW DO I FIND MY FEEDS?
> If you just simply hit the little subscribe button to a feed you will 
> likely
> find it under "Tools" or wherever you find your "Favorites" menu in your
> browser. You can also paste the actual URL for the feed into your news
> "aggregator" to subscribe:
> <http://www.mail-archive.com/mosaic@literacyworkshop.org/maillist.xml>.
>
> OK - WHAT'S AN AGGREGATOR?
> An aggregator is a place that will house all of your feeds in one neat 
> tidy
> place. It's kind of like making your own newspaper out of the web. You can
> pick the things you want to read about, subscribe, and then when you go to
> your aggregator, everything's there ready for you to read. Aggregators 
> will
> also have some really neat tools that you can use compared to looking at
> feeds in just your browser. Remember to use the actual URL of the feed and
> not the "SnipURL" when subscribing in your aggregator. An RSS URL will end
> with "xml".
>
> I use NewsGator for my aggregator (free at http://www.newsgator.com). I
> tried a few out and then picked this one. Most of them work exactly the
> same. Some of you may have other aggregators that you really like so this
> might be a good chance to share that info.
>
> So, if you're interested or just want to see what RSS is all about, don't 
> be
> afraid to give it a try.
>
> Keith Mack
> Web Administrator for Mosaic List
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Mosaic mailing list
> Mosaic@literacyworkshop.org
> To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to
> http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org.
>
> Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.
>
> 



_______________________________________________
Mosaic mailing list
Mosaic@literacyworkshop.org
To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org.

Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive. 

Reply via email to