I am so thankful for the deep thinking that is being brought back to the
discussion.

As my teaching partner and I wrote plans for the next couple of weeks (she
is out for two months so we are writing for a sub) we were concerned
because we couldn't be too specific for our math as we are heavy into
moving to CCSS work. This is the muck racking work of having an idea of
where we want the darlings to get to but needing daily reflection and
discussion to know what to try next as we develop this work.

with thankfulness, Kim


On Fri, Jan 4, 2013 at 4:31 PM, Margy Hillman
<margueritehill...@yahoo.com>wrote:

> thanks for this phenomenally profound post.
>
>
> ________________________________
>  From: Beverlee paul <beverleep...@gmail.com>
> To: Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group <
> mosaic@literacyworkshop.org>
> Sent: Friday, January 4, 2013 7:53 AM
> Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Gradual release
>
> The post you're speaking to was actually my second "post" yesterday. I
> wish I had a dollar for every post I carefully wrote and then lost because
> of silly tech glitches. I no longer remember all I wanted to say, but the
> main part was probably dealing with the NAEYC'S model of learning. Through
> the years I've found it to be true of virtually all learning, no matter the
> age of the learner or the content. The model purports that all learning
> begins with awareness and proceeds to exploration, then inquiry, and last
> utilization. It's not linear, nor clean and neat, nor predictable, nor
> simple, nor uniform. I believe that model aids and deepens understanding of
> the release to independence. I also believe Jerry Harste's discussion of
> like processes, often called "mucking around", is illustrative. It's time
> we begin to discuss again the differences between teaching and learning.
> All too often in the last few years, there has been the "unperceived
> inconsistency"
>  and underlying assumption that everything that is taught is learned and,
> even sillier, that nothing is learned unless it is taught. Whole class
> instruction comes from that thinking. Learning is something done by the
> child, not to the child, and we need to remember that. Often
> differentiation is a necessary result of teaching large groups in a
> too-narrow fashion, rather than being open-ended enough to accommodate
> differences among learners.
>
> You mention anthologies. I believe that publishers, in their attempt to be
> all things to all people so as to increase sales, have/use inadequate PD on
> their part as well. That often results in whole-class teaching. If the
> district doesn't extend the teachers' understandings, or challenge
> assumptions, release to independence becomes just one more buzz phrase.
>
> Hopping down off my soap box now....
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On Jan 4, 2013, at 6:16 AM, "Palmer, Jennifer" <jennifer.pal...@hcps.org>
> wrote:
>
> > Bev...
> > What a thoughtful post...it leads to something I have been thinking
> about, and that is the structure through which we teach literacy is of
> grave importance. My district has Writer's Workshop...but not a Literacy
> Studio/Reader's Workshop. For years we taught a whole group lesson followed
> by two reading groups...then gave teachers permission to be flexible in how
> they teach reading. Without sufficient PD, that has become a LOT of whole
> group lessons. We purchased an anthology for teachers to use as a resource
> for reading, but for many that resource has become a crutch...and so while
> we read Miller and Keene, and teach our comprehension strategies, they
> don't always become part of our students' independent repetoire.
> >
> > I think that part of the reason for this is that our basal has a
> strategy being taught for two weeks...it marches students through the
> gradual release model together (or sometimes neglects the "we do" or guided
> practice section). We don't work at each student's pace...those kids who
> have already mastered the strategy get it again. Those who need more
> modeling don't get it. And so... we leave some behind and fail to push
> others ahead.
> >
> > If we put our money into PD to help teachers use a workshop model, the
> structure for differentiation is in place, making it more likely to be
> implemented. I used to think that the structure for instruction didn't
> matter, it was the philosophy behind it that mattered. I am changing my
> thinking at this point, now that I am out of the classroom. The structure
> supports the good teaching...and allows us to use the gradual release model
> that Debbie describes rather than marching students through a "flow chart"
> lock step.  Got to get Debbie's second edition I think!!!
> >
> >
> >
>
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>
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