Re: [MOSAIC] read alouds

2007-06-11 Thread Cyd Pecoraro
It is the Jewel Princess... good guess!
-Sapphire Princess, Emerald Princess, Diamond Princess, Ruby
Princess
I have ordered them from the Scholastic book order.  My daughter really
enjoyed them as well as my students.
Do you have any of the Magic Attic Club or Secrets of Droon?

C~


Cyd Pecoraro
Reading Specialist
Runnymede Elementary
410.751.3203

We shouldn't teach great books;
we should teach a love of reading.
  ~ B.F. Skinner
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 06/11/07 6:13 PM 
Does anyone know what the Princess series.  Each princess was named 
after a jewel.  I think there was a ruby Princess.  I am trying to find 
a replacement for Barbie.  All of my second grade girls are into 
Barbie.  I remember my son's friends use to read about these 
Princesses.
Pat K

to be nobody but yourself -- in a world which is doing its best, night 
and day, to make you like everybody else -- means to fight the hardest 
battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting.

e.e. cummings

On Jun 11, 2007, at 11:45 AM, Betsy Lafontant wrote:

 These read alouds were huge hits in my fifth grade class:
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Re: [MOSAIC] instructional methods for teaching comprehensionstrategies

2007-02-04 Thread Cyd Pecoraro
Well said and thank you for your input and feedback.  
Sometimes I feel all alone in my thoughts and understandings and then I
get to hear thoughts/understandings/beliefs of others that let me know
that I am not alone...
Cyd

Learning is like rowing upstream; not to advance is to drop back. 

   Chinese proverb 

 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 02/04/07 12:21 PM 
Your first grade colleague has an interesting dilemma to explore and one
I
wish more graduate students would spend time studying.  I think we have
confused standards, curriculum, learning tools and instructional
strategies in many states and districts.  I suspect this teacher's
professor is urging them to uncover that issue.  Standards and
curriculum
should be the content we teach - what we intend that our students will
learn
following instruction.  Objectives may break that content down further,
into
more manageable chunks, but it really is the content that should be
represented in our state standards and curriculum documents.  We have
plenty
of research to suggest what content is most essential and that essential
content should be the focus of daily instruction.  When states include a
bunch of instructional practices and learning activities into standards
and
curriculum, it distracts us from the essential content, but that is
another
rant!  

 

Instructional practices, by contrast, are the tools we use to
communicate
the content.  So, a read aloud, shared reading, reciprocal teaching,
etc.,
are instructional practices - pedagogy.  In comprehension instruction,
the
most effective (correlating to long term retention and reapplication of
concepts) are thinking aloud, modeling, demonstrating, conferring, etc.
Reciprocal teaching has a ton of good research behind it, we know
scaffolding to be effective, the gradual release of responsibility model
is
a useful instructional framework into which all of the aforementioned
can be
woven.

 

Unless the professor has made a distinction in class between
instructional
methods and practices, I'm not aware of a technical distinction, but the
place we often get confused, I think, is in using instructional
practices
interchangeably with learning practices.  When a child creates a
two-column
note chart to hold her thinking or completes a Venn diagram to show an
inference, those are not instructional practices - they aren't teaching
her
to comprehend better.  Teachers teach children to comprehend better, not
activities.  Activities or ways to hold thinking may be useful if a
teacher
wants to review/assess/decide on a direction for further instruction,
etc.  

 

Hope that's helpful clarification - encourage your colleague to look
into
thinking aloud - I believe it's enormously important in comprehension
instruction.  

 

ellin keene

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