WOW, Lori! You hit the screw on the head. > Date: Mon, 2 Feb 2009 05:55:05
-0700> From: ljack...@gwtc.net> To: > Subject: Re: [Understand] Chapter six?> >
> As a lurker in this conversation--and as a teacher who knows the power of
eavesdropping;-), I have to say that the primary discomfort I have with relying
exclusively on levels in matching books to readers is that we seem to neglect
the passion. It has been my task, as of late, to review children who have
'flat-lined' as readers--children stuck in basic and below basic categories
over the course of two or more years. What I am noticing is that many, many of
these children achieve a reading level of 20-24, as determined by DRA2
assessments, and then they level out, stuck in a holding pattern or one of only
minimal acceleration (they may gain some levels across grades but only enough
to hold the status quo). I find this trend alarming, because a child who
attains that level of reading has already had so many doors opened to them--how
is it, then, that they stop reaching for those open doors? Looking closely at
the children, and having the opportunities to know their classrooms and their
teachers, I honestly feel the difference is an utter lack of passion and
interest. As a former classroom teacher, I certainly encountered some children
over the years for whom that 'one book' or that 'one topic' was elusive, and
for just a couple, never found. However, the case is more likely to be this, in
my opinion based on informal investigation: a failure of the classroom
environment to foster passion (lack of books organized by topics, a focus on
silence or moritorium (sp?) on book chatter, and often a teacher who has not
been taught to look beyond the level of the book to see other types of
supports--passion and prior knowledge, familiarity with an author or a series,
sheer dogged determination. I truly believe that the use of leveled readers
provides teachers an important tool but that we have emptied the classroom tool
boxes in some cases, and that when this is the only tool in the box, there will
be many children left behind.> > > Lori Jackson> District Literacy Coach and
Mentor> Todd County School District> Box 87> Mission SD 5755> > ----- Original
message -----> From: Janice Friesen <jani...@jfriesen.net>> To: Special Chat
List for \To Understand: New Horizons in ReadingComprehension\
<understand@literacyworkshop.org>> Date: Monday, February 02, 2009 6:33 AM>
Subject: Re: [Understand] Chapter six?> > > I am really curious about this
question. Now that SO much reading is > > done online it is harder to "level"
the reading and find just the > > right sites with the right reading level for
the kids. A friend of > > mine with lots of classroom experience said that when
she started > > using the Internet kids read what they were really interested
in and > > that they stretched to read passages that she would have thought too
> > high for them. What do you experience with your classes?> > > > Janice> > >
> > On page 149 Ellin argues for a more "moderate approach to book > > >
selection."> > > She says she understands how students who consistently read
things > > > that are too> > > easy or too hard can lose interest in reading
but also believes that> > > readability formulas are very limited in utility
and do not > > > account for student> > > schema and interest. What are your
views on book selection and how > > > do you handle> > > this in your
classroom? What is your belief system and how do you > > > use what> > > you
believe to make decisions about what reading materials you use?> > > > Janice
Friesen> > jani...@jfriesen.net> > > > "An adult can't expect to teach a 6 year
old how to> > swim without getting wet."> > > > We can't expect to effectively
prepare students for their future > > education,> > career, civic and personal
activities without fully embracing Web 2.0 in> > schools.> > > > Quote from
Nancy Willard in email> > > > > > > > > >
_______________________________________________> > Understand mailing list> >
Understand@literacyworkshop.org> >
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/listinfo/understand_literacyworkshop.org> >
> > > _______________________________________________> Understand mailing list>
Understand@literacyworkshop.org>
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/listinfo/understand_literacyworkshop.orgYou
_________________________________________________________________
Windows Liveā¢: E-mail. Chat. Share. Get more ways to connect.
http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_t2_allup_explore_012009
_______________________________________________
Understand mailing list
Understand@literacyworkshop.org
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/listinfo/understand_literacyworkshop.org