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Friday, August 24, 2012

The Grand Plan...

I've laid out my plan for my reader's workshop.  Remembering that it is just that, a plan, I share it here.  I'm excited for my workshops to begin!


My Reader's Workshop Plan:

September

  • Establish workshop routines
  • Learn the genre of a test
  • Getting to know oneself as a reader

October

  • Launching the Reader's Workshop (continuation from September)
  • Moving into Strategies

November

  • Reading Fiction--focus on strategies
    • Visualizing, Schema, Questioning

December

  • Reading Nonfiction

January

  • Reading nonfiction

February

  • Reading Fiction--focus on strategies
    • Metacognition, inferring, and synthesizing

March

  • Reading Fiction
    • Literary Elements
    • Literary Appreciation

April

  • Reading poetry

May

  • Genre Study
  • Author Study
**This is a pretty basic structure.  I hope to write more at the beginning of each month as I lay out the month's lessons.  Finally, I am a Montessori teacher.  That means that I will adjust the plan when needed to meet the needs of my students.  That's just good teaching...really!  One final thought, each month's work should build upon the last.

Happy Reading!

--Mrs. Perrien

Monday, August 20, 2012

Back-to-School Resolutions!

Resolution setting is not necessarily my thing, as I have trouble keeping them!  However, I stumbled onto this Back-to-School Resolutions LINKY PARTY (Hosted by Teaching Maddeness) and decided to join in the fun!  I'm more likely to keep these resolutions because I'm making them public on my blog.  

Here are my Back-to-School Resolutions!



1:  My first resolution is to keep the paper trail under control in my classroom.  I'm resolve to PREVENT piles from forming by filing things immediately and using electronic filing whenever possible!

2:  I resolve to keep myself from overcommitting!  I am a full-time teacher, wife, and mother.  I need to keep my focus on my family and my work and say NO when something would take away from my kids, my husband, and my students.

3:  Remodel my master bathroom!  I know this isn't a back-to-school resolution, but it's something that needs to get done and we need to do it this year!

4:  I resolve to keep the focus on work when I'm at work!  It's easy to get roped into hallway conversations and lounge gossip.  While at work I need to be working and keep the focus on my students and their needs.

5:  Finally, I resolve to blog each week about my reading workshop!  :)

That's it!  Do you have resolutions to share?  Comment on this post or link to your own classroom blog.

Happy Reading!


Back to School and Back to Blogging!

I have been absent for several months, yep...I can admit it!  Things really got away from me with work, kids, dance competition, graduate work, etc... I really had to stop blogging.  But I'm back and my reading workshop is also back!

I'm really excited to get back to reading with my kiddos, and working in our reading workshop each day.  I've been focused on setting up the workshop for the past few days; I've been planning for the year, setting up the scope and sequence and picking books for read aloud.

For now, I'm going to write about the books I use to set up my reader's workshop and tell what I love about them.  By no means is this the complete list, I have others I use as well, and other books I've read over the years that have led me to where I'm working today!

Let me begin by saying that working in literature circles/book clubs got me started in reading workshop.  My book club program was already in full swing, humming along nicely, when I realized that my students needed a new format for whole group reading instruction.  Using book clubs and having "centers" wasn't working well and I felt as if we were fragmented as a class when it came to strategies.  That's when I started researching the method of reading workshop.

The following resources have been my guides in reader's workshop:

  • Day-to-Day Assessment in the Reading Workshop by Franki Sibberson and Karen Szymusiak
    • (useful for strategy lessons and small group instruction)
  • Lessons in Comprehension by Frank Serafini
    • (Comprehension lessons)
  • Around the Reading Workshop in 180 Days by Frank Serafini with Suzette Serafini-Youngs
    • (I use this for research on structure, forms for the workshop, a month-by-month plan, mini-lessons)
  • Reading Essentials by Regie Routman
    • (This book has wonderful notes on the usefulness of assessment feedback, and a GREAT section on conferring!)
  • Mosaic of Thought by Ellin Oliver Keene and Susan Zimmermann
    • (Comprehension mini-lessons!)
  • Comprehension Connections by Tanny McGregor
    • (Strategy instruction focus.  Her ideas for introducing each strategy are amazing!)
  • Comprehension & Collaboration by Stephanie Harvey and Harvey Daniels
    • (I use this most for inquiry circles research and apply that most often to my content area instruction and research.  It's a great way to teach non-fiction reading strategies within the context of REAL work.)
  • Notebook Connections by Aimee Buckner
    • (I use this for workshop structure, strategy instruction, the first month [unit] of the workshop...)
  • Engaging Adolescent Learners by Releah Cossett Lent
    • (An excellent resource for content area instruction, with excellent strategy examples.  This book is actually a text I use for my GVSU graduate students.  It's a GREAT book!)
  • Solutions for Reading Comprehension by Linda Hoyt, Kelly David, Jane Olson, and Kelly Boswell
    • (I use this book as a resource for small groups, especially for working in intervention groups for "striving learners.")
  • Conferring with Readers by Jennifer Serravallo & Gravity Goldberg
    • (A focus on conferring...excellent resource.)
Finally, I also use several web resources, including the teacher's college site.  Click on their "resources" tab, it's amazing!  (http://tc.readingandwritingproject.com)

Happy Reading!

Amy



Tuesday, March 27, 2012


When we talk about writing good summaries, which we do often, we refer to the following chart.  Writing summaries and giving oral summaries are a big focus for us this year!  I have found my students are able to give more succinct, yet thorough summaries when we follow this chart.  All students have this chart copied into their reading journals!

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

A few thoughts on structure

As I begin my Reader's Workshop each morning I have a firm structure that I use to begin EACH day.  Let me explain:

My students come to the meeting space (a rug near my easel and rocking chair) with three things:  their reading folder, reading journal, and a pencil.  I don't allow them to bring their books for one simple reason.  They read instead of listen to the lesson!  :)  Imagine telling your students NOT to read, but sometimes it's necessary.

Students sit next to their literature partners, without exception.  This person is the workshop "turn and talk" partner.    I have assigned them partners, thinking of reading levels, attention concerns, genre interests, etc.  Some partners switch often, but I have a few that are static.  It all depends on the needs of the readers.

All students must be able to see the easel.  They occasionally take notes or copy anchor notes into their reading journal.

Journals:  Notes go in the back, work goes in the front.

This is how we start each day:

  • Students come in when the bell rings and begin the day's morning message.  This could be a math review, question generating task, or content area prompt.
  • After 5-10 minutes of work (during which time they must also make their lunch choice, turn in lunch money and library books, etc...the usual morning routine tasks) students do a "Fit with Fred" warm-up.
  • We are now 15 minutes into the day.  After FWF, students take out their reader's workshop materials, find their partner, sit down, and the lesson begins!
Please let me know if you have questions, another way of starting or organizing your workshop, or ideas to share!



All mini-lessons are approximately 12-15 minutes in length or less.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Welcome MRA attendees!

I want to begin this post by saying thank you to everyone that attended my Michigan Reading Association presentation on the Reader's Workshop method.  I strongly believe in this method and hope to help and encourage other teachers interested in running a reader's workshop in their classroom.

For MRA attendees, the following handout link will take you to the handout I ran out of on Sunday.  Sorry!  Within the next week or so I will add several posts to this blog, all addressing components of the reader's workshop.  I strongly encourage you to also check out the following:



To follow most efficiently, please click on the "follow" link to the right of this post.  If you have questions about my use of the Reader's Workshop method, feel free to send me an email (croperr@gmail.com) or comment on this post!

Monday, February 27, 2012

The Hunger Games

I just posted on my classroom blog about 4th grader's reading The Hunger Games.  Some of you exploring Reader's Workshop might be interested in my comments.

Thanks for reading!

Amy