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The Big Fresh from Choice Literacy
May 12, 2007 Literacy Spring Cleaning
We were filming some literacy lessons in a Maine school a couple
weeks ago. The discussion among the teachers after the lessons
naturally segued into preparations for the end of the year.
Carolyn, a veteran teacher in the group, shared how her classroom
clean-up has changed over the years.
"The biggest mistake I made early in my career was taking down the
wall displays too soon at the end of the year. You want to get a
head start, and feel like you are making progress, so it's tempting
to take down bulletin boards a week or more before school is out.
But that sent a message to my kids - we've taken down our thinking
and hard work from throughout the year, so our thinking and hard
work for this year is over. Now we sort through work, desks,
folders in the week or two before the year ends....but we save
taking down the bulletin boards for the last day."
Carolyn was speaking in a group that included a couple novice
teachers, and you could see the wheels turning in their heads as
they revised their plans for end-of-the-year clean-up. It only
makes sense - if we start the year with bare walls, and slowly fill
them up with our best thinking throughout the year, no wonder
students perceive emptying the walls is akin to emptying our minds.
So how do we transition to the summer months? We are moving into
the season of cleaning, sorting, and closure. We're starting a
collection of features to help with that transition in the Big
Fresh. Over the coming weeks, we'll post articles and videos on
sorting through materials, using learning from this year to plan
for next, and reorganizing classroom libraries and book rooms
before shutting them down for a stretch.
This week we start with some advice on preparing students for
thoughtful, independent summer reading. Enjoy!
Brenda Power Editor, Choice Literacy
Free for All
We spend all year helping students learn to be thoughtful,
independent readers...and then we send them off for the summer with
a list of required books we've chosen for them to read. Or we
promise them a coupon for pizza and cupcakes in September if they
plow through enough titles. Maybe there is a better way? Franki
Sibberson shares her strategies for helping students sort through
and plan what reading will be most helpful and enjoyable to them
over the summer. The process begins a few weeks before the year is
out to allow students to take responsibility for their summer
reading. Franki includes a simple student planning template to
start classroom conversations about summer reading:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/public/345.cfm
NCTE has posted a terrific article chock-full of web resources and
lesson links on summer reading preparation. (All links are open
now at the site, but some will expire for non-NCTE members in 10
days):
http://www.ncte.org/elem/content/127259.htm
We've launched our biggest promotion of 2007 - the PDPalooza!
summer site license and DVD sale Save 33% to 60% on site/license
DVD combos, with the best prices of 2007. If your school already
has a site license, you can do a "rollover" and save even more:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/public/346.cfm
For Members Only
While it may be too early to take materials off classroom walls,
it's never too soon to think about what displays have worked well,
and which ones might be changed next fall. The Sisters (Gail
Boushey and Joan Moser) give a rundown of what's included on the
"Community Language Board" in this five-minute video tour - an
everchanging display of vocabulary words from read-alouds, sight
words, and alternative words and phrases compiled by the class all
year long:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/347.cfm
Late in the school year can sometimes be a good time to try new
things - not only for classroom teachers, but for literacy coaches.
Jennifer Allen tries one morning of group observations among the
new teachers group, rather than the standard individual visits to
demonstration classrooms. In this article, she writes about how
she will carry the learning from the experiment into fall "partner"
observations. The essay is packed with goodies - video excerpts
of a 5th grade writing workshop, team debrief, and study group
discussion, plus sample completed observation forms:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/348.cfm
We've posted the last feature in our three-part series on closure
activities. These quick "time-capsule" suggestions not only
close out the year for a study group or faculty - they will give
you great fodder for the first meeting of the next school year:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/349.cfm
And from the Choice Literacy archives, if you're looking for a
literacy-themed project to celebrate with families the literate
lives of their children, Andie Cunningham's "Honor Books" are a
wonderful gift to create as an end-of-the-year gift that will be
cherished:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/149.cfm
That's all for this week! |