Thursday, October 4, 2012

WELCOME TO DAY 5

Welcome to Day 5:  

This week's blog contains a lot of information about upcoming assignments as well as provides an opportunity for to have a discussion in relation to Kylene Beers Chapter 4.  There has been a request to provide some more miscue coding practice and I will be sending you an opportunity to do this via email this weekend.  I was worried if I placed it here it would be viewed as a requirement. This is only for people who are interested and feel they would benefit from a bit more practice.  I will also be responding to questions that were posed this last week (i.e., How are running records different than miscue analysis as well as how to code immature speech patterns and ELL related miscues).  You can look for this sometime this weekend as well as new comments/discussions.

As always if you have any question, please just let me know.

Below I have just posted what I believe is one of the cutest commercials I seen in relation to reading.

Enjoy!

CHECKLIST FOR SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6


CHECKLIST
FOR OCTOBER 6, 2012 (5:00PM)
DAY 5

We will be meeting online again

Topic – Miscue analysis- retellings

Reading: Beers, Chapter 4

DUE:
v  Please make sure you’ve listened, coded, and uploaded your recorded miscues for the two stories (A Fishy Story and Nothing) by Wednesday, October 3 (6:00 PM).
Ø  Please scan a copy of your miscue markings (if you don’t have a scanner available you can take photos of your work as long as we can ALL read your miscue markings clearly
Ø  Post your two (2) miscue marking stories (both: A Fishy Story AND Nothing) to your SMALL online group discussion area on D2L by Wednesday, October 3, (6:00 PM).
v  By Saturday, October 6 (5:00 PM) look at how others in YOUR SMALL GROUP recorded miscues for these two stories (children).
v  As a group have an online discussion about similarities and differences in how miscues were recorded.
v  After identifying similarities and differences discuss why you made the marking you did. 


  • Please engage in an online conversation (D2L small online group discussion area) in relation to your practice miscue coding (Nothing and A Fishy Story). 
Here is a friendly reminder of the directions printed on the Day 4 Blog (last week). 
  • PRINT: Print a copy of each of the following: a) A Fishy Story, AND b) Nothing by Jon Agee.  I have already prepared triple-spaced, typed versions of these texts for our coding use. You can locate them in D2L-Content-Miscue Analysis Practice Sheets. 
  • CLICK: Click on the story you are going to listen to below. 
  • LISTEN, FOLLOW ALONG, CODE MISCUES: Listen, follow along and code miscues as if the reading is happening in live time.  Afterwards you may go back and code any miscues that you may have missed.  You are more than welcome to go back as many times as you would like.  I would just like you to try it once all the way through without stopping.  
  • SCAN: Please scan a copy of your miscue markings (if you do not have access to a scanner you can take photos of your work as long as we [even old people like me] can ALL read your miscue markings). 
  • POST: Post your two (2--both) miscue coding sheets (both stories--A Fishy Story AND Nothing) to your online discussion group area found on D2L by WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 6:00 PM 
  • VIEW: By SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6 (5:00 PM) look at how others in your group recorded miscues.  
  • DISCUSSION: This is not so you can catch others doing it wrong it is to be an opportunity to discuss with others how they went about the process.  It is to be an opportunity to learn from others.  Thus, as a group have an online discussion (on D2L-- your group discussion area) about similarities and differences you see in how coding was done between the members of your group. 
  • COACHING/COLLABORATIVE LEARNING: After identifying similarities and differences discuss why miscues were coded the way they were.  If this was being done in a face-to-face class I would allow you to get into your groups to discuss similarities and differences.  After seeing and hearing how and why some one else coded the miscues in the manner they did I would allow you to make changes to your document.  You do not need to go back and make those changes for us to see, but if you would like to on your paper, so you have it as a record feel free to do so.  The purpose of the activity is to practice coding miscues collaboratively.  Please use these space to practice, coach and learn from each other. 

CHECKLIST FOR SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13

CHECKLIST FOR 

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2012 

Remember this is a face-to-face meeting day. See you next week!

Topic: Defining Troubled Readers 
  • READ: Trouble Reader Book Chapters 1-3 (everyone) and one additional chapter. 
  • Please indicate sign-up for the  additional chapter you will be reading on the google document below. 
  • Please post a visual metaphor and explanation onto our NEW whole group D2L reading discussion area (located in D2L-Discussion- whole group reading discussion) in response to Kyleen Beers, 'When Kids Can't Read' chapter 4 
  • Please post a response to the question/prompts provided below onto your D2L small group discussion group area 
  • Please review directions below: 
  • Directions:

    1) In the NEW D2L whole group reading discussion area please post a visual metaphor for the whole class to see. 
    2)  Take a few minutes to describe why you feel the visual metaphor you have chosen connects with Beers' chapter 4. 

    3) Consider the following prompt in relation to Chapter 4: 
            What are the central ideas discussed in the chapter?  
            What issues or ideas does Kyleen Beers explore in the chapter? 
             Do the issues affect you as a teacher?  How so---directly, on a daily basis, or more generally. 
    4) Answer the following prompt ( as well as discuss something you think is important in relation to this chapter) in a written response that you will post onto D2L in your online discussion group area 
    5) Your response to the above question/prompt should be a two to three page response (about 500-750 words) 
    6) This response should be posted before class on Saturday, October 13. 

    Important this is a two part response: 1) post a visual metaphor in our NEW D2L whole group reading discussion area for ALL to see.  Please provide a short write up explaining how your visual metaphor connects to the reading.  2) Please post a written response onto the D2L- small group online discussion area answering the question posed above.  

    Therefore, you are posting in two different areas on D2L 

UPCOMING ASSIGMENTS

UPCOMING ASSIGNMENTS 

This section give you an overview of upcoming assignments.  Please view the three videos on the upcoming assignments (writing samples and write-up; summative assessment presentation, and miscue CD - write-up). These videos are intended to give you an overview of expectations.  You can also find these in your Assignment Forms & Guidelines Packet.  Please post questions and comments below so that everyone can see questions posted as well as answers that I provide.

WRITING SAMPLES AND WRITE-UP 

DUE: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20 



MISCUE CD & WRITE-UP 

DUE: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3 




SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENTS PRESENTATION

DUE: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17 


CONDUCTING GOOD RETELLINGS

Conducting Good Retellings 

A miscue analysis always includes a retelling by the reader, since we need to know what s/he understands from his/her reading as well as what her miscues are like.  Since teachers often underestimate how much a reader can get out of a text even despite many miscues, a retelling helps ensure that we base our assessment of the reader on a full range of evidence. 

Below you find a series of videos that introduce retellings.  Please view the below videos.  I invite you to make comments/suggestions and post questions directly below as well.

Part I: Watch First




Part II: Watch Second 




PREPARING FOR THE RETELLING PORTION OF YOUR MISCUE 

PART III

Please note that this video is also posted on D2L under Assignment Guideline Videos 


WHEN KIDS CAN'T READ: WHAT TEACHERS CAN DO


ONLINE CHAPTER 4 DISCUSSION

Explicit Instruction in Comprehension 

This week you were asked to read Chapter 4 in Kyleen Beers book, 'When Kids Can't Read'.   I am inviting you to spend some time to reflect and discuss the concepts brought up in this chapter in your online D2L discussion groups as well as a NEW whole group discussion area set up just for 'whole group reading discussions'.  However, to get us thinking and to provide an opportunity for us to share as a whole group.  I would like you to post a visual that could be a metaphor for the chapter 4 in our new D2L whole group reading discussion area. 

For example: 


Here is my visual metaphor for chapter 4 (the above child with the lit light bulb in hand).  When I think of comprehension and providing explicit instruction in comprehension I can't help but to think of a second grader that I had who was struggling with comprehension.   Wyatt was able to decode and read fluently, but often struggled with comprehending what he read (sound like any children you know).   After some direct instruction in visualization we had a conversation that went something like this: 

Me: After reading that section can you make a movie in my mind of what was happening. 
Wyatt:  Yes and no.  I think I would see . . . (and he goes into some details from the story)
Me: Well that is a good start.  Let's read some more and try to continue to build a movie in your mind. 

We continue with this throughout the reading.  At the end of the book I invited Wyatt and a few other children I was working with to reread the story and work on making a movie in their mind of the story they were reading. As I was working with another child in the group Wyatt jumped up and yelled across the room, "I can see it, I can see it!"  He ran up to me and said, "I get it!"  "I get what you mean by making a movie in your mind"  "I can see the story happening in my mind."  

In that moment I felt as if I witnessed the infamous "light bulb" that teachers talk about going off in Wyatt.  A few weeks afterwards Wyatt's mother asked me what I did because they cannot stop Wyatt from reading.  

Directions:

1) In the NEW D2L whole group reading discussion area please post a visual metaphor for the whole class to see. 
2)  Take a few minutes to describe why you feel the visual metaphor you have chosen connects with Beers' chapter 4. 

3) Consider the following prompt in relation to Chapter 4: 
        What are the central ideas discussed in the chapter?  
        What issues or ideas does Kyleen Beers explore in the chapter? 
         Do the issues affect you as a teacher?  How so---directly, on a daily basis, or more generally. 
4) Answer the following prompt ( as well as discuss something you think is important in relation to this chapter) in a written response that you will post onto D2L in your online discussion group area 
5) Your response to the above question/prompt should be a two to three page response (about 500-750 words) 
6) This response should be posted before class on Saturday, October 13. 

Important this is a two part response: 1) post a visual metaphor in our NEW D2L whole group reading discussion area for ALL to see.  Please provide a short write up explaining how your visual metaphor connects to the reading.  2) Please post a written response onto the D2L-online discussion area answering the question posed above.