Title: Workshop Open Court Reading
1WorkshopOpen Court Reading
2Welcome, I am Glad You Are Here!
- My Name is
- Shayla Brown
- shayla_brown_at_mcgraw-hill.com
3What is Workshop?
- Workshop is flexible grouping!
- Students work on purposeful activities that
reinforce and extend the instruction in Open
Court. - Teachers work with small groups, conference with
students, and/or do informal assessment.
4Think about Workshop and your Students?
- In Workshop, the goal is for children to work
productively on their own or in small groups
(collaboratively) with classmates to practice and
review content that has been taught in the
lessons or to complete writing and investigation
activities. - At this point in the year, what are your students
doing in Workshop? Share with others.
5Think about Workshop and Yourself?
- In Workshop, the goal is for you to have time to
work with small groups of students or individual
children each day. - At this point in the year, what are you doing
during Workshop time? Share with others.
6Taking a Closer Look
- In small groups or with a partner, read the
section on Workshop, pages 40-41 in the Appendix
of your Teacher Edition. - Think about the following
- What have you done to set up Workshop areas?
- What classroom rules for Workshop have you
established? - How did you introduce Workshop?
- Share with the whole group.
7How to begin
- Set up your class with areas that can be used for
workshop. - Establish class rules.
- Explain workshop to the children.
- Let them know that as the year goes on, they will
be able to use different areas and make the
choices but for right now, the class will work
together in Workshop.
8Organizing Materials
- Think about your room. Use areas, bookcases, or
containers for materials - Label the materials, Reading, Writing, etc.
- Color-code game pieces so children know where the
pieces go. - Code individual Sound/Spelling Cards and keep
them in baggies or on rings.
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12Class Rules
- In the Appendix on page 40, there are five
suggested rules. - Be Polite
- Share
- Whisper
- Take only the materials needed
- Return materials
- Why are rules important? How are yours the same
or different? Are there any other rules you
think are important?
13Class Rules
- Work in small groups and discuss the following
questions, then share them with the larger group. - Why are rules important?
- Why is it important to keep rules short and to
the point? - How are yours the same or different?
- Are there any other rules you think are
important? - Why is it important to review rules regularly?
14Ready!
- Introduce rules
- Explain Workshop
- Give class Workshop activity rereading a
decodable, rereading an anthology selection,
working on writing, and the like. - Monitor children observe, make positive
comments. - Set time. After 10 or 15 minutes, have several
children share what they learned and liked about
Workshop. - Over several weeks, introduce several different
workshop activities, for example, working on
writing, reading books, and the like that can
become choices later.
15Why take time to share after Workshop?
- Sharing lets children know that
- Workshop is an important time of the day.
- They are expected to learn something during
Workshop.
16Why take time to share after Workshop?
- Sharing gives the teacher the opportunity
- To find which activities are interesting to the
children or which activities need to be adjusted. - To find out if there were problems, to discuss
them, and to make changes for the next day.
17Â Â
Ready!GroupOne activity Whole Teacher
AssignedTeacher monitoredÂ
18Think about Workshop and your Students?
- Watch the video on Setting up Workshop. Notice
how the teacher sets up Workshop. - How does the teacher set up the rules?
- What are the children doing at this point?
- What materials and options are available to the
children? - What is the teacher doing?
19Where Are You and Workshop?
- Discuss in small groups and share.
- What is going on for Workshop in your classroom?
- What can you do differently or what can you add
to what you are doing for Workshop?
20Set!
- After several weeks or when you think the
students are ready, youre SET! to move on. - Introduce a Menu. Discuss the activities the
students have been doing and explain a couple of
new activities that can be done during Workshop.
If it is a game, demonstrate it. - Introduce the idea of Must Dos and Can Dos.
Let the students know that once they have
completed any must dos, they can choose one of
the Workshop activities. - If you feel students need additional practice or
review, you can assign them to specific Workshop
areas at this point in the year.
21Set! (Cont.)
- Be sure the class understands how Workshop is
changing. - During the first few days of Set! you may have
to remind children to use whisper voices. If
the class gets too noisy, end Workshop early and
let the children know why. - Continue to have several children share at the
end of Workshop. This is important now since
children are working on different activities.
Encourage them to talk about why they liked this
area and what they learned.
22Possible Must Dos
- Complete writing from Part 3 of the lesson.
- Add vocabulary to Writers Notebook (grade 2 on)
- Reread anthology selection or decodables for
fluency. - Complete Journal entry into Writers Notebook
(grade 2 on).
23Workshop Activities
- In time, introduce different activities.
- Using individual Sound/Spelling Cards
- Phonics practice (software)
- Work on writing in progress
- Reading alone or to each other
- Work on Investigation and Inquiry
- Cross-curricular activities
- Listening to selection on tape
- Scrambled sentences using sentences from Blending
or Word Knowledge. - Fluency practice with Decodables, Anthologies,
and Intervention Selections
24Workshop
- Possible Teacher Activities . . .
- Pre-teach
- Use Challenge materials
- Reteach concepts
- Listen to students read
- Check fluency
- Hold conferences to work on writing
25Making Set Work Think About It!
- Discuss the following
- Why might you want to assign students to
different Workshop activities? - Why might it be important to limit the number of
children who can work on a particular Workshop
activity? - Why is it critical that students take
responsibility for carefully putting away
materials? - Why is it important that students not interrupt
you when you are working with a group?
26Deciding which Children Need to Work with the
Teacher
- All children should have time during the week
with the teacher. - Teacher observes children during instructional
time, for example, during Dictation or Strategic
Reading and notes children who need help. - Groups are made up of children with common
instructional needs. - Groups are flexible. They should change over
time.
27Taking a Closer Look
- Working with a partner or small group, go through
several lessons in your Teacher Edition and
identify instructional opportunities for
observing your students. What help is in the
Teacher Editions to support your observing in the
classroom? - Share with the whole group.
28Taking a Closer Look
- Opportunities and support in Open Court of
observing in the classroom. - Informal checklists
- Informal Comprehension and Research Rubrics
- Informal Assessment (in gold) found throughout
the lessons - Others?
29Set!Suggestions for Minimizing Interruptions
- Help Chart- students can go and put their names
on the chart. Names could be on clothespins,
Velcro backed name tags, etc. - Help Basket- students have names on cards and can
put them in the basket. - See Three Before Me sign- students need to see
three other students to see if they can help
solve the problem before going to the teacher. - Resident Expert - select one student who is
skillful at the assigned activity to assist
students having difficulty. - If Youre Stuck Must Do
30Â Â
Ready!GroupOne activity Whole Teacher
AssignedTeacher monitoredÂ
Set!Students One assigned activityOne
choice Teacher Monitors workshopWorks with
groups
31Think about Workshop and your Students?
- Watch the rest of the video on Workshop.
- What is different now from the beginning of the
school year? - What are the children doing?
- How are they taking responsibility?
- What did you notice about the activities and the
room? - What will you try to use in your classroom?
32Think about Workshop and your Students?
- What was the teacher doing in the video?
- Why do you think the children who were not with
the teacher were able to stay on task? - What management techniques did the teacher use?
33Go!
- Students are making choices from a menu.
- Students are working independently alone or in
small groups. - Workshop may take a longer block of time.
- The teacher is working with multiple groups of
children.
34Â Â
Ready!GroupOne activity Whole Teacher
AssignedTeacher monitoredÂ
Set!Students One assigned activityOne
choice Teacher Monitors workshopWorks with
groups
Go! StudentsMake choicesMay do
more than one activityMultiple groups of
students working on different activities
TeacherWorks with groupsAssessment
35Ready, Set, Go!
- What is the difference between
- Set and Go ?
36Workshop
- Time everyday when all students are assured equal
access to the curriculum. - Students work in groups or Independently.
- Teachers meet individual student needs provide
differentiated instruction, hold student
conferences, or assess student needs.
37Flexible Grouping, Flexible Time
- Groups working with the teacher are not static.
They change as the needs of the students change. - Workshop time is not static. It can be a single
block of time or several smaller blocks
throughout the language arts block of time.
38Workshop Does Not Have to Be a Single Block of
Time
39Workshop Does Not Have to Be a Single Block of
Time
40Keeping Track
- If there are certain activities you want every
student to complete in Workshop during a week,
keep a chart at that Workshop area for students
to check off their names once the activity is
completed. - Keep a chart with the names of the different
Workshop activities down the side and the date
for a two week period of time across the top.
Give one to each student to keep track of what
they did. Conference with students periodically
to discuss their choices. - What other ways can you think of?
41Keeping Track, K-6
- Pie Graph and Clothespins
- Circle divided into sections and label
and color to correspond
to Area. - Dots or stickers at edge of circle
refers to number of
students who
can work in the Area. - Clothespins with students names
on them. - Teacher attaches clothes pins toassigned areas.
42Keeping a Record
43Remember
- Setting up Workshop takes time.
- Start by doing whole-class workshops and
gradually move into groups. - Review the rules regularly. Make the children
responsible. If necessary stop Workshop time if
rules are not being respected. - Have a way to keep track of the children and what
they are doing. Some children may do the same
thing every day and may need some encouragement
to try something new or needed.
44Think about it!
- Work with a partner or small group.
- Using the following chart and your Teacher
Edition, identify program resources you have that
will support Workshop, which areas you will put
those resources in, and the purpose for the
children using those materials.
45Workshop Resources
46Other Resources
- Using the following chart, what other resources
do you have in your classroom that you could use
for Workshop? - Remember Workshop activities should be connected
to language arts and support what the children
are learning.
47Workshop Resources
48Workshop Ready, Set, Go!It Works!
- Whole Group
- One activity
- Teacher assigned
- Teacher monitored
- Students
- One assigned activity
- One choice
- Teacher
- Monitors workshop
- Works with groups
- Teacher
- Works with groups
- Assessment
- Students
- Make choices
- May do more than
- one activity
- Multiple groups of
- students working on
- different activities