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The Power of Reading

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Title: The Power of Reading


1
The Power of Reading
  • An Opportunity to Make a Positive Impact on
    Future Academic and Personal Success at SWHS

2
The man who does not read good books has no
advantage over the man who cannot read
them.Mark Twain
3
Reading Is A Skill
  • Ask any sports coach, the band director, the
    speech coach, the key-boarding teacher, a dance
    teacher, or a chess champion, What do I do to
    be good?

4
Answer
Practice
5
However, research tells us most students get very
little practice reading
  • Reading practice declines markedly after fifth
    grade.
  • On average, high-school students spend about as
    much time in literature-based practice as
    kindergarten students.
  • Schools graduate students that have practiced
    reading an average of only seven minutes per day
    over their entire academic career.

6
Research tells us students who read more
demonstrate markedly higher achievement.
  • Students in the top 5 read 144 times more than
    students in the bottom 5.
  • Students in private schools read 67 more than
    public school students.
  • On national testing, students who scored in the
    top 25 spent 59 more time reading than do
    students who score in the bottom 25.

7
Strategies to improve literacy at SWHS
  • Teachers read aloud to class each day as a model
    of good reading (READ-ALOUDS)
  • Teach reading skills in our classrooms
  • Use textbooks more effectively
  • Direct vocabulary instruction
  • Sustained Silent Reading
  • Require reading directly related to content area
    as part of curriculum (BOOK LISTS)
  • Provide reading materials in the classroom
  • Promote a culture of reading in our building

8
Read Alouds
  • Should not be seen as something added on as time
    allows but rather an intentional strategy that
    meets a variety of literacy and learning goals
    across all content areas and grade levels
  • Use read alouds to introduce a new concept,
    reinforce learning, and expand understanding

9
More about Read Alouds
  • Prompt students with a purpose What should they
    know when you finish the read aloud? Explain why
    you chose the story or let students predict what
    the unit you are beginning is about based on the
    read aloud.
  • Find interesting readings about your content to
    share at the beginning or the end of class to
    spark independent learning. If you liked this
    book, try

10
READING strategies that good readers use to
comprehend what they read
  • Recall prior knowledge before, during, and after
    reading to glean understanding
  • Engage in questioning before, during, and after
    reading to clarify understanding and focus their
    reading
  • Activate sensory images to deepen their
    understanding of the text
  • Determine what is important
  • Infer to predict, draw conclusions, make
    judgments, and form unique interpretations from
    the text
  • Network new information with existing knowledge
    to create original ideas and interpretations and
    make critical evaluations
  • Get past comprehension problems by consciously
    and independently applying appropriate
    strategies.

11
Use Activities That Prepare Students Before,
During and After Reading
  • Use KWL pre-reading strategies to set the stage
    for textbook reading.
  • K-What do you know about the topic?
  • W-What do you still want to know about the topic?
  • L-What did you learn about the topic?

12
The K (KNOW) Stage
  • As students brainstorm what they already know,
    list the items on chart paper or an overhead so
    they can look back as the unit progresses.
  • Students have to access prior knowledge about the
    topic and this makes it easier to make
    connections between new information and something
    familiar

13
The W (Want) Stage
  • Generate questions about the topic
  • Develop a purpose for reading
  • Use anticipation guides
  • Pose essential questions for students to answer
    as they read

14
Strategies to use During Reading
  • During reading the students can use bookmarks to
    jot down four kinds of notes
  • Personal responses
  • Important passages
  • Questions
  • Important statistics from the assigned reading
  • Students can use small sticky notes to jot
    responses and flag important passages.

15
The L (Learned) Stage
  • This what we have learned stage tells students
    how and whether they have achieved the goals that
    they have set
  • Use of Written Conversation
  • Each person pairs with someone and they write
    notes to each other about their reading and
    switch every 2 to 3 minutes
  • Use of graphic organizers
  • RAFT writing activity where students select the
    Role the writer takes, the Audience, the Format
    of the writing, and the Topic within the reading.
    Students then share their writing with the
    class or within small groups.

16
Ways to Use Textbooks More Effectively
  • Have empathy.
  • Help kids get started. Front-load our teaching.
    Give students support before and during reading,
    not just handing out quiz grades afterward. Use
    pre-reading activities.

17
More Ways to Use Textbook
  • Dont leave kids alone with their textbooks.
    Have them work in pairs, groups, and teams at all
    stages of reading to discuss, debate, and
    sort-out ideas in the book.
  • Choose wisely. Make more strategic choices about
    what is most important, assigning fewer pages and
    helping students study them more carefully.

18
More Ways to Use Textbook
  • Supplement richly. Coordinate with magazine
    articles, newspapers, websites, trade books,
    primary sources, and more.
  • Allow students to first check out their textbook.
    Review its features and organizing principles,
    at the start of the course.
  • Use guide-o-rama study guides.

19
CHARACTERISTICS OF EFFECTIVE VOCABULARY
INSTRUCTION
  • Descriptions as opposed to definitions
  • Use of linguistic and nonlinguistic
    representations
  • Gradual shaping of word meanings
  • Teaching and using word parts
  • Students interacting about the words they are
    learning
  • Use of games
  • Focus on terms important to academic subjects
  • Different instruction for different types of
    words

20
6 Steps to Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • The teacher provides a description, explanation,
    or example of the new term
  • Students restate the explanation of the new term
    in their own words
  • Students create a nonlinguistic representation
    (picture or diagram) of the term

21
6 Steps to Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Students periodically do activities that help
    them add to their knowledge of vocabulary terms
  • Students are asked to discuss the terms with one
    another
  • Periodically students are involved in games that
    allow them to play with the terms

22
SSR is an acronym forSustained Silent Reading.
  • SSR is a reading intervention strategy used in
    schools all over the nation.

23
SSR
  • SSR is one way to incorporate literacy into the
    classroom at SWHS.

24
Research shows that SSR
MAKES BETTER READERS AND IMPROVES SPELLING
25
IMPROVES VOCABULARY
  • Students learn an average of 45 words with each
    novel they read.
  • Word meaning is picked up 10 times faster by
    reading than intensive vocabulary instruction.

26
IMPROVES WRITING
Research shows that both style and complexity of
sentence structure is increased as the amount of
reading increases.
27
Major Conclusions from Six Decades of Research
  • Kids should read a wide range of materials in all
    classes
  • A sense of purpose is key to reading success
  • Students need to read a lot. Volume, quantity,
    and practice count
  • The classroom should be a reading community, a
    group of people who regularly read, talk, and
    write together.
  • Kids need choice of reading materials

28
MORE CONCLUSIONS
  • Students should read plenty of books and articles
    written at a comfortable recreational level, not
    frustration level.
  • Teachers must help students develop a repertoire
    of thinking strategies to handle challenging
    texts.
  • Students should engage in frequent
    interdisciplinary inquiries and projects

29
More Conclusions
  • Students of ALL ages need to hear powerful
    writing in performancereading aloud by the
    teacher and other students.
  • Adolescent students need opportunities to connect
    with the adult literate community, starting with
    teachers as readers who generously share their
    reading lives with kids.

30
Key Ingredients of a Classroom Library
  • Interesting trade books, histories, and
    biographies of people in your field (Sets of 3 to
    5 copies of each, so students can read and
    discuss them in groups)
  • Current articles clipped from magazines and
    newspapers.

31
More ingredients of a classroom library
  • General interest magazines like Time, Newsweek,
    U.S. News and World Report, Scientific American,
    Harpers, Popular Science, Popular Mechanics.
  • Educational magazines on school topics, like
    ChemMatters, Science News, Discover Magazine,
    Chance Magazine, and Dell Math Puzzles and Logic
    Problems., Americas Civil War and American
    History

32
How do we acquire reading material?
  • Teachers in successful literacy programs dont
    wait for someone to supply the books they get
    the books. Books, not standard textbooks are a
    budget item that is requested. They are ruthless
    in their search for books and magazines they
    raid locked closets where retired teachers have
    left books long forgotten, beg from businesses,
    haunt garage sales, and demand donations from
    friends whose children have gone off to college.

33
How do we promote a CULTURE OF READING at SWHS?
  • Use of the library
  • English teachers take classes to library every 2
    weeks
  • All 9th and 10th grade content area teachers take
    classes to library at least once each nine weeks
  • Word of the day on the morning news show and on
    website
  • Book reviews by students and faculty on morning
    news show
  • Use UNITE TO READ program in our school

34
TEACHERS ARE THE KEY
  • Reading has to be important to the adults in
    building and then it will become important to
    students
  • What is important to us will be important to our
    school!!!

35
The Most Important Benefits from Reading Practice
Have Nothing to Do with Research.
36
What we become depends on what we read after all
of the professors have finished with us. The
greatest university of all is a collection of
books. Thomas Carlyle
37
Richard Peck may provide the best answer for why
you should want to improve your ability to read
in his poem entitled I Read.
38
I READ because one life isnt enough, and in the
pages of a book I can be anybody.
39
I READ because the words that build the story
become mine to build my life.
40
I READ not for happy endings but for new
beginnings Im just beginning myself, and I
wouldnt want a map.
41
I READ because I have friends who dont, and
young though they are, theyre beginning to run
out of material.
42
I READ because every journey begins at the
library and its time for me to start packing.
43
I READ because one of these days Im going to get
out of this town, and Im going to go everywhere
and meet everybody--and I want to be ready.
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