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Brantner ElementaryGrade One

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Title: Brantner ElementaryGrade One


1
20-20-20
  • Brantner ElementaryGrade One

2
Who are we?
  • Melissa Stewart- Principal
  • Treva Bedel, Lisa May-Ellis,
  • Emily Stepaniak- First Grade Teachers
  • Debbie Shipley- Title 1 Reading Specialist
  • Angela Beeker, Pat Schreiber- Special Education
    Teachers
  • Angela Deighen, Megan Miller, Jeannie Wardwell-
    Paraprofessionals
  • Coletta Wood- Psychologist/Intervention
    Specialists Assistant

3
Brantner A Closer Look
  • Brantner Elementary is a PreK-5 school in West
    Clermont Local School District.
  • In a school of 450 students, 35 receive free or
    reduced lunch.
  • 15 of our first grade students receive special
    education servicesincluding services for
    learning disabilities, hearing impairments,
    multiple disabilities and emotional disabilities.

4
Looking back at 2005-2006
  • How do we effectively use the teachers and
    paraprofessionals available?
  • How do we integrate our districts new systematic
    phonics program into our literacy block?
  • How can we consistently provide solid
    interventions to our students?
  • How can we eliminate behaviors that take away
    from students learning?

5
What does our day look like?
  • A typical day in the first grade at Brantner
    looks like this
  • 820-835 Seat work/Attendance
  • 835-945 Calendar/Mathematics
  • 945-1030 Reading Comprehension
    Strategies/Silent Reading
  • 1030-1130 20-20-20
  • 1130-1225 Recess, Lunch
  • 1225-1255 Write Well/Word Work
  • 1255-155 Specials
  • 155-245 Writing
  • 245-300 Prepare for Dismissal
  • Our school day is spent in heterogeneously-grouped
    homerooms with the exception of one hour, where
    the students are grouped according to their needs
    in a Walk to Read format that we call 20-20-20.

6
20-20-20
  • For the hour in which the students walk to read
    we have divided the time into three twenty minute
    increments, hence the name 20-20-20.
  • At the start of the year students were given a
    variety of assessments to determine their skill
    levels. These assessments included obtaining a
    DRA level, a test of first grade sight words,
    DIBELS, and the Read Well placement test.
    Students Title I referrals from kindergarten
    were also taken into consideration.

7
The next step
  • The results of the assessments were used to place
    the students into one of three classrooms.
  • Within the three classrooms students were placed
    into three smaller groups in order to better meet
    their individual needs. Each group was comprised
    of approximately seven students.
  • The team meets on a regular basis to review
    student progress. Students are moved within
    groups and/or classrooms based upon their
    changing needs.

8
What happens during 20-20-20?
  • The students move through three stations during
    this hour Read Well, Guided Reading, and
    Literacy Centers.

9
The Big Switch
10
In the classroom
11
Read Well
  • Read Well is our district-wide K-1 reading
    program. This is part of our Tier 1 instruction.
  • After 1 ½ years of use, we felt strongly that
    this program be taught by a highly-qualified
    teacher.

12
Read Well In a Nutshell
  • This program
  • builds phonics skills through letter/sound
    recognition practice
  • develops knowledge of word families
  • provides opportunities for choral reading
  • offers students the opportunity to demonstrate
    their reading comprehension skills

13
Guided Reading
  • Students work with a certified teacher in a
    guided reading group. This is also part of our
    Tier 1 instruction. One week is spent using Read
    Naturallys program GATE and the next week is
    spent using trade books. We use Alpha Kids or the
    Scholastic Leveled Readers.

14
Guiding their learning
  • During the guided reading portion of 20-20-20,
    teachers work on various skills with the
    students including
  • Decoding strategies
  • Comprehension
  • Smooth blending
  • Self-monitoring strategies

15
Centers
  • Our centers are led by our paraprofessionals who
    expertly keep students on-task and assist them
    when they need help.
  • The center portion of the day provides us with
    the opportunity to provide enrichment or
    intervention according to our students skill
    levels.
  • This is part of our Tier 2 instruction.

16
It all CENTERS around students needs.
  • Our centers include
  • a double-dose of Read Well or assessment
  • a listening station, where students read along
    with a Marie Carbo tape
  • sight word games
  • word work (word sorts, word making)
  • handwriting practice with tools to strengthen
    hand muscles (clothes pins, tennis balls,
    Etch-a-sketch)

17
Thats the ticket!
  • In each group students are
  • Encouraged to work as a TEAM!
  • Talk when appropriate
  • Put forth best effort
  • Ask questions
  • Move quickly and quietly
  • Students earn a stamp from each teacher for
    demonstrating TEAMwork. Students stamps are
    placed in a 5 by 5 grid on their 20-20-20
    folders. Five stampsone ticket (part of our
    school-wide behavior program), 25 stampstrip to
    the treasure box.

18
Objectives, objectives, objectives
  • The following are only some of the objectives
    that are met during 20-20-20
  • Establish a purpose for reading
  • Make predictions while reading
  • Recall the important ideas in fiction and
    nonfiction texts
  • Monitor comprehension by answering questions
  • Decode by using letter-sound matches
  • Read text, using fluid and automatic decoding
    skills, including knowledge of patterns, onsets
    and rimes
  • Monitor to see if meaning is clear
  • Demonstrate an understanding of letter-sound
    correspondence
  • Use knowledge of common word families to sound
    out unfamiliar words
  • Blend 2-4 phonemes into words
  • Add, delete or change sounds in a given word
  • Recognize common sight words
  • Print legibly and space letters
  • Spell high frequency words correctly

19
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