Much
like Cris Tovani’s book, Readicide by Kelly Gallagher is a great book and a
great tool for teachers to use to look for ways to get their students to love
reading and to comprehend what they’re reading. I feel like these two books overlap in some ways because
they both talk about how students are “fake reading” because they are having
trouble figuring out strategies to use to comprehend text and about how
students have come to hate the thought of reading because everything they have
to read is specifically for tests or an assignment and it doesn’t spark their
interest. Students aren’t reading
for pleasure anymore, they are reading because they have to. In “Readicide,” Kelly Gallagher is
saying that schools need to focus less on tests and teaching to the test and
focus more on letting students get immersed into books that interest them. If students are reading, they are
learning. Something Gallagher
talks about that I really liked was that teachers are over-teaching novels to
the point that students are starting to hate reading. They aren’t able to get into the “reading flow” that
Gallagher talks about so much in the book and that we as adults are able to get
into so easily when we’re reading for fun. Teachers should want to help students discover that “reading
flow,” because once you experience that, you realize how fun reading is and how
it can take you into another world for a while and allow you to block out everything
else around you. If you over-teach
a book and stop students constantly to reflect on what they read and to answer
questions about what they read, they will never reach that “reading flow.” How would you like it if you had to
stop every ten minutes to reflect on what you read? Students are going to get burnt out on reading if this is
how you teach a novel. I think one
of the most important things I’ve learned from this book is that you have to
find a balance between over-teaching a book and under-teaching it.
Amanda Brummett English 493
Monday, October 26, 2015
Saturday, October 24, 2015
Cris Tovani's "I Read It, But I Don't Get It"
I loved this
book. Cris Tovani is absolutely
brilliant in the way that she describes the problem that students are having
these days with comprehending what they read. I loved the examples and stories she shared from her own
classroom because that made it all the more real for me and helped me better
understand this problem. I found
myself laughing out loud at some of the things her students said to her, and I
also found myself recognizing that I used to do some of the things her students
did in school when I didn’t understand the textbook I was reading. I’ve loved to read for pleasure for as
long as I can remember, but I have always found it difficult for me to get into
reading boring textbooks. I used
to find myself re-reading passages in a textbook (what Tovani’s students often
tried to do) in the hope that I would miraculously understand what I just read. But I never did, and I ended up getting
the answers to a worksheet from a friend.
I
had never thought of what I was doing as “fake reading,” but that was indeed
what I was doing. I think its
interesting how teachers and parents just assume that their students or their
children are amazing readers because they can read every word and pronounce
them correctly from the page. But
if they were to ask that child to summarize what they just read in their own
words, they would find that they were “faking reading.” The strategies that Tovani suggests
that teachers use to help students comprehend what they read are very
helpful. This book is probably one
of my favorite things we have read this quarter. My favorite section of the book is called “Re-reading is
only the Beginning” and it is my favorite because the strategies that she gives
to “fix up” confusion are so obvious and simple, yet teachers never think to
tell their students that this is what good readers do. My favorite suggestions on what to do
when you are stuck on a passage is to “Visualize” and to “Retell what you’ve
read.” If you aren’t able to
visualize what you’re reading, that is a good sign that understanding has
stopped. And if you aren’t able to
retell what you have just read to someone, it is a good sign that you either
didn’t understand what you read, or you were actually thinking of something
else as you were reading. Overall,
I think this book is a great tool that every teacher should be using to help
their students comprehend what they read.
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Individual Exploration: "Creating Classrooms for Social Justice"
When
I read the question “What is social justice?” I could not think of what my
response could possibly be to that.
And if I couldn’t even define social justice, how could I say why it is
important for our classrooms?
After looking through many articles, I came across a post on a website
called edutopia, that simplified what being an educator for social justice
really means and gave me ideas on some practices I could use to teach my
subject, while still advocating for social justice in my classroom. This post made it clear to me that
social justice is important in the classroom because it is about using the
power we have as teachers to make a positive change, and it is also about
giving students the opportunity to see that they can make positive changes as
well. There were a few suggestions
in this post on how to create a classroom for social justice that I really
thought was important. The idea
that you need to make sure what you teach is relevant to the real world is such
an important one. This post talks
about how you could incorporate what’s happening in the news into your content
and it also talks about how you could ask your students if they have any
questions about something controversial in the news that they have been hearing
about. I thought this was an
interesting point because I never would have thought of that. I think I would be too afraid of
bringing up anything too controversial. The post also suggests that you should
create as many opportunities for students’ voices to be heard as possible
through discussion and collaboration and that you should go through all of your
materials for your lessons and make sure they include examples from diverse
aspects of society. I think both
of these are extremely important.
I agreed with everything this post said. In my mind, social justice is now defined as promoting
tolerance, freedom, and equality for all people regardless of race, sex,
orientation, religion, handicap, etc.
And it is important for our classrooms because students need to feel
like they are accepted before they can begin to learn.
http://www.edutopia.org/blog/creating-classrooms-for-social-justice-tabitha-dellangelo
http://www.edutopia.org/blog/creating-classrooms-for-social-justice-tabitha-dellangelo
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Critical Pedagogy in an Urban High School English Classroom
This
article gave great insight into the many injustices that are experienced by
students in their schools and classrooms.
I also felt like this article gave me so many new ideas on how to
approach teaching and how to approach creating my lesson plans. In some ways this article gave me more
courage to think outside of the box and create lesson plans that would be more
interesting for my students.
There
were many ideas that interested me in the first section of this article. Andrade and Morrell talked about how
they were all for teaching popular cultural texts in the curriculum, even
though they still taught the “classics.”
They also went on to say that many teachers interpret teaching
multiculturalism with simply giving their students texts written by African
American people or where the main characters are African Americans. Andrade and Morrell talk about how a
text isn’t necessarily multicultural just because an African American writes
it, and always teaching these texts to show so-called multiculturalism is
really oppressing African American students. Teachers need to think outside the box and figure out what
texts are actually multicultural, without being oppressive. One of my favorite lines from this
section of the article was: “Nothing promotes border crossing or tolerance more
than helping students to arrive at an implicit understanding of what they have
in common with those they have been taught to perceive as different.”
In
the second section of this article, I particularly liked the mention of the
movie Stand and Deliver and how it
was used in the classroom as a comparison to Jonathan Kozol’s Savage Inequalities to study the
conditions and ways in which students were able to achieve great things in
urban schools. I remember watching
this film many times, one of which was for my educational psychology class, and
I remember that I was so inspired to go out of my way to help my students. I want to make sure my students know
that they are not destined to be a high school drop out or to never go to
college just because their school doesn’t have the materials they need. There is always hope. Every student has the potential to do
better.
Friday, October 9, 2015
Paulo Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed" Chapter 2
I
thought it was interesting how this article compared the most common
teacher-student relationship, one where the teacher is the narrator and the
students are just passive receptacles of information that they just memorize
and repeat, to depositing information into the garbage. There is no creativity, no back and
forth conversation, no opinions, and no building knowledge because students
take in the information and store them in their minds for a short period of
time and then let it go. This
‘banking’ concept of education I was reading about in this article became
eerily familiar to me with each and every word, and I realized why. This is the most common practice of
teaching in schools today. For so
many years, I have been the receptacle of thousands of facts, phrases, and just
information I’m supposed to know (sometimes I was never told why I needed to
know it- I just did). Most of the
time I would store this information in the back of my mind for a little while
and then I would just forget it.
There was no meaningful conversation or inquiry happening in class, so
the knowledge never stuck with me.
So many of my classes in high school and even in college were the type
of classes where the teacher would stand up at the front of the classroom and
spout off a bunch of facts and tell us to write them down. Then we would have a test on those
facts (I would memorize them the night before) and after that those things
would never be talked about again.
It really is like filling up a trashcan, and once it gets too full you
have to dump it out. I definitely
think that the ‘banking’ concept of education needs to stop and teachers need
to think of ways that they can get their students involved creatively in
lessons and still learn the material that they want their students to
learn.
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Assessing and Evaluating Students' Learning and Secondary Standards-Based Grading and Reporting Handbook
One
thing that stuck with me after I had read the entire handout was that there are
different conceptions of learning literature and your conception of it will
influence the kinds of assessment tools you use in the classroom. I agreed with the text when it stated
that if you think learning literature is only about acquiring facts and
knowledge about literature, there would be a lot of limitations to that
conception. Teachers who have this
conception about learning literature focus simply on if a student knows that
fact about the story, they don’t focus on the student’s ability to apply that
knowledge to texts. Tests that
only give the opportunity for students to give the right answer rather than
allowing students to express their thoughts through open-ended responses are
not very effective because students will then focus on trying to retain only
the facts they need to get a good grade on the test. “Correct answer” tests do not let students be creative and
thoughtful with their responses and in the long run I don’t believe that always
administering these types of tests is going to get students to the types of
learning goals teachers have for their Literature students. I liked the alternatives to “correct
answer” tests that this handout gave.
My favorite was to provide “reader-based” descriptive responses. A favorite quote I got out of the
reading was this: “To assert through a multiple-choice test that a piece of
text has only one meaning is unacceptable, given what we know of language.”
As
far as the “Secondary Standards-Based Grading and Reporting Handbook” article
goes, I thought it showed how much a failing grade on an assignment can affect
a student’s overall grade. A
student could be doing great in class, with good grades, and if they have one
little slip up their grade could be in the toilet. I don’t think this is fair because a student’s grade, in my
mind, should reflect what they know and how hard they are working. I’m not sure what I would do as far as
my grading system goes. I don’t
like the idea of giving a student a zero for a grade, but then again, I don’t want
students to think that there won’t be consequences for not doing an assignment
and turning it in on time or not trying at all on an assignment.
Thursday, October 1, 2015
California State Universities Expository Reading and Writing Course Assignment Template
I
liked this handout because it had many great ideas about how to get your
students to not only read what you want them to read, but to understand it and
be able to question it and respond to it in writing. I especially like the whole section on pre-reading. Oftentimes we forget that there is
steps we need to take before jumping into the reading that will help us better
understand the text. Pre-reading also helps students to develop a purpose and
plan for their reading, which would help them later down the line in writing a
paper about what they are reading.
I
liked how this handout had suggestions and strategies you could use with your
students to help them read and understand text, not only for the pre-reading
section, but also for every section.
Some of the pre-reading activities that were my favorite suggestions
were group discussions, brainstorming, role-play activities, and
quick-writes. Another section I
liked that had great suggestions was the section called, “Reading for
Understanding.” I like the idea of
having students read the text multiple times, with a different purpose in
reading it each time so that they can identify the main ideas and then develop
their interpretations and opinions on the text. Teachers can have their students make predictions about the
text and then revisit their predictions.
My favorite questions that were suggested to ask students were: Which of your predictions turned out to
be true? And if any of your predictions were inaccurate, what in the text
mislead you?
Overall,
this handout is a great tool that can be used by teachers to help their
students understand what they read, think outside the box, and think critically
about what they read. One of the
best sections in this handout is a subsection in the post-reading section
called, “Thinking Critically.” The
different questions it suggests students ask themselves after reading something
would be excellent starting points for an argumentative paper.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)