
Reading/Writing Connections in the K-2 Classroom: Find the Clarity and Then Blur the Lines, 1st edition
Published by Pearson (August 30, 2005) © 2006
- Leah Mermelstein
Price Reduced From: $69.99
Details
- A print text
This product is expected to ship within 3-6 business days for US and 5-10 business days for Canadian customers.
Foreword by Lucy Calkins
Preface
Acknowledgments
PART I BUILDING
CHAPTER ONE
Powerful Relationships
INTRODUCE ENGAGING TOOLS
EMPHASIZE HOW STUDENTS TREAT ONE ANOTHER
GET TO KNOW YOUR STUDENTS
LET YOUR STUDENTS GET TO KNOW YOU
START WITH STRENGTH
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER TWO
Find the Clarity. . .
HOW ARE READING AND WRITING THE SAME?
Both reading and writing are purposeful activities.
Both reading and writing are a process.
Readers and writers use similar sources of information (cueing systems).
HOW ARE READING AND WRITING DIFFERENT?
Writers express text for a purpose. Readers access text for a purpose.
Writers always produce a product. Readers sometimes produce a product.
Writing is a slower process. Reading is a quicker process.
Writers must choose their topic. Readers must read about the topic that the writer chose.
Writers choose their own structures. Readers are introduced to new structures.
Writers go from sound to print. Readers go from print to sound.
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER THREE
. . .And Then Blur the Lines
WHAT COMMON THINKING STRATEGIES DO READING AND WRITING SHARE?
Readers and writers make decisions independently.
Readers and writers activate relevant prior knowledge.
Readers and writers determine importance.
Readers and writers infer.
Readers and writers envision.
Readers and writers synthesize.
Readers and writers ask questions of themselves and the writers and readers of their texts.
Readers and writers monitor their reading and writing processes.
Readers and writers activate their knowledge of letters and sounds.
HOW CAN I USE THIS INFORMATION?
FOR FURTHER STUDY
PART II PLANNING
CHAPTER FOUR
Listening, Speaking, Reading, and Writing
HOW DOES SPEAKING CONNECT TO WRITING?
HOW DOES SPEAKING CONNECT TO READING?
HOW DOES LISTENING CONNECT TO READING?
HOW DOES LISTENING CONNECT TO WRITING?
SUPPORTING SPEAKING AND LISTENING THROUGHOUT YOUR DAY
Choice time.
Sharing sessions.
Informal conversations.
READING AND WRITING PARTNERSHIPS: A POWERFUL STRUCTURE
Launching partnerships.
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER FIVE
The Components of Balanced Literacy
WHAT ARE THE COMPONENTS OF BALANCED LITERACY?
WHAT DOES BALANCED LITERACY ACTUALLY MEAN?
LOOKING AT COMPONENTS THAT CONNECT
Shared Writing: Highlighting meaning and structure sources of information.
Read-Aloud: Highlighting meaning and structure sources of information.
Interactive Writing: Highlighting visual sources of information.
Shared Reading: Highlighting visual sources of information.
Reading Workshop and Writing Workshop: Putting it all together.
USING ASSESSMENT TO PLAN THE COMPONENTS OF
BALANCED LITERACY
HOW MANY TIMES PER WEEK SHOULD I DO EACH COMPONENT?
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER SIX
Units of Study
WHAT IS A UNIT OF STUDY?
PLANNING READING AND WRITING UNITS OF STUDY
Emergent literacy Units of Study.
Revision Units of Study in reading.
Series books Units of Study.
Nonfiction Units of Study.
Rereading Units of Study.
IMMERSION: LETTING READING COMPLEMENT WRITING
Immersion Lesson 1: Teaching students to notice the structures within texts.
Immersion Lesson 2: Teaching students how to internalize the structures within texts.
Immersion Lesson 3: Teaching students how to look at books to get new topic ideas.
Immersion Lesson 4: Teaching students how to study one particular text structure.
Immersion Lesson 5: Teaching students how to produce these structures through talking.
Immersion Lesson 6: Teaching students how to produce these structures while writing.
PLANNING READING AND WRITING UNITS OF STUDY SIDE BY SIDE
Plan clear reading and writing goals for both Units of Study.
Plan to teach reading and writing thinking strategies at similar times.
Plan the order of your reading and writing minilessons.
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER SEVEN
Yearly Curriculum
WHAT IS A CURRICULUM CALENDAR?
GENERAL PRINCIPLES FOR PLANNING CURRICULUMS
Curriculum calendars should have some genre Units of Study and some non-genre
Units of Study.
Planning yearlong curriculums and assessing your students should be simultaneous.
Curriculum calendars should be used as guides and should be revised and fine-tuned when necessary.
Curriculum calendars should have between eight and twelve studies. Each Unit of Study should last from three to five weeks.
Units of Study should build on one another.
MAPPING READING AND WRITING CURRICULUMS TOGETHER 96
Connect reading and writing curriculums by genre.
Connect reading and writing curriculums by strategies.
Connect reading and writing curriculums by process.
FOR FURTHER STUDY
PART III TEACHING
CHAPTER EIGHT
Crafting Your Teaching
LISTEN TO YOUR STUDENTS
STRUCTURE YOUR TEACHING IN CONSISTENT WAYS
Connect the known to the unknown.
Have one clear and brief teaching point.
Ensure that both you and your students are active.
TEACHERS TEACH USING THE QUALITIES OF GOOD WRITING AND THE COMMON
THINKING STRATEGIES ACROSS READING AND WRITING
TEACHERS TEACH THE SAME CONCEPT OVER TIME ACROSS READING AND
WRITING
TEACHERS ASSESS AND REFLECT UPON THE EFFECTIVENESS OF
THEIR TEACHING
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER NINE
Minilessons
THE PURPOSE OF YOUR MINILESSONS MUST BE CLEAR TO YOUR STUDENTS
THE STRUCTURE OF YOUR MINILESSONS SHOULD BE CONSISTENT
The connection.
The teach.
The active engagement.
The link.
CONNECTING THE READING MINILESSON TO THE WRITING MINILESSON
Just tell the students how the two minilessons connect.
Retell a previous reading minilesson.
Use the same or similar language across minilessons.
Use materials from the reading minilesson in your writing minilesson.
CONNECTING THE WRITING MINILESSON TO THE READING MINILESSON
EXTEND MINILESSONS ACROSS TIME AND ACROSS SUBJECT AREAS
Teaching minilessons across time in the Writing Workshop.
Teaching minilessons across time in the Reading Workshop.
SHOULD THE WRITING MINILESSON OR THE READING MINILESSON COME FIRST?
HOW CAN I CREATE USEFUL CHARTS THAT DOCUMENT READING AND WRITING MINILESSONS?
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER TEN
Conferences
STRUCTURE OF A CONFERENCE: RESEARCH, DECIDE, AND TEACH 133
Research.
Decide.
Teach.
TYPES OF CONFERENCES
Content conference.
Strategy conference.
Coaching conference.
CONFERRING ACROSS READING AND WRITING
Angela: Strong writer/not as strong reader.
Tan: Strong reader/not as strong writer.
Tynia: Similar needs across reading and writing.
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Small Group Work
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF SMALL GROUP WORK?
THE STORY BEGINS: ASSESSING WRITERS
THE STORY CONTINUES: FORMING GROUPS
DECIDING ON METHODS OF TEACHING
TEACHING SMALL GROUPS
Small groups should teach a strategy that some but not all students need.
Small group instruction should be structured in ways similar to your minilessons.
BLUR THE LINES: MOVING SMALL GROUPS BETWEEN WRITING
AND READING
Continuing with Group 3: Small group instruction in both writing and reading.
Continuing with Group 6: Small group instruction in both writing and reading.
FOR FURTHER STUDY
CHAPTER TWELVE
Final Thoughts
BLUR THE LINES IN YOUR METHODS AND STRUCTURES OF TEACHING
BLUR THE LINES IN YOUR PLANNING AND YOUR ASSESSMENTS
BLUR THE LINES IN YOUR STRENGTHS
BLUR THE LINES IN YOUR MATERIALS
BLUR THE LINES IN YOUR PROFESSIONAL READING
Appendixes
1: RECOMMENDED PROFESSIONAL LITERATURE
2: TRANSCRIPT OF REHEARSAL AND REVISION IN READING
3: STRATEGIES TO TEACH MEANING, STRUCTURE, AND ADDING SOURCES OF INFORMATION
4: THINKING STRATEGIES THAT READERS AND WRITERS USE
5: PLANNING SHEET FOR THE COMPONENTS OF BALANCED LITERACY
6: PLANNING A UNIT OF STUDY
7: PLANNING READING AND WRITING UNITS OF STUDY
8: PLANNING A CURRICULUM CALENDAR
9: SAMPLE CURRICULUM CALENDARS
10: TRANSCRIPTS OF A CONNECTED READING AND WRITING MINILESSON
11: CONFERRING WITH STUDENTS ACROSS READING AND WRITING
12: SMALL GROUP WORK PLANNING SHEETS
References
Index
Need help? Get in touch