Friday, October 22, 2010

Kristen Chandler-Author

This is from a guest author, Kristen Chandler's, presentation at the UCTE/LA conference at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah.

Her book (that I am excited to read) is: Wolves, Boys, and Other Things that Might Kill Me





--became published when she quit trying to be a writer and went back to being a storyteller.
--literacy grows us and the world we live in.
--need to find something meaningful that you love to write about.
--reading and writing helps kids do big things.
--create space through language.
--find space in our students' media bombarded, cluttered minds.
--find the character and write for the character.
--on revision: you have to trust that it can be better.

Using Technology in Writing and Reading

This is from the UCTE/LA conference at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah.
A Teacher's Digital Life: How to Use Technology in a Writing and Reading Classroom--Mat Wenzel
Reasons teachers should use technology in the classroom:
It's the language of the natives.
It's easier to share/adapt files.
It's what kids know/ are familiar with.
It can be a reluctant learner magnet.
It is part of the work place and global economy.

Why teachers don't use technology in the classroom:
Intimidated/afraid.
Lack of resources/access to computers.
Too complicated.
Requires extra time/too time consuming.
"It's just bells and whistles."

Social networking (for book nerds):
www.librarything.com
www.goodreads.com
www.shelfari.com
You can export your libraries as an Excel spreadsheet from one site to another.
You can have students do this, starting with adding the books you are reading in class, to create a classroom community.

Google-many resources besides just searching!

data storage site: www.dropbox.com

http://cogdogroo.wikispaces.com/StoryTools
--Bubbler: http://www.pimpampum.net/bubblr/ (Image drop easy create your own comic strip).
http://www.bitstrips.com/ (you can create yourself as a cartoon character or create other characters and create a comic strip).
http://www.makebeliefscomix.com (Simpler format/more limited to create comic strips).
He had students use bitstrips to create a comic strip of themselves and tell about themselves and what they will contribute to the class at the beginning of the year.

Mat Wenzel's website/blog:
http://www.misterdoubleyou.com
http://weber.k12.ut.us/mawenzel

Literacy with an Attitude-Patrick J. Finn (A recommended book).

The Reading/Writing Connection

This is from the keynote speaker at the UCTE/LA conference at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah.
The Reading/Writing Connection: A Cognitive Strategies Approach to Teaching Interpretive Reading and Analytical Writing in Secondary School--Carol Booth Olson, cbolson@uci.edu
Writing analytically--many students are struggling with this because they don't get enough practice.
'Create movies of the mind'
How do we help all of our students to be there? To be strong, strategic, independent readers and writers?
Acts of mind in reading and writing (common characteristics of experienced writers and readers):
  • engagement, become one/get inside the process
  • visualize
  • aware of process
  • slow down, speed up as the task requires
  • are actively engaged in constructing meaning;
  • go back to go forward in a recursive process (being a good reader isn't a really fast, one shot deal);
  • interact and negotiate with each other (reader and writer keep each other in mind);
  • are motivated and self-confident;
  • use skills automatically;
  • access a common tool kit of cognitve strategies, including planning & setting goals, tapping prior knowledge, etc.
Need to teach students three types of knowledge:
  • Declarative Knowledge
  • Procedural Knowledge
  • Conditional Knowledge
Reading/Writing Tool Kit (Cognitive Strategies):
  • Planning and setting goals
  • Tapping into Prior Knowledge
  • Making predictions
  • Adopting an Alignment
  • Making Connections
  • Evaluating
  • Analyzing Author's Craft
  • Summarizing
  • Clarifying
  • Forming Interpretations
  • Monitoring
  • Visualizing
  • Asking questions
  • Revising Meaning
Examples of a Strategic activities:
  1. Bring/describe four items in your house.
  2. Peers write what these items might say about you.
  3. Student writes what they think these things might say to others.
Highlight reading or writing analyses:
  1. yellow: plot summary/just the facts
  2. green: supporting detail
  3. blue: commentary/opinions
Resources:

The Reading/Writing Connection-Carol Booth Olson
You Gotta be the Book
-Jeff Wilhelm
It's Never Too Late-Janet Allen

Reading Changes Everything: Ideas & Book Talks Galore

This is from the UCTE/LA conference at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah.
Reading Changes Everything: Ideas & Book Talks Galore--Cassie Cox
ccox@weber.k12.ut.us
"Reading saved my life"--Cassie dropped out of high school in 10th grade but later went on to get her GED and on to a Master's.
"The average American reads one book per year after they graduate from college"--Washington Post.
How do we get kids to read?
CHOICE!! Choice makes a difference.
Main goal: Hook kids on books!
We've got to be readers ourselves.
What her classroom looks like:
  • Time everyday for self-selected reading.
  • Book talks
  • Book trailers
  • Time for talking and sharing.
  • Author visits--find local authors and get them into your classroom! Get authors on board!
  • Make books readily accessible.
  • Spotlight books of all kinds.
  • Take it outside the classroom--county library. Keep your ears open for public author talks and presentations.
  • Classroom full of books.
  • Themed book shelf at front of the room.
  • Make books more visible.
How do you find time to read?
  • Commit to reading with your students.
  • Squeeze professional development into your daily planning time (5-10 minutes goes a long way).
  • Always carry a book with you.
  • Listen to audio books on the way to work or when you're exercising or walking.
  • Treat yourself with at least 15 minutes of reading before you go to bed each night.
  • Squeeze the time in any way that you can!
  • Faculty meeting? Take a book! =)
  • On-line book clubs, nings, etc.

Ideas:
  • Olive Garden event-Cassie had five authors (Sarah Zarr, Sydney Salter, Wendy Toliver, Marion Jenson (Matthew Buckley), and J. Scott Savage) and twenty of her students (those who read the most of the authors' books) at Olive Garden. The restaurant paid for it, and it was an amazing experience. Don't be afraid to get out there and ask!
  • Make reading a social activity. Books and friends, FUN! Paired reading, small group reading, reader's theater, chorale reading, etc.
  • Book Talks: picture books, books of poetry, short stories, novels, children lit., young adult lit.
  • Read for your students.
  • Talk about books you've read...and about books you haven't read.
  • Encourage the entire school community to get on board (other teachers, parents, business members, local professors, lunch ladies...get others to do book talks).
  • Have students make book trailers (www.animoto.com).
  • Send home book wish lists that parents can purchase for the classroom (they don't have to be new!).
  • Encourage book clubs to donate their books to your class.
  • Ideas for assessment/accountability: silent exchange, save the last word for me, paragraph plug in, alpha boxes, etc.
  • Article of the week
Book List:
Reading Reminders-Jim Burke
Writing Reminders-Jim Burke
Readacide-Kelly Gallagher
Phineas Gage--John Fleishman
The Story Behind Toilets
Troy Thompson's Excellent Poetry Book--Gary Crew, Craig Smith
Stiff-Mary Roach
Guts-Gary Paulsen

Websites:
Professional Development and Networking:
http://englishcompanion.ning.com
http://www.ncte.org
http://www.reading.org
Discounted Books:
http://www.bookdepot.com
http://www.bookcloseouts.com/
Video book talks and book trailers:
http://www.scholastic.com/librarians/ab/booktalks.htm
http://www.book-trailers.net/
http://digitalbooktalk.com

Thursday, October 21, 2010

The Scholastic Reading Bill of Rights

The Reading Bill of Rights (from http://www.scholastic.com/readeveryday/read.htm).
A Child’s Right to Read
Today we live in a world full of digital information. Yet reading has never been more important, for we know that for young people the ability to read is the door opener to the 21st century: to hold a job, to understand their world, and to know themselves. That is why we are asking you to join our Global Literacy Call to Action. We call this campaign: “Read Every Day. Lead a Better Life.” We are asking parents, teachers, school and business leaders, and the general public to
support their children’s right to read for a better life in the digital world of the 21st century.
Here is what we believe about reading in the second decade of the 21st century. We call this The Reading Bill of Rights:

WE BELIEVE
that literacy—the ability to read, write and understand—is the birthright of every child in the world as well as the pathway to succeed in school and to realize a complete life. Young people need to read nonfiction for information to understand their world, and literature for imagination to understand themselves.

WE BELIEVE
that the massive amounts of digital information and images now transmitted daily make it even more important for a young person to know how to analyze, interpret and understand information, to separate fact from opinion, and to have deep respect for logical thinking.

WE BELIEVE that literature and drama, whether on printed pages, screens, on stage or film, help young people experience the great stories of emotion and action, leading to a deeper understanding of what it means to be truly human. Without this literacy heritage, life lacks meaning, coherence and soul.

WE BELIEVE every child has a right to a “textual lineage”—a reading and writing autobiography which shows that who you are is in part developed through the stories and information you’ve experienced. This textual lineage will enable all
young people to have a reading and writing identity which helps them understand who they are and how they can make their lives better. In short, “You Are What You Read.”

WE BELIEVE every child should have access to books, magazines, newspapers, computers, e-readers, and text on phones. Whatever way you read, you will need to figure out what the facts are or what the story tells you. No matter how and where you get access to ideas, you will need the skills of reading to understand yourself and your world.

WE BELIEVE that reading widely and reading fluently will give children the reading stamina to deal with more challenging texts they will meet in college, at work and in everyday life. And every child should be able to choose and own the books they want to read, for that choice builds literacy confidence—the ability to read, write and speak about what they know, what they feel, and who they are.

WE BELIEVE that every child has the right to a great teacher who will help them learn to read and love to read. Children need teachers who provide intentional, focused instruction to give young people the skills to read and interpret information or understand great stories they will encounter throughout life.

WE BELIEVE that in the 21st century, the ability to read is necessary not only to succeed but to survive—for the ability to understand information and the power of stories is the key to a life of purpose and meaning.

Why Students Don't Read What is Assigned in Class

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Motivating the Unmotivated Reader

This is from my presentation at the UCTE/LA conference at Brigham Young University, Provo, UT and the UCIRA conference at Salt Lake City, UT.
Motivating the Unmotivated Reader-Jolene Jenkins, mj4toty@gmail.com


Three Reading Truths:

1. Everyone is a reader (some just don't know it yet).
2. Not everyone reads in the same way.
3. Teachers can make a difference!
How do you convince that unmotivated, I-hate-to-read-and-you-can't-change-me reader that reading is good?
You've got to hook them!
Your bait:
  1. Establish a positive reading attitude in your classroom.
  2. Know your students.
  3. Exposure! Exposure! Exposure!
Positive Reading Attitude:
  • What is your attitude? Are you enthusiastic and passionate about reading? You can't help a person learn to love reading if you don't love it yourself.
  • Do your students see you reading often?
  • Have your students ever seen you emotionally react to a book?
  • Are there book displays, posters, lists, etc. posted through out your classroom?
  • Do you have a classroom library filled with GOOD books? When discouraged about kids losing/taking books, remember: a book on the shelf is safe, but that is not what books are made for.
  • Do you ever 'talk book' with your students?
Know Your Students
  • Reader Interviews:
  1. Do you like to read at school?
  2. Do you like to read in your free time?
  3. What do you like to do in your free time?
  4. How do you generally feel about starting a new book?
  5. What do you like to read?
  6. What movies/T.V. shows do you like to watch?
Exposure! Exposure! Exposure!
You never know what will hook a student, so you expose them to as many reading possibilities as possible!
How do you know what's hot in YA lit?
  • Be a book spy! Watch students, neighborhood kids, etc. What are they reading? Ask your avid readers what they are reading. Check out the YA section of the library and of book stores often. Look in Scholastic book orders. Join a book club or on-line book group such as www.goodreads.com.
    *My claim to fame: I read The Hunger Games before it was cool! In fact, I may have started the craze! I ran across it in a Scholastic book order and thought it looked interesting. It was fairly obsolete at the time, but I thoroughly enjoyed it and recommended it to my students and friends. (You're welcome, Suzanne Collins!)
  • Consume/devour YA books. One summer I made a goal to read 100 YA books. I didn't make my goal, but I did read close to 40 books! Expand your horizons too. I discovered that I read a lot of books in the fantasy genre but little else. I pushed myself to read from other genres (I was specifically trying to find more books my male students would like) and discovered a plethora of books that I loved and could recommend to my students.
Some ways to expose your students to books:
  • Read aloud--read aloud to your students often. Be dramatic. I'm not the most dramatic person but my students tended to prefer when I read aloud to them rather than listening to a book on tape. It creates this personal atmosphere and makes it easier to get into the book. I would do special treats for my students--one year I read Skeleton Creek (Patrick Carman) to them. For a few years, I've read Searching for David's Heart (Cherie Bennett) as a winter treat for them. You can just read excerpts to students or you can read entire books. Students love story time, even in middle and high school! Sidenote: don't make students do any assignments or tests with the read-aloud, just let them listen and enjoy!)
  • Five-minute Book Talk--choose a genre. I liked to do one genre a month. Get as many books as you can for that genre and have them on display in the classroom. Have a student time you and talk about as many books as you can in five minutes. I usually liked to do a book talk before independent reading time. I would let the students read from the books on display as long as they put them back so that I could present for the next class. I would tell the students that they can check out the books at the end of the day or the next day. I like the five-minute format because it is quick and painless for the students. Sometimes the students will keep track of how many books you present and challenge you to do more for the next book talk! To talk about the books, I prepare some book previews (see below), read from the back, read excerpts, or just give a quick plot summary.
    Click here to go to my book lists.
  • Book Previews/Book Trailers--book previews are like movie trailers but for books and in written form. I would often have my students do book previews rather than book reports because they are short and relatively painless AND I can use them to promote books. Book trailers--You can create your own, have students create videos, or you can find book trailers on the Internet. I found the following book trailers at www.youtube.com (search under 'book trailers', 'book trailers ya', or 'book trailers middle school') and at http://www.scholastic.com/kids/stacks/videos/?lnkid=stacks/nav/videos/main.






Fever Crumb by Philip Reeve

  • Book Pass--I use this to introduce my students to my classroom library, to introduce a topic (the Holocaust, Civil Rights Movement, etc.), or to introduce a genre. Before the students arrive, I put a book on every desk. You can either give students a list of the books or have them write titles and authors down (I think I will switch to giving the students a list so they don't spend so much time copying information). I then give the students one minute to check out the book: look at the cover, read the back/inside cover, check how many pages, start reading the beginning, etc. At the end of the minute I have them mark a =) if it looks like something they would want to read, a =1 if it's a maybe, or a =( if it is definitely not something they would want to read. Then they pass the book to their neighbor and start again with a different book for one minute. You can do this for 10 minutes or for a whole class period, however long you would like to do the activity.
Books I used in my presentation:
The Hollow-Jessica Verday
Fallen-Lauren Kate

The Graveyard Book-Neil Gaiman

Sweet Far Thing-Libba Bray (This is the third book of a series).
Skullduggery Pleasant series-Derek Landy
Ninth Grade Slays: The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod-Heather Brewer

Shiver-Maggie Stiefvater

Fever Crumbs-Philip Reeve

Ghost Huntress: The Awakening-Marley Gibson
Down a Dark Hall-Lois Duncan
Darkness Creeping-Neal Shusterman
(short stories)
The Unseen: It Begins-Richie Tankersley Cusick

Secrets of Dripping Fang: The Onts-Dan Greenburg

The Haunting-Joan Lowery Nixon

The Face on the Milk Carton-Caroline B. Cooney
The Secret of Laurel Oaks-Lois Ruby
Creepers-Joanne Dahme

The Last Apprentice: The Spook’s Tale and Other Horrors-Joseph Delaney
Daeman Hall-Andrew Nance

The Haunting of Hill House-Shirley Jackson
Skeleton Creek-Patrick Carman
The Ghost in the Machine-Patrick Carman


Documents that you can download:
Reading Interview
Reading Motivation Powerpoint
How to Write a Book Preview
Reading Rap

Funny things students say/do:

  • A Pronoun is a noun who has lost his amateur status.
  • Did we do anything yesterday when I was gone?