Your Name: Lauren Brown
Inquiry Two, Part A:
Discuss Your Target Area and ‘Core
Practice’ for Guided Lead Teaching
Talk
with your MT about your idea, and use the information you gained from Inquiry
One to respond to the following guiding questions listed below. Email
your responses to your instructor before our Week 4 class (September 26) AND
post them on your book club blog:
1.
Describe your target area for guided
lead teaching.
Reading
and Writing
Reading Street will
be used and I will be starting with Unit 2 Week 2; in fluency we will focus on expression,
will work on oral vocabulary/concept development, and in text comprehension we
will work on drawing conclusions through story structure and questioning.
For writing,
my MT follows Lucy Calkins curriculum and will be following their writing
workshop; primarily prompts followed by strategic writing format to follow
(Narrative, opinion, and informational).
2.
Approximately how much time per day is
allotted for your instruction in this area?
Currently,
we allow 1.5 to 1.75 hours a day for reading and writing (sometimes even more)
3.
Which Common Core State Standard(s)
will you work toward?
4.RL.4, 4.RL.7, 4.RIT.1, 4.RFS.3, 4.RFS.4, 4.W.1, 4.W.3,
4.W.5, 4.W.8, 4.W.10, 4.SL.4,
4.
How will teaching in this target area
provide opportunities for students to
learn important content and/or skills that relate to their lives? In what ways does this learning include learning literacy, learning about literacy, and/or learning
through literacy?
Through
teaching the described target areas, my students will become proficient in
comprehension and the appropriate strategies to apply. Writing will become more
fluent in practice through prompts and peer review and conversations.
5.
What types of classroom talk take place
within this target area? To what extent is the talk teacher-led, student-led,
or focused on higher-level thinking? What norms for interaction would you like
to build within your classroom as you teach in this target area (e.g., see
ideas in Chapter 6 of Strategies that
Work, the Berne & Clark 2008 article, or draw from some of the readings
done in TE 402 on classroom talk)?
Currently, in my classroom it is both
teacher-led and student-led at times. During reading time, my MT relies a lot
on the curriculum to guide his teaching and will often do worksheets related
and/or use the computer to go over information instead of himself prompting
thoughts and conversation. Students are only given a short time to discuss
connections and thoughts with the given vocabulary words through whole class
discussion and small group work. From what I have observed thus far, the
current teaching style for reading is teaching for the weekly Reading Street test. By this I mean it
is the same weekly routine of pre spelling test, vocabulary words/work, the big
story, review, and then test. Therefore, not much higher level thinking is
occurring and as a result students are not being challenged enough to create a
substantial impact in their literacy learning.
I would like to create some norms for
interaction within my classroom as I teach. For example, from this week’s reading
I really liked the emphasis on small group work and discussion to prompt
literacy learning. Small group work, in my opinion, is a way to reach both my
introvert and extrovert students in their learning styles. Modeling and group
norms would need to be dealt with before I had my students partake in any
activities that I plan for them.
6.
Which ‘core practice’ do you want to
work on developing/improving as you teach in this target area (refer to
document “Resources for Developing Core Practices”)? How will focusing on this
core practice contribute to your own
professional learning?
Reading
comprehension/strategy instruction; and writing instruction
In
reading focus on interactive read aloud; and in writing focus on conferences
Focusing
on these target areas and core practices will contribute to my own professional
learning because I will be implementing new norms in our weekly routine that
will further my learning and understanding of the curriculum and of my
students. Interactive read aloud will allow me to model strategic thinking for
comprehension and promote a more engaging discussion of text. Conferences will
allow me to individually assess and motivate students in their writing.
7.
What resources within the community,
neighborhood, school district, school or classroom do you have to work with in
this target area?
In my classroom, I am able to use a computer,
elmo, and smartboard to help technologically aid me in my literacy teaching.
The school/school district has the Reading
Street curriculum in place and assessments/lessons to follow. Within the
community there is the local library that I am able to access; as well as, my
own school library and librarian that could be of help in planning lessons.
8.
What additional resources do you need
to obtain?
I currently do not need additional resources;
but, I could search for higher level tasks/thinking tasks for my students to do
for practice when students finish their assigned work during work time.
9.
How will you pre-assess your students
in your target area?
I will use my students past weekly tests and
writing samples to pre-assess my students.
10. What else will you need to find out about all students in
your class to help you develop lesson plans for your Guided Lead Teaching?
I would like to find out which of my students
like to read/write in their spare time. I would also like to know which of my
students struggle in fluency, comprehension, decoding, ect..
11. What else do you need/want to learn about the ‘core
practice’ to support your planning and teaching?
It seems as if the core practices overlap; I need
to learn how to make my lessons be interconnected as well.
12. What concerns, if any, do you have about planning and
teaching your unit?
I do have some concerns about planning/teaching
my unit plan. One concern is keeping the routine of my MT while still
implementing some of my own ideas and plans without overwhelming my students. Another
concern is knowing the content well enough to teach effectively (which will
take a lot of prepping and planning on my part).
Last year, my 401/2 placement was in a school that used Reading Street for their language arts curriculum. This year, my placement uses a genre based reading approach. The difference between the two is drastic. The main difference comes with the amount of preparation a teacher must do to implement these two styles. With Reading Street, the whole year is scripted from start to finish with all the materials being provided through the curriculum. The genre based approach is much more involved for the teacher. My mentor is the language arts chair for our school and the fifth grade uses most of the materials that she has created for each genre. She has spent a great deal of time over the years modifying and organizing what she uses for each genre. As a new teacher, I would find it to be a daunting task to create unit after unit for the entire year and would probably prefer using Reading Street. However, having control of what you teach your students is invaluable. The lessons can be tailored to use the resources available in the classroom and school. The depth in which a genre can be explored is much more flexible allowing for changes on the go. The suggested readings can be adapted to each reader based on their reading level. The testing and assessing can also be controlled to create very specific assessments of student progress. Overall, I believe that both approaches can be successful because they engage students in language arts. Whether you want the control of every aspect of a unit to be yours is the deciding factor.
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