Teaching Reading in Small Group PDF
Teaching Reading in Small Group PDF
Teaching Reading in Small Group PDF
groupings, and formative assessments somehow involve going over to The Dark
Side, this book is a powerful antidote. It will help you know that you can hold tight
to your deepest beliefs about children and literature, classroom communities,
and good teaching.
Lucy Calkins
Author of Units of Study for Teaching Reading
www.heinemann.com
Serravallo
She shows how to take the strengths of individual conferences and apply
them to small groups so that readers:
get into texts and get more out of them
learn vital strategies that increase independence with more
challenging texts
talk about books with rigor and vigor.
Jennifer Serravallo
Foreword by Lucy Calkins
HEINEMANN
Portsmouth, NH
Heinemann
361 Hanover Street
Portsmouth, NH 038013912
www.heinemann.com
Offices and agents throughout the world
2010 by Jennifer Serravallo
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or
mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in
writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.
Dedicated to Teachers is a trademark of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
Contents
vi
ix
Acknowledgments
xi
14
18
Assessing Engagement
20
Assessing Fluency
31
38
Assessing Comprehension
43
Assessing Conversation
61
65
66
Want to Read
67
70
71
79
81
85
93
95
iii
iv
Contents
97
98
99
109
117
120
123
124
125
131
135
146
150
153
155
163
Performance Clubs
167
171
173
175
178
186
189
196
Contents
198
199
206
Keeping Track
211
Scheduling Yourself
216
220
References
Childrens Literature
Index
221
225
227
vi
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
vii
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Foreword
Heres what you need to know about this book. It is a book about all the new buzz
words: differentiated instruction, data-based teaching, accountability, formative assess
ments, comprehension, fluency, small-group work . . . its all here. Yet the really
extraordinary thing about this book is that Jennifer Serravallo is able to harness the
current pressures, and to use this momentum to help all of us teach reading with that
magic combination of rigor and intimacy. Imagine reading instruction that depends
on the voices of kids, their passions and foibles, hopes, and heartaches, and that
depends on the face-to-face interactions between teachers and students around a
book. Imagine reading instruction for which these moments of flickering amusement
or amazed understanding are not happy offshoots but are at the root of how teachers
teach reading.
This book will serve as a handbook to help you use a whole array of formative
assessment tools to assess readers and lead small-group instruction within reading
environments in which kids read tons and tons of self-selected books at levels they can
handle. Your assessment tools will help you think about learning progressions as you
support children towards their next moves as readers. The book will help you fashion
small groups that are as rich and varied as your children and your purposes. Rather
than advocating for one and only one form of small-group workguided reading
Jen provides you with a repertoire of ways to lead small groups, and with suggestions
for how to teach each well.
The book is a stand out for all sorts of reasons.
First, although it is a book about small-group work, it is written by a teachereducator who is passionately committed to one-to-one conferring. Ive always thought
that educators views on small-group instruction differ above all based on whether
people see small-group instruction as a variation of whole-class instruction, only deliv
ered to a smaller group, or as one-to-one instruction, done with several individuals at
ix
Foreword
a time. Jens approach falls squarely in the latter camp. Coauthor of the popular book,
Conferring with Readers, Jen never waivers from her image of teaching as an intimate
interchange that begins with a child, engaged in reading for her own purposes, and a
teacher, leaning in to listen, to understand, and to extend what that child can do.
Jens commitment to a responsive and personal sort of teaching is reflected not
only in her content but also in her writing style. The book brims with kidsyou hear
their quirky, uneven language, you learn about the stuff that fills their pockets, you see
them sitting, arms linked, two on a chair. The book brims with teachers, too, like those
who aspire to keep Perfect Records and end up with records that might not be showy
but can be used on the run, in real classrooms. But what shines through most of all is
the sense of connectedness between kids and teachers. The instruction is imbued with
connectedness. Youll see this connectedness as you watch teachers working within
small groups while meanwhile, they keep their eyes on individuals and on data about
kids. And you will feel the connectedness as you come to know the author, Jennifer
Serravallo, and to sense that she hasnt tried to write a book, to make a monument, so
much as she has tried to connect with you, a colleague.
The book is a stand out also because Jen shows that a teacher who is deeply com
mitted to teaching reading workshops can not only deal with but embrace the contem
porary pressures. For teachers who sometimes feel as if data-based instruction,
differentiated groupings, and formative assessments somehow involve going over to
The Dark Side, this book is a powerful antidote. It will help you know that in todays
climate, you can hold tight to your deepest beliefs about children and literature, class
room communities, and good teaching.
Finally, the book is a stand out because Jen, as a part of the Teachers College
Reading and Writing Project, has had the privilege of working with some of the most
dedicated and brilliant teachers, superintendents, principals, coaches, graduate stu
dents, and teacher-educators that the world has ever known. This book shows the way
in which this collective community gathers clusters of kids together, and listens, and
loves, and learns.
Lucy Calkins
Acknowledgments
We are each a product of the groups to which we belong. I would like to thank my
groups, and the individuals within those groups, for their support.
Thanks first to my professional group, the Teachers College Reading and
Writing Project (TCRWP), and its founding director, Lucy Calkins. She is a generous
leader who gives of her knowledge, her spirit, and her mentorship widely. Thanks to
her for reading versions of this manuscript and giving encouragement and advice all
along the way.
It is through the team of staff developers Lucy has worked to assemble, and the
weekly Thursday think tanks she leads, that I have developed into the educator I am
today. These think tanks help me constantly question my practice and force me to
grow. Kathleen Tolan, Deputy Director of the TCRWP, has influenced so much of my
thinking about the teaching of reading and small-group instruction and about staff
development. She is a model teacher to children and adults. Amanda Hartman, leader
of Primary Reading, was my first staff developer about eight years ago and, through
her modeling, helped transform my classroom. She is the teacher who first helped it
to click for me and she continues to make new things click regularly. Thanks also to
Mary Ehrenworth and Laurie Pessah, two other influential, inspirational leaders of
our work.
Every member of the TCRWP, past and present, has influenced me in immeasur
able ways, and their footprints are all over this book. Specifically, I want to thank Carl
Anderson, Mary Chiarella, Colleen Cruz, Brooke Geller, Cory Gillette, Ami Mehta,
Elizabeth Moore, Alison Porcelli, Donna Santman, Emily Smith, and Joe Yukish.
Thanks for keeping me thinking.
Thanks to the groups of educators at all of my schools across the country, but in
particular the teachers at PSs 63, 158, and 277 in New York City. Thank you, Darlene
Despeignes, Darryl Alhadeff, and Cheryl Tyler, the leaders of these amazing schools,
xi
xii
Acknowledgments
for providing such an inspirational model of leadership and for hiring me to work
with your school for so many days each year. Thanks to all of the teachers at these
schools for allowing your classrooms to be lab sites and for talking back during
meetings. You are all critical friends. Special thanks to Laurie Faber, Samantha
Diamond, Rosie Maurantonio, Tara Goldsmith, and Brooke Baron, who shared their
childrens work and their own conference notes for this book. Thank you to the princi
pal, staff, and students of PS 63 for the beautiful images that fill the pages of this book,
especially Darlene Despeignes, Brooke Baron, Jodi Friedman, Heather Madigan, and
Amanda Ortiz.
Thank you to the group of people who read versions of this manuscript. Judy
Wallis was a tremendous help from the beginning. She was always available and
responded with urgency. You helped me get unstuck many times. Thanks also to
Colleen Cruz, Kara Gustavson, Lucy Calkins, and Samantha Diamond for offering
feedback along the way.
Thank you to the team of people at Heinemann who have helped to make this
book possible. Thanks to Kate Montgomery for encouraging the initial proposal and
for finding me a wonderful editor, Wendy Murray. Wendy is so much more than an
editor. She has been a sounding board, a challenger, an advocate, a mentor writer, and
a giver of much help and time. Thanks also to all of the people in the design, produc
tion, and marketing departmentsSonja Chapman, Lisa Fowler, Eric Chalek, and
many others I have not yet metfor lending your creativity, time, and dedication to
this book.
Last but not least, Id like to thank a most important group: my family. Thanks
to my dad and mom for reading to me so much as a child and being such great teach
ers in so many waysreading and beyond. Thank you to Jen for being so understand
ing when this book took over evenings and weekends that belonged to you. Finally,
thank you, little Lola, for not arriving until the manuscript was turned in, and for
napping so that I could finish this book. I love you all!
Chapter
Herbie Jones was an Apple. That was the name of the lowest reading group in
Miss Pinkhams third grade class. Herbie hated the name. Margie Sherman
suggested it the first week of school. Unfortunately, there were three girls and
two boys in the Apples. The girls voted for Apples and the boys, Herbie and
his best friend, Raymond, voted for Cobras. Miss Pinkham was pleased the
Apples won.
Now it was March, and Herbies group was still reading the red book (the
one with the suitcase on the cover). His teacher said the stories were about
people going places. Herbie didnt think his group was going anywhere.
Herbie Jones (Kline 1986, 7)
and leading a brief discussion afterward. I balanced these guided reading groups with
one-on-one conferences and book groups, as Id done in my student teaching experi
ence. These two structures constituted all of my individualized reading instruction.
At some point in my third year, I stepped back to ask myself this question: Is
what Im doing a benefit to the student, to myself (teacher), or to us both? I had always
thought of myself as a purposeful teacher, but a close look at my small-group reading
instruction made me take pause. When I thought critically about what I was doing, I
found that I was checking up on their comprehension more than teaching comprehen
sion (Durkin 1981). I did more teaching of the book than teaching the reader. I spent
more of my teaching time in what Johnston (2004) calls telling mode than respond
ing to what they needed as individual readers.
I wanted to get better at differentiated reading instruction. I knew that to do this
I needed to group children more flexibly and purposefully and to develop a repertoire
of ways to meet their needs. I needed to find structures and methods that got at the
heart of engaged, independent reading.
The small-group methods described in this book were developed, refined, and
tweaked with the aim of supporting children as readers and thinkers and discussers of
books. In contrast to the kind of instruction Herbie and the Apples group received, the
small-group methods and structures I choose help children feel like theyre going
somewherespecifically, small groups that will help children to:
read strategically
What are your fundamental beliefs about teaching in general, and the
teaching of reading specifically?
All of the small-group work in this book comes from my personal experi
ences. Much of this work is informed by the work at the Teachers College
Reading and Writing Project (TCRWP), by my work in schools where I serve as
a literacy consultant, or from my own classroom teaching experiences. Much of
the work has its roots in researchers and theorists from Pearson to Vygotsky to
Marie Clay.
The schools, teachers, and children most frequently mentioned in this book
are in New York City where I spend the majority of my time: PS 63 in the Lower East
Side, a tiny school with large numbers of English language learners and receivers of
free and reduced lunch; PS 158, which serves a largely middle- and upper-middle
class neighborhood of the Upper East Side; and PS 277 in one of the poorest con
gressional districts in the country, the South Bronx.
Although they have such diverse student makeups, these schools have a number
of important things in common. First, they are strong communities of practice where
teachers work, plan, and think together; constantly try to outgrow their best ideas; rely
on research; and respond to children. The leaders and teachers of these schools believe
strongly in professional development.
Second, they each have exemplary reading and writing workshops, conduct
daily read-alouds, and use an assessment-based developmental word study pro
gram for phonics, spelling, and vocabulary. In concert, these balanced literacy
structures support one another and create a well-rounded approach to literacy
instruction.
Third, and perhaps most relevant to this book, is that all three schools are
committed to small-group instruction, and these small groups have had powerful
effects on their readers. At PS 277, the teachers had to order scores of new books
for their classroom libraries because children were reading at higher levels than
they ever had before. This year, their state English Language Arts exams results
showed a 25 percent increase in one year for children performing at or above
grade level. PS 63 also celebrated large gains. At PS 158, this year, they saw 98
percent of their students performing at or above grade-level standards on the
same exam.
In my first book, Conferring with Readers: Supporting Each Students Growth and
Independence (2007), Gravity Goldberg and I described our beliefs about what reading
instruction should look like and what it should accomplish. We distilled our beliefs to
five tenets. We believe reading instruction should:
motivation and engagement when learning new skills and strategies. Knowing that as
readers they have tools to use to accomplish their goals helps students develop what
Johnston calls agency (2004).
allows students to feel like part of team as they work on the same
goal with other students
Guided Reading
Both
Strategy Lessons
Students practice in
instructional-level
texts.
Small group of
students works with
the teacher.
Students practice in
independent-level
texts.
Students practice in
text chosen by
teacher.
Combination of
explicit and
supported instruction
used.
Students practice in
self-selected or
teacher-assigned texts.
Structure often
includes book
introduction, reading
with coaching, and
teaching point(s) or
discussion.
Teachers coach.
Students respond.
Structure includes
connection, explicit
teaching, active
engagement, and a
link to students
reading.
Across the next years in my own classroom, and with teachers with whom I work
in my current role as staff developer, I discovered that the strategy lesson is just one of
many structures possible for small-group instruction that achieve the same essential
goal of providing instruction that matches individual readers. Depending on the pur
pose, small groups might resemble another balanced literacy component like shared
reading, or they might look more like a coaching conference that you would typically
do one-on-one with readers. I ask myself, What am I helping the reader to learn about
reading? and How much support does the student need from me to accomplish the
task? My answers guide my decisions about structures and methods (Pearson and
Gallagher 1983; Vygotsky 1978).
SMALL-GROUP INSTRUCTION IN READING IS REALLY CONFERRING To me, a
well-run small group in reading seems more like a conference than anything else. I
think of a conference as a structure that offers opportunities to meet with a student or
students to support them as they work to acquire new learning and to support them as
they transition to their own independent practice.
Even though children are grouped, I still need to see the students as individuals
and differentiate my responses in the course of the small-group work to meet
their needs. As Tomlinson (2001) teaches us, differentiation means that I need to
understand how children take in information, make sense of ideas, and express their
learning. Differentiated instruction, she writes, needs to be student-centered, rooted in
assessment, and dynamicwe need to constantly make adjustments to match learner
to learning. This differentiation is something that happens naturally in a well-run
individual conference, and is the hallmark of a good group conference as well.
Because I put so much emphasis on differentiation and the quality of conversa
tion that I strive to maintain in small groups, all of the small-group work structures
and methods I describe in this book can really be thought of as group conferences.
number of different ways (Cunningham and Allington 1994; Cunningham and Hall
1998; Fitzgerald 1999; Dickinson and Neuman 2001; Pearson et al. 2007). Some use the
term to refer to the balance in the childrens literature chosen or the skills being taught;
to others, balance is about instructional methods; to others, it is about taking a philo
sophical stance. Many would agree that the term balanced literacy originated during the
whole language versus phonics debate. The term denounces the extremism on either
side and instead offers a solution: a little of both (Pearson et al. 2007). Balance.
In this book, I use the term balanced literacy to describe methods and structures
of teaching, and, more precisely, the amount of teacher support versus student inde
pendence expected in each method and structure of teaching. This view of balanced
literacy captures readings true complexity (Pearson et al. 2007).
In my concept of a balanced literacy classroom, there are opportunities for stu
dents to watch the teacher demonstrate, opportunities for the student to practice with
teacher support, and opportunities to practice independently, offering a bridge to
independence. This bridge is known as the to, with, and by of balanced literacy. That is,
there are times when the teacher provides a model to the students, times when the
teacher works with the students, and times when students work by themselves. I find
the graphic in Figure 1.2 helpful in visualizing this, which I adapted from Pearson and
Gallagher (1983).
It is important to be aware of where each component of a reading workshop fits
into this bridge to ensure an equal balance across a week of planning, which will
ensure an appropriate bridge to independence. For a review of terms relating to read
ing workshop, see Chapter 8.
Read-alouds and minilessons are examples of times when I offer heavy support,
in the to category. During read-alouds, I read out loud to the students, offering
glimpses into my thought process through think-alouds. I may also provide prompts
to encourage discussion. Minilessons are also in the to category, as during most of the
lesson, I model, explain, and demonstrate. During the independent reading portion of
10
the workshop, children work by themselves. They are expected to continue reading in
their own spots, independently and for a sustained period of time, working to apply
strategies theyve learned.
In this book, I focus on the with part of this bridgein particular, how I support
students as they read, always moving students closer to independence. The theoretical
underpinnings of this are discussed in the next section.
A LEARNERS ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT AND RELEASING
SCAFFOLDING During conferencesindividual or groupI attempt to assess
. . . then I decide on
teaching point that is a slight stretch beyond what the student can already
a teaching point
that is a slight
Vygotsky called this the distance between finding the actual develop
stretch beyond
can already do
assessing to find what the student cant do, and then teaching to a deficit,
independently.
I find what the student is already able to do and I teach to move the stu
dent, always linking the new information with what is known.
Once a teaching decision is made, I then provide support to the student in this
new learning. After all, if the student is able to do it independently already, then there
is no point in teaching it! Vygotsky (1978) asserts that new learning occurs when the
child accepts the challenge to take on new competencies, not repeat old ones. The
supports that I put in place are commonly referred to as scaffolding, a metaphor first
used in developmental literature by Wood, Bruner, and Ross (1976) and later applied
to educational contexts.
Just like the scaffolding around buildings under construction, there needs to be a
plan for how to take it down. I used to make the mistake of providing excessive scaf
foldingmore support than the student needsand held it constant rather than
gradually removing it. I wouldnt see when my students were able to practice inde
pendently what I had taught them. I mistakenly referred to the children as needy and
just kept putting more supports in place.
In fact, what I was missing was the gradual release of responsibility, or the slow
takedown of the scaffolding, when planning for and executing conferences (Pearson
and Gallagher 1983). I needed to teach toward the development of inner control, so
the child no longer needs external support from me and can function independently
with the new learning (Clay 1991).
The idea of scaffolding can be applied when looking at the balanced literacy
model presented in the previous section. To and with are scaffolds to get to the by. On
a more microlevel, though, its also important to study how we interact with students
while engaged in a conference. Examining how we respond to student approximations,
the amount of support we give through modeling and coaching, and the amount of
time we spend supporting the student before she is expected to practice alone are all
important aspects of scaffolded instruction. Balance, then, is not simply about the
diverse structures we use, but the methods of teaching within each structure, the
amount of support we give, and how we release that support, always in constant con
sideration of what readers need most.
11
12
When in your life have strategies helped you to acquire new learning?
13
14
The final part of each group conference is the link. This part links the work
that students do in small groups to the work that they do at their independent work
spots. The teacher reiterates what was taught and encourages the children to practice
independently. This is an important, though quick, part of the conference because it is
essential that children transfer what theyve done in the ten-minute small group to
their independent reading. It is through repeated practice in multiple contexts that
children solidify new learning.
Although the structures remain the same, there is nuance in what happens in
each type of small group. As you read each chapter, use the predictable common struc
tures to focus your reading, and look to see how the differences support the goals of
the group.
Chapter
Several years ago, I taught a third grader with a magic hobby. He sometimes came in
from recess or from home having read about a new card trick or how to make three
segments of rope magically become one again. With his magic hat and the wave of a
wand, he often baffled me.
Pick a card, any card, he said one afternoon. He fanned out a whole deck in
front of me. I chose my card and held it close to my chest. He made the cards return to
a nice neat stack with a tap on each side.
15
16
Put your card back in this deck, he said, splitting the deck in two, and Ill tell
you what card you pulled. I did as told. He flipped every card over, one by one, until
he got to my queen of hearts. Thats it! That was your card. The queen of hearts.
My first impression was, Wow! He did it again. Tricked me. But today I was
determined. It was only a trick. There was a way he did it. I just had to figure it out.
Do it again, I said. As he did, I started asking questions in my head. Was he
marking the card with ink on his finger? Did he bend the corner? Did he leave the card
sticking out a bit so that hed know which was which? I watched closely, scrutinizing
every tiny movement.
And then I caught it. Aha! I said, and a look of worry spread across his face.
When you split the deck in half and had me place mine in the middle, you peeked at
the card right on top. That way, when you went to flip them over, youd know which
card that would come right after that one. Then, as soon as Id said it, I felt terrible for
ruining his trick.
As teachers of reading, it often seems that what happens inside a students head
when he reads is like the card trick my student performed. What we see on the surface
is one thingarriving at the right card or arriving at the word or thought while read
ing. But what lies beneath is really what were after.
To be a good teacher of reading, we need to know the students tricks and what
makes her tick. We need to better understand everything from the students book
choices to how she plows through each page. We need to get underneath how she does
what she does so that we can help her to engage with texts and think with more
sophistication as she reads. We need to be able to assess well, and make teaching deci
sions based on those assessments.
The goal of this chapter is to offer advice on how to make the magic behind
reading a little more visible. Accurately assessing and gaining insights about individual
students allows me to group them according to their strengths and needs.
So in a book about groups, this is a chapter about how to see children as
individuals.
The insights I glean from my assessments can literally help me differentiate
instruction the very next moment, or in a small-group setting later that day, or in the
days to come. These groupings tend to be flexible as my constant assessment using the
measures described in this chapter allows me to move students in and out of groups as
appropriate.
I begin by reviewing some principles of assessment. I then discuss ways to assess
students
comprehension
conversational skills
In examining these five aspects of reading, I get a more complete picture and am
able to make goals for students that move them ever closer to engaged, proficient read
ing. The subsequent chapters in this book offer structures and methods for supporting
children in developing increasing proficiency each of these five aspects. In each section
ahead in this chapter, I explain the dimension, then lead through a structure that I find
helpful for assessing the dimension. I use specific examples of children with whom I
work so you can have practice making sense of the information gathered from the
assessment measure.
Whats Ahead
17
18
their understanding. So to confirm that each child had gotten it, and that this
would be our final time together with this skill, I asked them to describe on
a large sticky note what they pictured, which then stayed in their reading
portfolio.
Any of these three types of assessmentdiagnostic, formative, or summative
can be formal or informal, although it is most common for formative assessments to
be informal.
Formal assessments are typically those that are standardized. Standardized
assessments have been tested on students and report the data as statistics, percentiles,
or stanines. Examples of formal assessments are the Directed Reading Assessment
(DRA), state standardized tests, or IQ tests.
Informal assessments are not data driven, but instead are content and perform
ance driven. Examples of informal assessment are checklists, rubrics, and listening to a
conversation about books to determine comprehension skills being used. Most of the
small groups I form are based on informal assessments, but this is mostly because by
the time I receive results from most formal assessments, the data are old. That is, what
a child was able to do in January when the state English Language Arts test was given is
likely very different from her skill level in May when I receive the results. If you work
in a district where formal assessment data are turned around quickly, this will not be
such a conflict for you.
Assessments can also be categorized as quantitative or qualitative. Quantitative
measures yield numbers. Quantitative data in reading can refer to a reading level, a
percentage of accuracy on a running record, or a test score. Qualitative measures, on
the other hand, attempt to offer descriptions for what is going on. These measures may
include descriptions of the kinds of books a child likes to read or may analyze the
reading skills a child uses when talking about a book in a book club.
It is important to have a repertoire of ways to assess reading. Standardized tests
are not enough. A running record is not enough. A questionnaire about reading inter
ests is not enough. It is through multiple assessment measuresformal and informal;
quantitative and qualitative; diagnostic, formative, and summativethat we can begin
to understand the complexity of a readers process and offer appropriate instruction to
meet the readers needs.
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20
Assessing Engagement
Like any activity, reading is something that one gets better at with practice. It is not
surprising, then, that for children to become better readers, they must read for long
stretches of time, with just-right material, joyfully engaged in their reading (Allington
2000; Calkins 2000; Serravallo and Goldberg 2007). Without engagement during read
ing, this time spent reading doesnt count. As responsible reading teachers, it is
important to be vigilant when it comes to our students engagement and to offer them
strategies and techniques to help them stay motivated and engaged while reading
(Guthrie and Wigfield 1997).
Assessing for engagement can be both qualitative and quantitative. Certain
behaviors are observable when it comes to determining whether a child is engaged or
not: giggling at the funny part, keeping eyes on the book, turning pages at an accept
able pace. There are also measures, though, that help quantify how fully a child is
engaged. We can look at the number of pages students read per reading workshop
period and the number of books they read across the course of a week. Engagement
inventories, book logs, and reading interest inventories provide both quantitative and
qualitative data to help us plan for individuals and small groups (see Figure 2.1).
Quantitative
Engagement inventory
Engagement inventory
Book log
Book log
21
22
R for reacting to the text or S for smiling. After a day of watching closely, I analyzed my
data. It spoke for itself, and was not very promising (see Figure 2.2).
From looking at the table, you can clearly see that many of my students were
looking at me or out the window every single time I looked at them during the inde
pendent reading block. Some children lost steam after about fifteen minutes (Mark,
Erin, Maria, Charlie, Elizabeth). Others sustained their attention the entire time
(Mehak, Ramon, Desiree, Michael, David, Pete, Kenny, and Margaret). Clearly target
ing the length of time that a student can stay engaged in reading helps develop a plan
for how to help the child. One important piece of data, then, is to determine the stam
ina that a child has for reading. This stamina can be measured by how long a child
reads before losing focus. I also am interested in looking at what the distracters seem to
be, as that will also help me to identify an intervention plan. Students doing anything
but reading every time I looked over (Mark, Charlie) are readers that I suspected had
problems with choosing books that will interest them and problems refocusing them
selves if they get distracted.
Book Logs
Book logs are invaluable tools for identifying many things about a reader. From a wellkept book log, you can learn about a students reading tastes, habits, and stamina.
Weve long known the importance of book choice in reading. As far back at the 1960s,
Daniel Faders book Hooked on Books discussed how to get even the most reluctant
students to read by helping them choose the right books. The book logs that the
Teachers College Reading and Writing Project (TCRWP) recommends for upper ele
mentary readers are logs that contain the date, title and author, start and stop time,
and pages read.
I look for a number of different indicators of engagement in a childs book log. I
look to see the types of books a child chooses, the length of time she is reading in
home and in school each day, and her page per minute rate. Often, I can state what I
notice but I also have some questions spring up from the information on a log. This
Looking at the March book log of Samantha from Miss Rosies second-grade
class (Figure 2.3), I can glean some information about the kind of reader Samantha is,
and I can formulate some questions I have about her. I notice that she reads several
different kinds of series books, and when she finds a series she likes, she will seek out
another within that series. She seems to like the Zack Files by Dan Greenburg, I can
deduce, because she has chosen more than one. I also notice that she tends to read for
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about twenty minutes at a time whether in home or at school. Her reading rate at
school (two pages per minute) seems to be faster than at home (less than one page per
minute), which might mean that she is not really reading for twenty minutes at home,
or that she has some things that distract her at home. All of the books on her log are
pretty funny, so I think that she might also gravitate toward books with a good sense
of humor.
This year, I worked with some colleagues at schools in New York City to create a
book log appropriate for younger children. Of course, when children read books below
level J/K, it is too much for them to record all of that information because it takes away
from their time spent reading. However, they could easily use a tally system to record
the number of times theyve gotten through an entire book. In this example, a reader
tallies under either the home or school column each time he reads a book. This
reading might be a reread of a familiar book or a first read of a new book. In either
case, he simply tallies once after reading. This system for logging could also be handled
by putting a sticky note on the back cover of each book and having the student mark a
tally on that sticky note. In this way, I can see how many times the child has read each
book and how many books were read across the week.
In Isaiahs book log (Figure 2.4), it is apparent that he was inconsistent with how
much (and probably how long) he read at home each night, whereas in school he was
much more consistent. Also, he seemed to read less at home than at school. You can
note from his teacher Ms. Lewis comments that she gave that feedback to him and to
the parent signing his log each night.
When looking at book logs with an eye toward engagement, it is helpful to think
about the expectations for reading rate based on the level that the student reads. Harris
and Sipays (1990) research offers guidelines for reading rate based on grade level and
reading level (Figure 2.5).
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Grade Level
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Reading Levels
CI
JL
LO
PR
SU
TV
VW
WZ
Z
Reading Rate
(words per minute)
6090
85120
115140
140170
170195
195220
215245
235270
250270
Figure 2.5 Reading Rate According to Reading Level (Harris and Sipay 1990)
With reading rate in mind, it is then helpful to think about how long it should
take a child to finish a book, and, therefore, how many books a child should read in a
period of time. We can compare these expectations against the childs book log to see if
the child was engaged during reading in school and at home. For example, a level L
text like Horrible Harry in Room 2B by Suzy Kline (1998) has about 4500 words in the
entire text. If this is a beginning third-grade reading level, the child should be able to
read it at about 115 words per minute. This means it should take that child about forty
minutes to read the whole book. Thats about one days worth of reading. If the book
log shows that it took the child even two days to read this book, that means that either
the child is reading at half the speed that is expected for that level or the child was not
engaged during reading. Further inquiry would be needed, but book logs are an
important first signal to an issue with engagement.
Of course, all of these measures are only important if we also know about how a
child understands a text. The information gleaned from book logs allows us to have
conversations with students during conferences, or to use other assessment measures
to understand not only how much time a child spends reading and how many pages
are read, but whats happing during that time and in those pages. No one measure will
give a full picture of what a reader is doing. The information gleaned here will also
need to be understood in the context of how a student comprehends a text, whether
the student has any difficulties with print work, and how fluently the child reads, in
particular. These other dimensions of a reader are mentioned in subsequent sections.
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How do you feel about having a partner who reads the same books you read,
or a club to talk to about your reading?
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that will best help them past this bump in the road. Is the root of the engagement
problem about book choice? Distractibility? Not having a clear sense of expecta
tions in the classroom? Needing more of a social motivation for reading? Feeling
like they arent good at reading? If I can figure out the root of what is causing the
disengagement, then I can target instruction toward the root. Sometimes, this will
be solved with homogeneous grouping, but often children benefit from peer men
tors within the group. For example, putting together four children who are disen
gaged into a book club might not work as well as putting one child in a book club
with other readers who can mentor him with some energy and enthusiasm around
books. In Chapter 3, I describe a group I pulled together to help with distractibil
ity. The group was made up of a diverse range of readers, to show the children that
all readers get distracted from time to time and benefit from strategies to help
them to stay focused.
Assessing Fluency
Fluency and intonation are important signals as to the extent to which a reader
makes sense of the text as he reads. Fluency tells us about comprehension. Through
reading smoothly and expressively, a reader also communicates that meaning to a
listener. Fluency affects comprehension, comprehension affects fluency (Kuhn
2008; Rasinski 2003). As with any of the other four dimensions mentioned in this
chaptercomprehension, engagement, print work strategies, and conversation
skillsit is not enough to look at fluency in isolation. Fluency tells us about how
well a child comprehends, how automatic the childs word recognition is, the ability
of a child to use print work strategies when encountering new words, and the abil
ity to stay engaged in a book. This section looks at fluency, but any information
gathered from the suggested assessment measures must be looked at alongside the
other measures as well.
In analyzing a childs reading with an eye toward fluency, it is essential to go
beyond just the speed with which a child can read and look at the qualities and dimen
sions within her fluent reading. In particular, I consider accuracy, automaticity, expres
sion, prosody, and parsing and take note of each aspect. See Figure 2.7 for a partial
glossary of terms explaining dimensions of fluent reading.
Accuracy: The ability of a reader to identify words in text correctly or with precision.
Figure 2.7 Fluency: A Partial Glossary of Terms. Adapted from Kuhn (2008).
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Shared Reading
When most of the children in my class were reading levels J and below, I had a daily
whole-class shared reading time when everyone read from the same text (either a big
book, a chart, or an overhead projection). During this time, I found it hard to listen to
children as individuals. To remedy this, I had portions of the class read together, and I
listened carefully to them as individuals. For example, I divided the carpet into four
squares and each section took turns reading pages.
It was important during this shared reading for me to listen for different aspects
of fluency, and to take notes on the children as individuals. For example, I had a check
list with childrens names along the left-hand side and the fluency descriptors along
the top (reads in two- or three-word phrases, attends to ending punctuation, phrases
preserve the authors syntax). During the shared reading lesson, or after the lesson was
over, I quickly checked off what I heard from each of the students (see Figure 2.9).
Running Records
Another important opportunity to assess fluency is during running records. When
administering running records, I created a space on my form to record how many
words the child read before pausing, whether the child paid attention to punctuation,
and how the childs voice sounded during dialogue or during narration. When I
collected these data on running records, I could go back and sort children based on
where they fell along the fluency scale.
Two-Word
Phrases
Three-Word
Phrases
Attends to
Ending
Punctuation
Isabella
Marcus
Emma
Louis
Figure 2.9 Sample Checklist Used During a Small-Group Shared Reading Lesson, Assessing Fluency
Phrases
Preserve
Authors Syntax
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From Grace Lees running record (Figure 2.10), I noticed that she read at a flu
ency level 4, as was appropriate for this level L text, Meet the Molesons by Burny Bos
(1995). She preserved the authors syntax as she read, and often stopped to create mean
ingful phrases when she paused within a sentence (One morning/ Dusty and I/
were getting ready for school). Most often, though, she paused only at the end of
sentences. She attended to punctuation, noticing exclamation points and question
marks and making her voice match the marks she saw on the page. She was also very
accurate and automatic with her word recognition, miscuing only twice, which helped
her fluency.
One-on-One Conferences
When conferring with children reading below level I, I often ask the child to read
aloud to me as part of the research of the conference. With children above this level, I
research by asking the child to read aloud only when I know from past assessments
that fluency or print work strategies may be an area of concern. During this time, I
listen for the childs print work strategies as well as how fluently and expressive his
reading sounds. Even if I decide in the one-on-one conference not to teach something
relating to fluency, I make a note as to what I heard during that reading.
In the excerpt of the transcript below, notice how I began the conference with
the goal of talking about the students comprehension, but soon got the hunch that he
was not really that engaged with the book. I wondered if he read it expressively in his
head, and whether he really understood what was going on. I then decided to assess his
fluency by having him read aloud. The slashes in the students part of the transcript are
to help you hear what I heard during the conference, and in brackets I give commen
tary on how he read the lines of the text.
Me: Hi, Jonah. How are you liking Henry and Mudge Under the Yellow Moon?
Jonah: Its OK. I like Halloween.
Me: Oh, it takes place at Halloween. Is it spooky?
Jonah: I dont know.
Me: Why dont you read a little bit to me?
Jonah: OK. [Reads in a monotone] Henry / loved Halloween. He loved / to make /
Figure 2.10 Grace Lees Running Record Listening for Fluency. Slashes Indicate Pauses.
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At this point in the conference, I decided to teach Jonah that he could think
about and match his expression to how the character was feeling. When Henry was
excited about Halloween, Jonahs voice should sound excited. When Henry was
scared, Jonahs voice should sound nervous and afraid. I coached Jonah to try this
on a few pages, and wrote notes to myself to follow up with him in another smallgroup conference soon with other students who could benefit from practicing
this strategy.
Partnerships or Clubs
When children are grouped with and spend time reading out loud with same-ability
partners or clubs, I can assess fluency. In primary grades, children have these partner
ship opportunities daily. In upper elementary school, children might meet with part
ners or clubs two or three times per week. During this time, I make my way around the
classroom, assessing fluency and comprehension.
Often, during partnerships or book clubs, children read aloud parts of their text.
They may read aloud to share a favorite part with their peers, to reenact a scene, or to
prove a point they are making about an idea they had when reading. I can listen in,
seeing if the way they read matches the emotion of the character on the page, if it
matches the dialogue tag telling the reader how to read the dialogue, and if it is appro
priately fluent for the level, according to the fluency scale. I teach in the moment,
responding to what I see, and make notes for follow-up in subsequent small-group
conferences.
Following is an excerpt from a transcript from two fourth-grade children who
read Junebug by Alice Mead (1995) in a reading partnership. They discussed ideas they
had about the characters; the students read excerpts aloud to prove their thinking. As I
listened to them talk, I was interested to see if the children chose appropriate parts in
the text to support their thinking, and if they were able to read those parts with into
nation that supported their thinking. I saw with these two boys a nice intersection
between evidence of their comprehension and evidence of strong fluency and intona
tion skills.
Jonas: Well, one thing Im thinking about Junebug is that he acts one way around
Jonas: Right here, where hes talking about how hes nervous about his tenth birth
day cuz hes worried the kids are going to ask him to run errands. But I dont
think he really means runs errands, he means do bad stuff like maybe steal. He
says . . . I mean, he doesnt say it, but hes the narrator so he kind of says it. He
says, I dont want to think about that. And Maybe he did. Maybe he didnt. I
dont know [reads this part in a very dismissive tone as if the character were
speaking, brushing off his own comments].
Malik: So you think even though he says he doesnt care, he really does?
Jonas: Yeah. What were you thinking about?
Malik: I was thinking about the sister character.
Jonas: What are you thinking about her?
Malik: Well, its weird how she doesnt talk. It says here, She starts off up the stairs.
She doesnt say a word. She can talk. She just doesnt [reads this part slowly,
pausing dramatically at each period]. This makes me think its going to be a big
problem later on in the book. Its the last thing he says in this chapter.
during conferences
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productive my group will be. In Chapters 4 and 6, I give concrete advice for a variety of
structures to support readers in developing their fluent, expressive reading. Keep in
mind, though, that group makeups constantly shift. A group may start out having four
members for the first and second meetings, and then go down to two, then add a third
for the fourth meeting. These groups are flexible and ever-changing, requiring con
stant formative assessment.
Most elementary school teachers would have a great deal of difficulty with that
excerpt; it would probably take an advanced degree in biology to read that passage
with automaticity. So, because there were challenges, it helps us to be aware of our
print work strategies. Here are just a few strategies I use when I encounter difficulty in
reading that excerpt:
find parts of words I recognize to help me to read unfamiliar words (i.e., phylo
in phylogenic)
read new words based on how I know letter combinations act in familiar
words (i.e., Chl will probably sound like how it does in a word I know,
chloroform)
read words syllable-by-syllable when I dont recognize parts (i.e.,
pristiophorids = pris-ti-o-phor-ids)
In the upcoming sections, I recommend two different ways to figure out what
strategies young readers are using as they encounter difficulties in a text: running
records and one-on-one conferences. In both examples, I take down information
about a readers errors and self-corrections and systematically analyze the data gath
ered using Marie Clays advice for miscue analysis.
Running Records
Running records offer numerous opportunities to assess childrens use of meaning,
syntax, and visual cueing systems as they read. Marie Clay (1993) writes that the pur
pose of taking these records is to determine what is already known so that we can
provide the learner with a useful context within which to embed new learning (20).
When looking at a running record, I ask myself questions to determine the cueing
systems that a child is using and not using when making an error and when self-cor
recting mistakes. I ask myself:
Does that mistake/self-correction make sense (meaning)?
Does that mistake/self-correction sound right (syntax)?
Does that mistake/self-correction look right (visual)?
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self-correct. Looking at each error separately, I ask myself if the error makes sense,
sounds right, and looks right.
Went/walked from the sentence Cam and Eric walked toward the shopping
bagthe error sounds right (they are both verbs), and share the same first
letter. The error also makes sense. Here, the reader is using all three cueing
systems but still reads the word incorrectly. Why? My hunch is that she is not
looking all the way through the word, only relying on the first letter along
with syntax and meaning.
She/someone from the sentence Can I help you? someone askedthe error
sounds right (they are both nouns), it makes sense, and shares the same first
letter. Again, though, the reader might not be looking all the way through
the word.
Wore/wearing from the sentence, A woman wearing a bright green dress with
a large white button was standing in front of themthe error follows the
same pattern as the last two.
Put/printed for the sentence, IM A BINKYS HELPER was printed on the
buttonthis error does not make sense, but it sounds right and has the same
first letter.
So far, I have a hunch that this student is someone who reads and makes sure it
makes sense. None of her errors ignores the meaning of the sentence or the syntax of
the sentence. However, when she comes to an unfamiliar word, she uses only the initial
letter to help her to figure out what the word might be. I need to teach her to look all
the way through the word and make sure that the letters match what shes reading,
along with the meaning and syntax.
In this section, I gave a very beginning idea of how to look at a running record
with the point that its important to look for patterns while keeping in mind the three
cueing systems. For more information on taking, scoring, and analyzing running
records, see Marie Clays 1993 book, An Observation Survey.
One-on-One Conferences
One-on-one conferences can be a place to do a more informal record of reading. As a
child reads his books, I might ask him to read aloud for a portion of the conference.
Usually, I do this only for children in lower levels (AJ). I also usually do this only on a
first read-through of a text, because the child should be able to read a high percentage
of the words without utilizing any print work strategies. When it is a first read, I will
often take a quick running record in my notes, much like the full-page running record
in Figure 2.10.
Assessing Comprehension
Comprehension is at the heart of what it means to really read. Reading is thinking and
understanding and getting at the meaning behind a text. Comprehension instruction
begins in TCRWPs schools before children can even conventionally read. As children
are read to during read-aloud, they are asked to think about characters, make predic
tions about what will come next, question and wonder whats happening, and consider
what lesson they can learn from the book.
Depending on which professional book you look at, you will likely see a different
list of the reading skills. Keene and Zimmermann in their book Mosaic of Thought
(1997) synthesized a great deal of research and distilled all of the reading skills men
tioned down to the following seven.
Activating prior knowledge before, during, and after reading a text. Proficient
readers think about what they already know about a texts structure or topic
before they read; they make connections to their lives, other books, and the
world as they read; and they think about these connections after they are
finished reading.
Determining the most important ideas and themes in a text. Proficient readers
understand the most significant events in a fiction story and use the signifi
cant events to retell, and when reading nonfiction can determine the main
idea of a passage, section, or chapter.
Creating visual and sensory images before, during, and after reading a text.
Proficient readers have a lost-in-a-book feeling when reading and are able to
describe the multisensory experiences they have across the course of reading
the text. It is not simply about visualizing, but also hearing, seeing, smelling,
and feeling what is described in the text.
Asking questions. Proficient readers read with curiosity. They question the text,
often including the characters actions or motivations, their own reactions to
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whats in the book, and even the authors decisions of what to include and
what not to include.
Drawing inferences. Proficient readers constantly read beyond whats literally
in the text. They are able to form judgments, make predictions, and determine
the theme or message of a story, and they have their own ideas and critiques
about a text.
Retelling and synthesizing. Proficient readers can figure out how parts of
a text fit together. One way to use that knowledge is to retell a text in
sequence, chronicling what happened first, next, and finally. Readers can
also put parts of the text together to understand cause and effect, character
change, or how all of the nonfiction features on one page fit together under
a single main idea.
Using fix-up strategies when comprehension breaks down. Proficient readers
monitor their own understanding as they read and have strategies to fix con
fusion as it arises. These strategies include the ability to understand new
vocabulary.
what I see, as if to say, Yup! He can infer.Yes! Hes got the visualizing down. Instead,
I look at the quality of the skill being used and think about how I can help the child
deepen this skill work.
Two years ago, the TCRWP also started working on taking each of these skills
and thinking about them along a continuum. We used a short story and preplanted
boxes for the reader to stop and jot in response to prompts intended to assess four
different skills. We collected hundreds of student and adult responses to the questions
and sorted them in an attempt to determine what made some of the responses more
proficient than others. Being part of this research think tank allowed me to see that
there is varying depth with which any one of these seven skills can be expressed.
Following are some stop-and-jots from a third-grade class of children at PS 158.
I read The Bat Boy and His Violin, a historical fiction picture book by Curtis, and
prompted students to stop and jot their thinking. The book is about a young boy
whose father is a coach for a Negro League team. The father doesnt approve of his
sons love of the violin and makes him become a batboy for the baseball team. When
the boy fails miserably at his batboy duties, the father tells him to just go into the
dugout and fiddle. The music he plays has a positive effect on the team, which begins
winning. Eventually, the team receives an invitation to play the top-ranked Negro
League team. Although they lose, the father comes to develop a new understanding
about his son and his love for music because of the time theyve spent together.
The first set of responses (Figure 2.12) is from the children looking only at the
front cover of the picture book, and I was assessing their ability to active prior knowl
edge. Whats shown is an illustration of an African American boy playing a violin in a
baseball uniform, with baseball players in the background. I asked the students to jot
what you know about how stories like this tend to go. The first childs writing indi
cates that he thought about the mood of the story, the second jotting shows that the
child took into account the historical time period, and the third jotting shows that the
child thought on a more inferential level about a possible big idea or interpretation
from the whole of the book. In thinking about the skill of activating prior knowledge,
the first childs sticky note shows a more basic ability and the third childs is more
sophisticated.
In Figure 2.13, there are a few collected sticky notes in response to a prompt
asking the children to describe this scene using all of your senses. Here, I was
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Figure 2.13 Jots to Assess for Using Visual and Sensory Images
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assessing childrens ability to use visual and other sensory images while reading.
Because the book is a picture book, I hoped to see that children could go beyond just
what they saw in the pictures and what they read in words of the text and add to the
multisensory experience of reading. The first sticky note is just a literal reiteration of
whats in the picture. Although accurate, its very simplistic. The second sticky note
shows a bit of inference into the fathers feelings or at least the temperature of the day
when the student writes the dad was wiping sweat off him. The third sticky note
shows the most complete sensory description, however. There are details about the
characters feelingsthe dad looks nervous and redand about the sounds that
might have been heardthe crowd is going wild. These details are not in the picture
or the words, but are instead inferred. The child took in more of the text and used
more sensory images.
Figure 2.14 shows three childrens responses to the prompt How has the
father changed from the beginning to the end of this book? With this prompt, I was
assessing the childrens ability to synthesize. I wanted to see if they could think about
how the father acted and the kinds of things he said in the beginning of the book,
and the kinds of ways he was acting at the end. The first sticky note simply states a
change in feelinggrumpy to not grumpy. This doesnt take into account large
chunks of the text where the father comes to finally listen and understand his son,
who was so different from him, and develops an appreciation for his musical talent.
The second and third children picked up on a change in attitude in the fatherhis
becomes more caring, or proudand this idea is a fuller understanding of the
whole book.
The final question I asked the children to respond to regarded what the story was
really about (Figure 2.15). I was looking for an interpretationan understanding on
an inferential level of the message, or lesson, or theme of the whole book. The first
childs response is simply a poor summary. The second shows an interpretation about
how the sound of the violin, or the music, has the power to change. This is an
insightful response, but it doesnt include anything about the main characters. The
third child wrote that the story is about the importance of following your dream.
This response seems the most sophisticated because it takes into account the father,
who follows his dream to take his baseball team to championships, and the boy, who
follows his dream of being a violinist despite resistance at first from his father.
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When looking at your own students comprehension skills and the depth with
which each of them can use a skill, I recommend beginning with a read-aloud. Collect
sample responses from each child in your class, and then sort and organize them into
piles (think, perhaps, deep/deeper/deepest). Next, see what the more sophisticated
skill looks like and use those samples as a model for the other children. At the Reading
and Writing Project, we call these mentor stickies. Children who have similar ways of
responding in a text can be grouped together and moved toward deeper thinking in
small-group conferences. These groups are again flexible and change across the course
of time based on formative assessments. More advice for how long readers stay in a
group and how to manage flexible grouping can be found in Chapters 4 and 8.
Reading Portfolios
Some of the teachers with whom I work find it helpful to maintain reading portfolios
for the students in their classes. These reading portfolios are simply a packet of paper
held in a folder. Each page is dedicated to its own skill or own month, with space for
the child to jot a response from an open-ended response. For example, one portfolio
might say Retelling across the top of the page and have eight boxes, one for each
month of the school year. The teacher might write or say a prompt like, Write the
most important events in the beginning, middle, and end of your chapter, and have
the student respond to the prompt in whatever book she is reading at the time.
Another teacher I work with uses one page per month, with six boxes. Each
box is dedicated to a different skill. The child responds to a prompt said out loud by
the teacher on whatever book he is reading at the time. Figure 2.16 is an example of
such a portfolio. This teacher has one portfolio for independent reading and one for
read-aloud.
Still another teacher decided shed have the pages made up, but planned to have
the children stop and jot on sticky notes, then collect and file the sticky notes herself.
No matter how its organized, the important thing to keep in mind is that its helpful to
assess each skill each month to get a picture for how skill work deepens and develops
across time, and how it changes from unit of study to unit of study, genre to genre.
We can analyze student responses to the questions in the same ways we just
looked at student responses from The Bat Boy and His Violin. For example, we can
look at Brians portfolio from October and see that in the Determining the Most
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Important Ideas and Themes box, he wrote, Who cares if people hate the things you
have. As long as you like it, its fine, about The Widows Broom by Chris Van Allsburg
(1992). This interpretation takes into account the characters and conveys an under
standing of the whole of the text, not just one part, and it is an inference, not some
thing stated in the text. This shows that Brian is able to demonstrate a strong control
of determining a theme, or interpreting the text.
Reading Notebooks
Writing about reading is an important way for students to hold onto their ideas and to
grow new thoughts about their books through the act of writing (Angelillo 2003;
Calkins 2000). Sometimes, thoughts are so fleeting that without writing them down,
they are lost. When readers write about their thinking, they can go back and look at it
later. This written record of ideas can become a springboard for more writing, more
thinking, or quality conversations about books.
Writing about reading is also important for our assessment. As students collect
their ideas and write longer entries, we get a glimpse into their thinking about their
books. We can see the kinds of thinking students tend to do, what kinds of reading skills
they use, how deeply they use the skills, and what reading skills they shy away from.
In TCRWP schools, teachers have students in grades three and up keep readers
notebooks. These notebooks are sometimes organized into sections: (1) writing about my
independent reading; (2) writing to prepare for conversation with partners or clubs;
(3) writing from the read-aloud; and (4) writing to reflect my own reading process
goals. Other times, the notebooks are kept in chronological sequence with dates at the
top of each page. Teaching children to organize the notebooks with dates and the title
and author of the book makes it easier for us to see where the student got his thinking.
The notebooks can house sticky notes that have been peeled out of books before they
were returned to the classroom library, stop-and-jots during read-alouds, longer writ
ten reflections about ideas, graphic organizers, character lists, and on and on.
In Figure 2.17, a child wrote a few short thoughts during her teachers readaloud of Eve Buntings Riding the Tiger (2001). In looking at the students responses,
we can determine the depth with which she uses reading skills to help her understand
the story. For example, the first jotting mentions the characters facial expression
(proud face and gleaming) but nothing about the setting. To teach for depth, it
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might be helpful to group this student with other children strong at visualizing charac
ter, but less apt to imagine setting using all their senses.
Figure 2.18 shows one students longer written response. The student took one
sticky note from his book and attempted to write a longer response to get ready for a
conversation. His writing shows evidence of interpretation (money has the power)
and determining importance by his ability to cite relevant parts of the text to go with
his idea.
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Figure 2.18 A Fifth Graders Notebook Entry from Stop-and-Jots During a Read-Aloud of
Monkey Island
Kenny: Because Bud had no father, he was on his own and went to this home as
mother loved him so much, she was preparing him for when she was
going to be gone, right? She left him nothing.
Ella: No, she left him this suitcase.
Kenny: Right, and what was in the suitcase thats so special? When he went to the
Amos, would he even have stepped out of their door without his suitcase?
They even had a gun to guard it and he took that gun and threw it away so
nobody could steal his suitcase. He knew everythingthe knots of the
twine.
Ella: He could take a quick glance at the suitcase and see if anyone had touched it.
Kenny: But why?
Ella: Thats the only key to his whole mystery of life. His suitcase is like him. It
contains everything about him. Its not just like a physical suitcase, its kind
of a mental suitcase. Because everything kind of represents him. Like who
he is. And without those things
Kenny: Wait, what do you mean, its a mental suitcase?
Figure 2.19 Transcript of Children Talking About Bud, Not Buddy
mothers actions. At the tail end of the transcript, Ella got the idea that the suitcase is a
mental suitcase, with the items representing symbolically who Bud is.
In setting goals for the children in this club, I might choose to support Kenny
and Charlie a bit more in using their initial inferences to come up with deeper inter
pretations about the whole of the text. Kenny only questioned the text at one point in
the story; perhaps teaching him to do this at more points across the text would help
him with his ideas. Ella came up with a great idea about symbolism in the text, and
teaching her to question other details the author includes about other characters as
well might deepen her comprehension. Here, as elsewhere, the goals I form for these
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students are always about finding what work they could manage with some support
that is within their zone of proximal development. I try in my goal setting to find what
students can do and imagine next steps.
Individual Conferences
Individual conferences are an opportunity to monitor and assess student comprehen
sion and to make teaching decisions based on that assessment (Calkins 2000; Collins
2004; Serravallo and Goldberg 2007). Usually, I enter a conference with a sense of the
skill or skills that I want to assess for, and Ill ask questions pertaining to those skills.
For example, when I knew I was working on retelling with Mehak, a fourth-grade
reader, I started off a conference by saying, So, youre on Chapter 5 of your book, I see.
Can you tell me the most important thing thats happened to your character in each of
your chapters? Instead of starting with a broad question like Hows it going? or Tell
me about what youre working on today or Whats your book like? I targeted a spe
cific skill from the very start of our conversation together.
I listened to Mehaks response with an ear for a good retelling, based on the work
wed done together so far. I looked for signs of whether she was able to respond in a
way that indicated that she was telling only the important details, not every single
thing that happened in every chapter. I also listened to hear if she was retelling in
sequence or out of order, and also if the retelling sounded inferentialembedded with
her own ideas about the chapteror literalsimply recounting the events of the char
acters. As I listened, I recorded all of my impressions. My notes from this and all my
conferences end up being quite thorough, as seen in Figure 2.20. I write down several
possible compliments and several possible teaching points, and mark the compliment
I ended up giving with a C and the teaching point I ended up using with a T. Then, I
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record next steps (NS) based on how the student did at practicing the strategy with me
in the one-on-one conference.
You will develop a system that works for you personally; whats important is that
you write down information that will help you look across many possible compliments
and teaching points and make a decision not only in this conference, but also to help
you to think about next steps and plan for small-group work.
I can go back across my notes from the week and see which children would ben
efit from the same strategy.
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important moment in the story. For the child who is inclined toward prediction, I
might help make stronger predictions based on information he has about the charac
ter to determine how the character will probably act, or to think about narrative
structure to make predictions about how the story will unfold, not just the very next
event. Because these children would benefit from different strategies, they need to be
part of different groups.
Assessing Conversation
Ive already discussed the value of listening in on students conversations about books
to determine what reading skills they are and arent using, and how proficiently they
are using those skills. An oral text, these conversations provide a window into what
children are thinking about as they read and discuss their books.
It is important to also listen for conversational skills as children talk. Helping
children to work not only in a group, but also as a group helps children develop
shared understanding, affiliation, and a deeper sense of caring (Johnston 2004).
Author/educator/social activists Katherine and Randy Bomer write in their book For a
Better World: Reading and Writing for Social Action (2001) that democracy . . . exists
only when people deliberate together, and conversations provide a platform for this.
Conversation about ideas, in classrooms where TCRWP works, are a daily occurrence.
Children talk in whole-class conversations from the class read-aloud, to partnerships,
and to book clubs.
At PS 277 in the South Bronx of New York City, first thing in the morning chil
dren discuss ideas about their lives and communities during a time called talk now,
in an effort to emulate the kinds of dinner table conversations that the children in this
community are often not privy to. They come to the classroom, quickly unpack their
bags, and gather in the meeting area to talk about topics like Why are rents going up
in our neighborhood? and What time do you think third graders should go to bed?
Children talk during social studies about social justice and history, and in science to
hypothesize and develop plans for testing theories. The talk transfers to reading and
writing workshops where quality conversation pushes their literacy thinking.
When children discuss their books, I listen and think about ways I can support
the quality of their conversation, knowing that it will have huge payoffs in their
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abilities to share and grow strong ideas. I hold in my mind what good conversation
looks like. In particular, I might watch for:
whether students body language indicates they are actively listening (i.e.,
facing the speaker, nodding, reacting to whats been said)
if children ask questions to clarify ideas
if readers stick to one idea, adding and building on that idea
if readers are open-minded and talk to arrive at new thoughts and ideas, or if
they simply share what they already thought
if readers are prepared for conversation by using writing on sticky notes or in
a reading notebook
if children provide textual evidence for what theyre talking about
whether children stop to reread parts of the text
if students offer questions or controversial thoughts to entice more interesting
conversation
To listen for both conversational skills and comprehension skills takes an atten
tive ear. For me, it takes some good note taking. I go back and forth between two types
of note taking when listening to conversations. Sometimes I divide my page into two
columns. On one side, I write comprehension skills, and on the other side, I write
conversation skills. As I listen to the conversation, I write down the name of the skill
that I hear. I sometimes take notes by microtranscribing the conversation, writing in
my own shorthand. I find this easier if Im having a hard time listening because then I
can go back across the transcript and analyze it to identify skills instead of having to do
that work in the moment.
Whole-Class Conversations
Interactive read-alouds and whole-class conversations are an important part of sup
porting readers to think and talk about books (Calkins 2000; Collins 2004; Nichols
2006). In TCRWP classrooms, teachers read aloud to the class at least once each day.
During these read-alouds, children have a chance to turn and talk to their partners
about their thinking, or to stop and jot what they are thinking in a notebook. Two or
three days a week, I open up the discussion to the whole class. At this time, partners
share their ongoing discussion with the rest of the class, and individuals share some of
their writing from their reading notebook. The class decides on a topic of conversa
tion, and we have a lengthy conversation, growing ideas, questioning, and challenging
each other.
These whole-class conversations are a large-scale model for what happens during
partnerships and book clubs off of independent reading. Observing and taking careful
notes during this time always provides crucial fodder for future conferences. Often, I
take notes as a sort of microtranscript as well as keep track of who talks. This way, I
can go back to the whole-class document and see each child as an individual. See
Figure 2.21 for an example of note taking from one conversation.
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I keep these notes in a binder so I can see each students progress over time. I also
refer back to notes from book club conferences during this whole-group conversation
time. This way, I can hold children accountable for those conferences during book
clubs.
Because the social groupings during reading workshop are fixed during partner
ships and book clubs, I often meet with the already-formed group for a lesson as
opposed to taking one or two children from a couple of different groups. Because of
this, I tend to see the group as a unit and make most of my teaching decisions based on
what the unit needs.
Impromptu Groups
Expert teachers are masters of both planning effectively and efficiently and of respond
ing to needs of their students in the midst of teaching. In a reading workshop, some
small-group work will likely be planned out ahead of time, and some groups will likely
be pulled together in the moment, based on careful kid-watching, quick assessment,
and an ability to be responsive and reflective. The answer to the question Should I
plan out my groups ahead of time or pull them in response to what I see in the class
room? is a strong Both.
First, some thoughts about planning. When teachers ask me for support with
planning, it is often the case that they ask for support planning the teaching points for
the minilessons of the unit of study, or incorporating their state or city standards into
whole-class lessons. Although I empathize with this, I also believe that I need to have a
balance in my planning time. Although minilessons are best planned in response to
what students need and are able to do, I also need to plan how Ill spend the 75 percent
of the workshop time individualizing instruction in conferences. For that reason, its
important to spend a considerable amount of time planning one-on-one and smallgroup conferences. In each chapter to come, youll get advice on how to plan for these
groups across the course of a week.
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There will, of course, be times when I recognize a need and do a group confer
ence that I wasnt planning on doing. Perhaps I overhear something during the minilessons active involvement that leads me to believe that a few children could benefit
from more coaching. Or perhaps I observe that some of my children arent engaged
during independent reading, so I pull them together for a conference without waiting
for tomorrow to come. These impromptu small-group conferences are an important
part of being a responsive teacher and are balanced with the planned groups that I do
each week.
Chapter
My book club recently decided to read American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld, a novel
based loosely on the life of former first lady Laura Bush. When I first glanced at the
cover, I was a bit turned off. Both the book and the author came with high praise from
readers I trust, though, so I decided to give it a try.
By the second chapter, I was hooked. I read while walking on the sidewalk in
New York City, glancing up from time to time to avoid bumping into a stranger. More
than once I read it and almost missed my stop on the subway. It was the last thing I
looked at every night before bed.
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This level of engagement in a book is not always a given with me. Im a big book
abandoner. Lifes too short, and there are too many books, to read ones that dont keep
my interest. Ive abandoned books that are so-called runaway best sellers, books that
friends have professed changed their lives, and professional books that werent what I
thought theyd be. This is significant, I think, because Im not the kind of reader who is
automatically engaged just because she has a highly recommended book in her hands.
If I reflect on the list of books Ive stuck with and books Ive ditched, I can find
some patterns. Often, the books Ive stuck with are either memoir or nonfiction, or,
when theyre fiction, they read like memoir. I know from experience that I tend to like
most of the books my close friends recommend to me. I also know that just because a
book is a best seller or even Pulitzer Prize winner doesnt mean its going to be a right
fit for me. I like books that are more character-focused than plot-driven, and in non
fiction I like books that have a sociological aspect to them, like Freakonomics by
Stephen Dubner and Steven Levitt or Malcolm Gladwells books, The Outliers and
The Tipping Point.
My reading habits might surprise you. I rarely read one book straight through
before starting another. I have three to five books or magazines going at once. As I
write this, Im getting ready to give birth to my first child and have a stack on my
nightstand of books about childbirth and breast-feeding and sleep-training a baby,
and Im also trying to finish up A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave
Eggers. I also have a few magazinesRolling Stone and Parentingin the pile.
With all Ive told youmy tendency to abandon books, juggling several books at
oncewould you call me a reader? I call myself one. I like to read and when I find
something I like, Im very engaged. I read widely for many purposes. I know what I like
and I have strategies for choosing good books. I have people with whom I share my
reading. Compared with other people whose nose is constantly in a book, who will
stay up all night with a page-turner instead of sleeping, or people whose cars don
bumper stickers demanding Kill your TV or Fight Prime TimeOpen a Book, do
you still think Im a reader? My point is that there is room enough for all of us in the
definition of engaged reader and as teachers, when we look at our students, its
important to consider that engagement. A love of reading might have more than a few
profiles. Each reader might have his or her own reading rhythms, habits, patterns, or
tastes, but one nonnegotiable is that each needs to be able to be engaged with print.
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
What do you look for when you check to see if your students are
engaged readers?
As reading workshop teachers, we wear our love of reading on our sleeves for all
children. As the mentor readers in our classrooms, we talk about our own reading
lives, the books we choose and love and those we abandon, and we read aloud as if
every word were gold. For some students, though, it doesnt seem as if its enough. Just
as I use groups in my own life to give me a vision for what it means to be an engaged
reader, small-group conferences can be the perfect solution to meet the needs of stu
dents in my class with engagement difficulties. I have groups of friends who recom
mend books to me, who talk with me about my choices and help me set goals, who
read with me by the pool or on the couch, and who taught me to refocus when I get
distracted. As teachers, we can help create these groups for children. For my students,
I found:
When my rally cries around reading seemed to still fall flat, I made it a prior
ity to see those students in small groups for some additional support to men
tor them into developing their own reading identity.
When my students felt it was an impossible task to find a book that theyd
enjoy, I pulled them in small groups to talk up books so they could make better
selections.
When I noticed students had trouble staying focused, I gathered them in a
small group to teach them to self-monitor and fix up disengagement.
When some of my children seemed like dutiful, but not really engaged readers,
or had a hard time keeping up their own reading life, I found that helping
them to establish their own goals in small groups helped.
In this chapter, Ill show examples of each of these types of small-group confer
ences and help you get to know some readers who took part in these small groups. As
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you read, reflect on the networks in your life that help you stay engaged with books and
discover new ones. And as you read, pay attention to the students who come to mind,
children who have mystified you a bit on the unevenness of their thirst for reading.
Reasons for disengagement come in many colors, and this chapter will help you dis
cover how to discern the true nature of the childs resistance and use small-group inter
actions to get him to that subway-stop missing state we want for all our students.
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
children stay engaged with books into all the grades in an effort to improve this statis
tic even more in years to come.
In school-aged children, summer reading loss is well documented (Shin and
Krashen 2007; Kim 2004; Mraz and Rasinski 2007; Cooper 2003). Children can drop as
much as two levels of reading in the two months they are on summer vacation because
they arent reading. Although its possible to argue that the availability of books is diffi
cult for some children, I would maintain that if they wanted to read books, they would
find a way from video games and television to the local library or bookstore. If children
saw reading as an important part of their lives, not just something that teachers make
them do in school, they would keep it up over summer vacation.
It is our job as teachers to find ways to mentor students into engaged reading lives
by creating positive experiences with reading and by helping them plan for their own
networks to support reading lives and to develop positive expectations about reading.
a Reading Identity
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home run bookthe first positive experience that will hook a child into becom
ing a readerwas tested by researchers with exciting results. It turns out that
among children who say they like to read, well over half of them could point to a
single book or series that got them hooked on reading (Von Spreken, Kim, and
Krashen 2000). I need to help some readers find their home run book and that
lost-in-a-book feeling.
gathering the children in my group around me to lead them through a reflection much
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
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like the one that I did to begin this chapter. I did this work this past September with a
group of disengaged fifth graders. Heres how I opened it:
Readers, its my goal this year to help you fall in love with books. Ive read your
reading inventories and watched you as you read, and today I want to begin help
ing you get to the place where you are so into a book that you cant put it down.
Where it feels like youre almost in a trance when you read and that if someone
calls your name, you almost need to shake your head to get back to this world. I
want to help you look forward to the time you have to read.
So, I pulled you together to talk to you about figuring out who you are as
readers, because I think doing so will help you with this goal. Every person in here
has different tastes in books just like you have different tastes in pizza toppings or
ice cream flavors or TV shows or sports. Our work together is going to be to have a
few meetings to talk about thiswhat kinds of books weve read, why we read
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
what we do, when we were bored out of our minds, and when we found that we
couldnt put the book down. To get you started thinking, Im going to talk about
myself for a bit and there might be some things I say that surprise you!
TEACH: MODEL YOUR OWN REFLECTIONS Then I pulled out my own bag of
booksboth books I love and books I hate. Magazines, newspapers, childrens books,
professional books. I assembled an assorted bag so I had different things to say so that
kids felt safe to share their honest thoughts about their books. This part of the lesson
took longer than in subsequent meetings with this group, because I wanted to provide a
lot of support through modeling. Over time, the teach part of the lesson got shorter.
Let me show you what Ive been up to for the last few months. Heres what Ive
readand what Ive tried to read. [I start by pulling out a copy of the New York
Times.] I have a really good friend, Sarah, who always impresses me with her
knowledge of whats going on in the news. I dont know how she finds the time to
read it all! I had dinner plans coming up with her and I thought that I might be
embarrassed to not know whats going on in case some big news story comes up in
our discussion. So I picked up a copy at the newsstand and read it on the train to
and from work. There were a lot of articles in here that I just read the title to, like
this one about fashion weekI dont care about thatand others where I read the
whole article, like this one about Obamas plans for health care reform. I could tell
when I wanted to read the article because I felt like there was something in the title
that made me go, Hmm. Thats interesting. Other times, I read the title of the
article and thought Who cares? or I doubt this will come up in conversation
with Sarah and I just skipped it.
Reading isnt like brussels sproutsI dont have to force myself to read stuff
that I couldnt care less about. And the same is true when youre making choices
about what to read in reading workshop. [I modeled how I made choices about what
I decided to read and what I decided to leave based on an initial interest. I thought
about my purpose for why I was readingto be able to keep up conversation with my
friend at dinner and be aware of current eventsand chose the articles that fit with
that purpose.]
[Next, I pulled out a childrens book.] This is Dogs Dont Tell Jokes by Sachar.
Id been hearing kids talk about this book and I havent read it yet, so I decided to
pick it up. Even though Im an adult, I dont always read books that are at my just
right reading level. I find that I often want to read easier books. I love being able
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to read the whole thing in a short amount of time, and I love that when the book is
easier, I sometimes can focus more on thinking a lot. So sometimes readerseven
adult readersread things that are on the easy side. [Next, I pulled out American
Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld and talked about my experience with that book. After that, I
pull out a tattered, wrinkled copy of Life of Pi by Yan Martel.]
This ones a little embarrassing. I was reading this book because I had heard
so many great things about it. I was reading it and the whole time thinking, Who
cares? I dont know, maybe I just wasnt getting the point of this book. Its an
award winner. Its not too hard for me. Many friends recommended it as an amaz
ing book. I just couldnt care less about the character. It fell behind the radiator in
my bedroom and I never even went to get it out! I just left it there. And then after
much time passed, I was cleaning and found it and stuck it on my shelf. I never
finished it, and I didnt care. [This story is important because children need to under
stand that sometimes even proficient readers abandon books. Readers are self-reflec
tive and know when they dont like something and make a conscious decision to stop.]
[I decided to end with a positive note. I pulled out four books by Augusten
Burroughs.] These books are ones that I couldnt put down. I started by just read
ing this one, Running with Scissors, and then once I read it and loved it so much, I
ran out and got everything else the man wrote. I read every single one of these
books straight through and barely talked to people when I was reading! I read in
bed, on the train, sometimes even at the dinner table. After I finished reading
them, I thought, What is it about these books that I love so much? because I
wanted to make sure I could find more that were just as great. I realized that I
really like that theyre a bit funny, in a serious and dark way. I started asking
friends if they knew of any other memoir writers like Burroughs who had a funny
slant to their writing. I got lucky and my aunt recommended another memoirist,
Ruth Reichl. Often, you find that if you like one book by an author, another book
by the same author will also grab you.
ENGAGE: INVITE CHILDREN TO TRY WHAT WAS JUST MODELED This five-
minute talk ended the teach part of my small group, and it was time to turn it over to
the children and ask them to try some of what I just did. Before I did that, though, I
made very clear to them what I hoped they noticed about my reflection.
In just a minute, Im going to ask you to do a little jotting by yourself in your
readers notebook. Think about the last few things youve readit can be maga
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
zines, poems, books, comics, newspapersand think carefully about why you
chose it, and what your reaction to it was. Were you into it, or not into it? And,
more importantly, why? You might remember some books that you started but
didnt finish. Or times when, like me, you just wanted to read something a little on
the easy side. Or maybe a time when you had a friend who was waiting to talk to
you about something you were reading, like for me with the newspaper.
At this point, the children took a few minutes to write, and I circulated between
them. I was on the lookout for children who wrote very vague responses. Vasilios wrote,
I read Bridge to Terabithia. I didnt like it. I coached him to think about why. I saw
that Mark only mentioned one genrenonfictionand prompted him to think
about what kinds of topics he liked most, and the other things he might have read and
enjoyed. Samantha and Vanessa were stuck, unable to remember anything they ever
read, so I brought them to the classroom library to see if looking through bins jogged
their memories. When Vasilios claimed he had never read anything he liked, I
prompted him to think about a time when someone read something to him and he
enjoyed listening.
Perhaps the biggest challenge here, especially if its the start of the year when
most are trying to make a good impression, is to get kids to be honest. Children often
want to put up a front and act like a good student and will not make admissions
about book abandonment or feeling disconnected to books.
Next, I had the children share.
We need to support each other in this quest to find books we like so that we can look
forward to our reading time each day in school. I want you to listen carefully to what
your partner is going to share with you and see if you can notice something about
the kind of reader he or she might be. You might listen to see if you notice a pattern
in the times they liked books and the times they didnt. Or, you might recognize a
title of a book that they say they love, and you might be able to think about a book
youve read that seems kind of similar to it in some way. Go ahead and turn and talk.
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to try to apply some of what they just reflected on about themselves as readers to their
book choice.
Name:
Title
Week of:
Author
Genre
Figure 3.3 Modified Book Log for Developing a Reading Identity Group
Level
Rate it
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Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
Meeting #1: Tell readers why theyve been gathered. Next, teach by
modeling your own reflections on books youve loved, hated, aban
doned, and read for a variety of purposes. This part of the lesson takes
about five minutes on the first meeting. Engage students in writing
reflections in their own notebooks and then talking with a partner.
Link by sending the group to the library to reconsider book choices for
the week.
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author. You all know him. He wrote one of our favorite books in hereSideways
Stories from Wayside School. Remember? Oh man. This must be a new book hes writ
ten. I cant wait to read this one. With every book that I pulled out of the box, I had
something to say. Sometimes, I talked about how the book seemed just like another
that the kids were familiar with, and if they liked that book then they would be sure to
like this one. Other times, I talked about how the cover made the book look so myste
rious, and I flipped it over and read the back cover blurb right away. There were also
times when I read the book or a review of the book and talked to the kids about the
kinds of characters or storyline they could expect if they wanted to read it. Still other
times, I read a snippet from the book to entice them. Listen to this . . . , I said, and
read it in my best read-aloud voice.
My modeling showed that I treasured each of these books like the gift it was and
at the same time enticed the children to open the book. It was so funny to me that
sometimes great books would just sit and get dusty in the classroom library and just
because these were being highlighted, or they came out of a box, they were the hot
item for weeks. I put them on the ledge of the chalkboard and called them the Hot
New Books and they were gone by lunchtime. The moral of the story? We cannot
underestimate how infectious our enthusiasm is. Students need to hear and see our
excitement.
In subsequent years, with the boxes no longer coming, I replicated this by talking
up books to small groups of children who I thought would respond well. There were
two differences on how I approached this. First, I used books that were neglected in the
library but that I loved and I knew the children would love. Second, I started to look
more closely at the student reading interest inventories and put groups of children
together who seemed to have similar tastes in books.
I found that talking up books worked even better in small groups. For
instance, I grouped the kids in my class who were avid nonfiction readers, and I
introduced a new or favorite or forgotten few nonfiction books that I thought they
might like. I pulled together my kids who liked to read books with strong girl
characters and introduced a few books that I knew they hadnt yet looked at that
might fit that category. I found that it wasnt about the books being new and shiny
or arriving in a box, it was about me modeling enthusiasm for the books and gen
erating a bit of interest in the books by recommending them and telling a bit
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
about what was in the book. Also, knowing something about the interests of the
readers I pulled together ensured that someone in the group would love the book I
was talking up.
After a few meetings like this where I did most of the recommending, I started
holding a book recommending group and had the children recommend books to
each other. After all, they were grouped together because of their similar tastes, and
getting a recommendation from a peer is like nothing else. Honestly, its how I choose
most of what I decide to read as an adult. Here again, I tried to hand over the reins to
the children, giving them more ownership and independence in the types of readerly
behaviors I initially modeled in the small group.
In some classrooms, the problem of children being able to find books they like
is a little more complex than just finding the right author or genre. For some readers
who read far below grade level, the books that they can read with fluency, accuracy,
and comprehension are not intended for their age group. It is very challenging to
get a fifth grader interested in books with bright, colorful pictures with pigs and
llamas as main characters, like Poppleton. Its a great series, but is intended for
six-year-olds. Many schools find it helpful to have a healthy collection of what pub
lishers refer to as hi-lo booksbooks that look like advanced chapter books, with
plotlines and characters that appeal to older readers, but that are written at a level of
low readability. Most publishers now have a section in their catalogue called hi-lo
and many booklists can be found online by searching for hi-lo. See Figure 3.4 for
some recommendations from the American Library Association. I have also found
really engaging titles from Red Brick Publishing, a division of Stone Arch books
(www.stonearchbooks.com).
Fix Up Disengagement
For some children, what looks like disengagement in reading is really distractibility.
For these children, its not only about the books they choose, but also about giving
them some strategies for staying focused, for setting short-term attainable goals for
themselves as they read, and for refocusing themselves when they find that they
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Marcus learns, through the guidance of an unconventional mentor and the game
A novel in cartoons about Greg Heffley and his introduction to middle school,
where undersized weaklings like himself share the hallways with kids who are
Knucklehead: Tall Tales & Mostly True Stories About Growing Up Scieszka by
Short chapters with family photos describe this popular authors childhood and
the adventures he had growing up with five brothers. Its easy to see how he
developed his wacky sense of humor with stories that are laugh-out-loud funny.
Orphans Amy and Dan have a choice to make when their wealthy grandmother
dies; they can inherit one million dollars or they can receive the first of thirty-nine
clues that will lead them to discover the secret that has made their family the
most powerful one in the world. Clues can be entered on the series website and
become distracted. These strategies can be taught in small groups, with children pro
viding models for each other and holding each other accountable.
We all get distracted from time to timeour stomach grumbles and we
think about whats for dinner, the checklist of all that we need to get accomplished
the following day makes it impossible to pay attention to that final chapter before
turning off the lights and going to sleep, the upsetting conversation we had with a
colleague just keeps playing over and over in our heads and we cant shake it. Some
of the kids we teach come from home lives that are beyond our imaginations,
which of course would distract them during tasks that are independent, quiet, and
in-the-head.
One thing that sets readers apart, though, is the ability to notice when your mind
has wandered and to pull it back and refocus on the task at hand. For some children,
explicit teaching is necessary to help them to identify when they lose focus and to help
them refocus on their books. I find it helpful to pull a small group of readers together
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
to teach them some strategies, and then to sit with them and support them as needed
in implementing those strategies. Having all of the students with me and at arms
reach helps me feel like Im being very efficient with my timethe alternative being
that I would either be moving around the room refocusing children, or reminding
them of what to do when they get distracted, or that I would catch their wandering
attention out of the corner of my eye when I was working with an individual or group
Place a bookmark or sticky note just a few pages ahead in your book.
Concentrate on getting to that goal. When you get there, stop and take
a break, saying something silently. Perhaps retell what you just read in
your head or say to yourself a reaction about what you just read
(Beers 1996). Look around the room, take a quick stretch, and then
resume reading.
Place sticky notes every few pages in your book. When you read to the
note, stop and jot a thought you had or a big event that happened
that you want to remember. Each time you sit to read, put the sticky
notes farther and farther apart.
When you catch your mind wandering, stop. Skim in your book to find
the last place where you remember reading. Back up a few pages
more than that. Reread.
Use a personal quiet timer to set a time goal for yourself. When the
timer ends, stop and take a break. Try to add more time to the timer
each day, constantly increasing time until you reach your goal.
Have a book in your baggie that can serve as a break read. This
might be a below-level chapter book, a magazine, a newspaper, or a
favorite poem. Set a goal in your longer book and when you reach
your goal, take a break with the other reading.
I begin by assembling a group of readers, some who need help staying focused
and refocusing, and others that the class thinks of as being good readers. My point in
doing this is to provide models within the group to help children to see that all readers
get distracted from time to time; whats important are the strategies we use to get back
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into our books. I begin by connecting with children by asking them to reflect on their
own distracters, then I teach by stating a strategy, next I engage them in trying the
strategy, and I end with a link to send them off to practice.
CONNECT WITH GUIDED REFLECTION I asked the students to bring their entire
baggie to the meeting area and we began with a talk. What distracts you when youre
trying to read? I asked them all. Students volunteered that when someone came in the
room or over the loudspeaker, they lost focus. Other students said that sometimes if
they didnt eat a good breakfast, they got distracted because they were hungry. Another
student offered that she didnt know, her mind just wandered sometimes. I then said,
The thing is, we all get distractedand probably not just during reading but also in
other times of day. I know I do. I find sometimes that I cant quite keep my mind on
what Im reading. But Ive learned ways to cope and I want to teach you some of those
strategies to stay focused despite distractions, and to refocus yourselves when you do
get distracted.
TEACH BY QUICKLY STATING AND EXPLAINING A STRATEGY I continued,
Today Im going to help you to recognize when youre losing focus, and were going to
practice a strategy together. Were going to practice that when you lose your focus, you
can stop, back up to the last part you remember by skimming over the page, and then
go one whole page earlier in your book to begin rereading.
I chose not to model here, because the strategy is pretty self-explanatory. I
wanted to move quickly to the engage portion of the lesson so that students could
spend the majority of their time practicing the strategy with support. For this strategy,
it was important for them to have a sense of what I was talking about.
ENGAGE BY HAVING THE STUDENTS PRACTICE THE STRATEGY At this point, I
had the students take out their books and start reading. My role was to watch them
carefully and tap them when they started to get distracted. I reminded them using
a few words: Back up, reread or Skim to find where youll start rereading.
Nonverbal prompts, or very short prompts, were often the most helpful because I
tried to help them develop that lost-in-a-book feeling. Listening to me talk too
much would take them out of that. After students had a little practice time with me,
I ended with a link.
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
you back to your seats now, and Id like you to try to tap yourself when you find that
youre getting distracted. Dont be upset with yourself, just be aware. Remember the
strategy when you lose your focus: stop, back up to the last part you remember by
skimming over the page, and then go one whole page earlier in your book to begin
rereading.
Engage them by having them read and use the strategy when
appropriate.
On subsequent meetings with the group, I did not give the students my undi
vided attention. After all, they needed to self-monitor, and the frequency with which
they needed to refocus themselves decreased somewhat. Often, in subsequent meet
ings, I had the group working on refocusing on one side of me, and I called another
group to an opposite corner of the meeting area or a nearby table to conduct a smallgroup conference. That way, I could still keep one eye on the focus group, and I
could tap and remind them when necessary, but most of my attention was on the new
group. Of course, it was important that the second group wasnt conducted too closely
to the first or too loudly, as that would have surely distracted the highly distractible!
Inside voices only.
Purposeful Reading
At the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project (TCRWP), we recommend a final
unit of study in June to help readers reflect on their year and set goals for their last
month of school. There is tremendous benefit to this whole-class study at the end of
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the year. When children have some help with this for a few weeks and then create a
new project before going home over the summer vacation, weve found that children
tend to keep up their reading over the summer when it might otherwise have been an
afterthought.
For some children, though, we cant wait until June to offer some instruction on
how to have an independent reading life. Some children could use more direction with
setting plans that are book basedthat is, helping them to create book sets, or lists,
that fit together for some reason to propel them through a period of time. For other
students, goal setting may be about having them reflect on their own process or skill
work and set goals aligned to their work as a reader. Each of these types of goal-setting
groups is described in the upcoming sections.
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When Could I Teach Small Groups to Help Students Set Reading Goals?
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
example, and I have an avid fantasy reader and two children who love humorous
fiction, I can help them figure out how to keep up their fantasy and fiction reading
simultaneous to the reading they are doing that is aligned to the unit. This way,
readers in the class practice the work from the whole-class study while maintain
ing their own reading agenda.
When students seem, based on the research Ive done during my engagement
inventory, that they are not engaged during the reading workshop time, I consider
them perfect candidates for this type of small group. Also, when there are students
who dont typically read over long vacations (such as the winter break or spring
break), I might have some small groups with them beforehand to get them ready to
read during that time.
If students have already completed reading interest inventories, like those shown
in Chapter 2 and Figure 3.1, or Im confident that they know their tastes in books, I
can help them develop a reading list for themselves at the start of their independent
project. If not, I might back up and have them complete an inventory or mentor them
in doing a little reflection on their own reading identity first.
CONNECT AND COMPLIMENT: STATE THE PURPOSE FOR THE GROUP AND
REINFORCE STRENGTHS When I pulled my fourth-grade group together, I set up
the group by saying to them that readers make plans and goals for themselves.
Readers, Ive been noticing that you do a great job at reading the books for our unit
of study. I also want to help you to have a life outside of that. A reading life, that is.
You know, I read things for many purposes. I read a lot of professional books to get
new ideas on how to be a better teacher. I enjoy reading those books, but I also want to
keep up an independent life outside of that. Today Im going to help you get started
with you own reading goals.
TEACH BY GIVING AN EXAMPLE AND EXPLANATION When I pick independent
books, I think, What is it that I like to read more than anything? Then I try to make a
little set for myself of books that go together by thinking, Can I find a few books that
go together that would be interesting to read, one right after the other? and finally, I go
and make a little stack or list for myself. I then gave an example for the group of how I
pick a focus (like my humorous memoirs) and create a list. I modeled how I use the
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to work on their own plans for themselves as readers. They started at the classroom
library, looking through bins and solidifying what they wanted to read about. I
reminded them that they could pick any genre they wanted. For kids who would say
something vague like I want to read fiction, I nudged them to think about how
there are all kinds of fictionmystery and historical fiction and realistic fiction. I also
said that within fiction, you could also pick a kind of character, like children who go
on adventures without their parents. Sometimes we went back to their book logs to
see the kinds of books they liked most, and I named for them the categories they
might fit into.
After a little time at the classroom library, children spent a bit of time talking to
each other. They first shared their category and then saw if their friends had any sug
gestions of other books theyd want to read. A few of the children couldnt find many
books in our classroom library that fit within the topic they wanted to read, so they
started the list with me and then planned to finish it at home with a parent who would
take them to the public library. One student asked to visit the school library for some
help from the librarian. There, she found a few titles that we didnt have in our class
room library.
LINK BY SENDING THEM OFF TO PRACTICE INDEPENDENTLY Finally, I ended
with a link. So, readers, Im going to ask you to keep track of how this reading project
is going by logging your reading. Youll write the title, author, level, genre, and whether
you liked the book or not by rating it on a scale of one to ten. Ive made a book log for
you to help you do this. Im going to check in with you next week to see how its going,
and to help you make revisions to your plan if need be. I gave the readers the reading
log shown in Figure 3.3.
After the group ended, the children made booklists based on their interests,
including books with strong girl characters, shark books, funny books, and books with
magic. See Figure 3.5 for examples of some of the titles they chose.
The list they created for themselves was about a weeks or week and a half s
worth of reading. When I saw them for the next meeting about a week later, I did
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
Sports Stories
Three books by Matt Christopher
The Story of Jackie Robinson: The Bravest Man in Baseball by Margaret Davidson
Baseballs Best: Five True Stories by Andrew Gutelle
Shark Books
Shark Lady: True Adventures of Eugenie Clark by Ann McGovern
The Best Book of Sharks by Claire Llewellyn
Amazing Sharks! by Sarah L. Thomson
Time for Kids: Sharks! by Editors of Time for Kids
Funny Books
Franny K. Stein series by Jim Benton (two books)
Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar
The Adventures of Captain Underpants by Dav Pilky
Books with Magic
Zack Files: My Great Grandpas in the Litterbox by Dan Greenburg
Deltora Quest: Enter the World of Deltora by Emily Rodda
Secrets of Droon by Tony Abbot
Figure 3.5 Booklists from Setting Reading Goals Small Group
no modeling, just reminded them of the process we went through to make reading
goals for ourselves.
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to teach this type of small group when children view my minilesson as their assign
ment for the day and dont make it a practice to reflect on their own plans or goals for
themselves; they simply wait for me to tell them what to do each day. Children who set
timers when they are assigned to read for twenty minutes at home and slam the book
shut midchapter as soon as the buzzer rings might also be candidates for this group. It
is clear to me that these children are dutiful and read when they are told, but they
dont have their own reading drive.
When setting reading goals that are process or skill based, its helpful to have
children begin by looking back at reading logs they keep and the writing about reading
in their reading notebooks or on sticky notes. They might look for patterns in the
kinds of writing they do (e.g., I notice that Im the kind of reader who always pre
dicts or I notice that I retell whats happening in the story a lot, but not much else
or I notice that when I read at home, I read a lot less than when I read at school).
They can use these observations about their own skill work or their own reading
habits to set goals for themselves. They might decide that because they usually predict,
theyre going to try a different kind of thinking about the book to see if they get a new
perspective. Or, they might decide that because they dont get a lot of reading done in
school, they are going to set some page number goals to see if they can make them
selves read at the same rate as they do at home.
These small groups can follow the same structure as the ones described in the
previous section. First, I tell children why theyve been gathered and state the agenda
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
for the group. Next, I teach by modeling how to reflect on what theyve written on
sticky notes, in their reading notebook entries, and on their reading logs. I do this
teaching quickly to allow most of the time to be used to support their practice.
Remember, the students in my group were selected because they had trouble selfreflecting and naming their work, so they needed some support from me in the first
meeting. In the engage portion of the lesson, I help them look at their book logs, sticky
notes, and reading notebooks. I coach them to code their sticky notes with the skill
work theyve tried to help them notice patterns. I next coach them to look at their
book logs to see if they can tell their page-per-minute rate, or to see if there are certain
books that they are able to read with more vigor, sustaining their reading for longer
periods of time. By the end of the engage portion, I have the students write a brief
reflection, like the ones shown in Figures 3.6 and 3.7, to set some plans for themselves.
Figure 3.6 Fourth Grader Kianas Reading Reflection After an Independent Reading Project
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Figure 3.7 Fourth Grader Alecs Reflection After an Independent Reading Project, and His Plan for
the Future
I end the group with a link, remind them of the process we went through and send
them off to start their work.
Kiana and Alec, two members of a fourth-grade group who were working on
setting independent reading goals, chose different focuses. Kiana (Figure 3.6) wanted
to work on reading more and choosing books that would motivate her to do so. Alec
(Figure 3.7) worked on a goal of thinking about lessons and making connections
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
between texts. Alec said he was making a new plan for himself to read fluently but
really he meant that he wanted to read more pages.
These groups follow a similar structure to the one described earlier, where I ask
the children to reflect, watch me model, make a plan while I support them, and then
send them off with a link to continue working independently with a promise to follow
up again with them soon.
What structures do you already have in place to help children be selfreflective? When do children look at, evaluate, and reflect on their own
reading logs, notebooks, and sticky notes to think about their skill work
and process?
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small-group sessions, from looking at book logs, and often from reading notebook
entries in which children reflected on their own reading processes and set goals for
themselves. The seminars might be on anything from book choice to understanding a
new genre to working on a particular reading skill to learning how to better participate
in book talks.
The group itself might follow any of the structures and utilize any of the
methods described in this or the other chapters of this book. This suggestion dif
fers from whats proposed elsewhere in the book in that students self-select to be
part of the group, instead of teachers choosing who belongs in the group. Groups
might meet only once, or there may be a sequence of lessons over the course of a
week or two.
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I could use some extra help with what the class is learning in the unit
of study.
There are a lot of words in my book that I dont know the meaning of.
Chapter 3: Without Engagement, Weve Got Nothing: Helping Children Want to Read
Students choose to be part of the group; they are not assigned the
group by the teacher. (Students might be gently nudged toward
choosing one, though, by a teacher or a reading partner.)
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engagement also help children move toward independencefrom support from you,
then peers, and finally by themselves. In Chapter 5, youll read about other group
structures that help with engagement: book clubs and partnerships. Having support
and accountability from peers also helps readers stay invested in their reading lives and
set and keep plans for themselves.
Chapter
In high school, despite my horrendous singing voice, I was always involved in our
spring musical. My drama teacher, Mr. Cantor, deftly cast me as part of a chorus or
background dancers or, in the case of my junior-year musical Barnum, a clown.
Mr. Cantor must have been well connectedor at the very least resourceful
because he somehow managed to convince actual clowns from the Ringling Bros. and
Barnum & Bailey Circus to come to tiny Montgomery High School to teach us how to
be part of a circus. Every day for a week we spent our after-school practices learning
our trick of choice. Juggling, the devil sticks, plate spinning.
I chose to be a plate-spinning clown.
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I learned, in a few days, how to get a plate going on the end of stick. But thats
not the hard part. The hard part is that when you get one plate spinning, you place the
end of that stick into a stand. Then, you get another plate spinning. And then that one
goes in the stand. The wow factor in plate spinning is when you have many plates
going at once. Plate spinning is hard because by the time you get the third plate spin
ning, the first one starts to get a little wobbly and you need to get back to it to give it
another twirl. Then you get the fourth one going and the second one starts to wobble.
And so on.
My plate-spinning background comes in handy when I work with a group of
children in a strategy lesson. The challenge in a strategy lesson is to keep all kids in
that one group spinningactively working, actively engaged, actively practicing.
Because the students in this kind of lesson are pulled together because they need
some support, its likely that once you get a few up and going, one will start to wob
ble. As a teacher in a strategy lesson, I find myself bopping and weaving in between
them, coach, coach, coachingmoving quickly to offer support when each child
might start to wobble.
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
explanation.
This structure helps us plan, helps children know their job across all parts of the
lesson, and helps keep the work in the group precise and efficient.
While the rest of the class is reading independently, I begin the group by telling
the students why theyve been gathered. I state a strategy that they will all work on
together. Next, I give a brief demonstration, an opportunity for the children to all
practice the strategy in a short shared text, and/or a give a brief explanation or
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example of the strategy. By this point, the students have been with me for about a
minute or two.
The next part is the most important, and the longest, portion of the strategy
lesson as all students practice right away in their own independent book. As the stu
dents practice, I make my way to each of them individually, coaching and supporting
their practice. In general, I attempt to see each student a couple of times during this
portion of the lesson to increase the potential for success. I keep in mind the amount
of support my coaching gives to each readerheavy, medium, or leanto ensure that
students are able to work independently on the strategy as soon as possible. The engage
portion, when I coach, lasts about three to six minutes, depending on how many chil
dren are in the group.
I conclude the lesson by restating the purpose and encouraging students to con
tinue to practice on their own. In total, the group will last about ten to twelve minutes.
CONNECT: LET STUDENTS KNOW WHY THEYVE BEEN GATHERED AND OFFER
A COMPLIMENT The strategy lesson begins with a very brief connection. In the
connection, its helpful to provide an orientation to the students to let them know
what theyve been doing well and why theyve been gathered.
When possible, I give the children a brief, specific compliment to reinforce
something theyve done well. This is what Peter Johnston refers to as noticing and
naming in his book Choice Words (2004). Its important that the compliment isnt
general, like Great job reading! but instead gives a specific insight into what theyre
doing well, like I noticed that when youre reading, youre getting your own ideas
about the book, not just retelling what happened.
Compliments are especially helpful when they in some way relate to what will be
taught: the compliment should complement the teaching point. For example, if Ive
gathered a group of fourth graders during a nonfiction study because I noticed they
need some practice determining the main idea, I might first compliment them on how
they can state the main topic of a section. That is, if the students are learning facts
about what whales eat, the group of children who are able to determine the topic
might say food or food for whales. This acknowledges their ability to determine
importance. I can then turn my attention to the teaching point: to identify the main
idea. Calling attention to their strength increases their confidence to learn something
new. The compliment is a clear segue into my teaching (see Figure 4.1).
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
If I Notice a
Student . . .
Then I Could
Compliment . . .
And I
Could Teach . . .
. . . is using the
beginning letter along
with the meaning on
the page to figure out
what a word means, but
often doesnt read the
correct word.
. . . approaches a new
word by trying to sound
it out letter by letter.
Sometimes, readers
need to play around
with sounds in their
mouth before theyre
able to figure out what
the word might be.
When you get to a new
word and reading it one
way doesnt sound like
a word you know, try
other sounds that those
same letters can make
until you come to a
word that youve heard
before.
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I next let the children know why I thought they would be perfect for this group.
Perhaps I tell them that I looked at all of their sticky notes the night before, or I lis
tened in on the conversations they had with their reading partner, or I noticed their
practice during the active engagement portion of the minilesson. By giving the chil
dren a sense of where and how Im learning about them as readers, Im also holding
them accountable for what Im teaching. Being explicit in this way sends a clear mes
sage that their ongoing work matters to me.
TEACH THROUGH DEMONSTRATION, SHARED PRACTICE, EXAMPLE, OR
EXPLANATION After stating the purpose for the lesson, I present a clear strategy. A
strategy should be a procedure to help the children know how to accomplish a specific
goal (see Chapter 1). This strategy should set up precise steps for children to take. Of
course, because each child in the group is reading a different book, its important that
the strategy transfers to any of their books.
Before getting back to the small group, lets take a moment to understand a criti
cal aspect to the strategy lesson: the strategy.
The strategy should match the reader, and, to some extent, should also match the
book. For example, if I teach a group of children how to come up with the main idea
of a nonfiction text, which requires skills of synthesis and determining importance, I
could use the strategy Read each sentence on the page. Think, What are most of these
sentences talking about? Finally, state the main idea that is not only about what but
also about so what. If, however, some students in my group have the kind of book
with only one line of text per page, those children will need a different strategy. If I
teach about main idea and the children have headings on each page, Im better off
teaching how to use the heading to get the main idea.
For example, I had a student who was reading Bugs! Bugs! Bugs! by Jennifer
Dussling (1998). The first two pages read, Yikes! Bugs look scary up close. But you
dont need to worry. Most bugs are a danger only to other insects. They are the bugs
that really bug other bugs (45). When I came to that student and said, State the
main idea as a sentence, and the student replied, Bugs, I knew that he was only giv
ing a topic and not the main idea of the pages. Because the book was organized in such
a way that there were the sentences spread across two pages with some color photo
graphs, it didnt make sense to teach about headings, but instead I taught about syn
thesizing the sentences to determine the main idea.
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
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So, when I pull a group of children together for a lesson, I usually ask them to
bring their entire baggie of books with them, which serves two purposes. First, it
allows me to make sure that the children will have a book that matches the strategy
Ive chosen. This isnt always about the exact title, but sometimes about where the
reader is in the course of the bookthe beginning, middle, or end (see Figure 4.2
for examples). Second, it allows the children to move to a different book to practice
the same strategy while theyre still in the group if thats appropriate for what
Im teaching.
Strategy
Figure 4.2 Examples of When Books Will and Wont Work for Strategy Lessons
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Book Bags
Childrens book baggiesliterally a gallon-size zip-top baggie or home
made cloth bag of the same sizehold the books theyve chosen from
their once-a-week visit to the classroom library. The number of books
children have depends on their reading level: lower-level readers need
more books to sustain a weeks worth of home and school reading
because their books are shorter and can be read more quickly; chil
dren who are reading higher levels need fewer books to sustain them
for the week. Refer to the reading rates chart in Figure 2.5 to get a
sense for about how many books each reader in your class will need
based on the level of book he is reading.
When we first started using strategy lessons at the Teachers College Reading and
Writing Project, we often led them like minilessons with long demonstrations. But
Kathleen Tolan, deputy director of the Project, pushed us all to think more carefully
about the method we choose. She asserts that because this is a small group, we should
get the children practicing as quickly as possible and keep the teacher talk time as short
as possible.
What Kathleen says makes a good deal of sense if we think about the with phase
on the bridge to independence. Too much time spent in the to phase means its farther
from the goal. For this reason, after I state the strategy in clear steps, I decide if I will
get the children started immediately, give an example or explanation, give them a
chance to practice on a shared text with me, or give a demonstration. The answer
depends on how much support I want to give, always keeping in mind that I try to
keep this part of the lesson as short as possible, while still providing adequate scaffold
ing. In order for children to get started immediately, chances are Ive worked with
them before on this same strategy. Perhaps we worked on this strategy in a conference
or in another small group. Or perhaps they just had a minilesson but I noticed that
they struggled during the engage portion and I want to help with transference in their
own book.
On the opposite end of the support spectrum is a demonstration. I choose
demonstration for my group when students need the most support. This might be
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
because its a strategy that Ive never taught before or because I know its a strategy
that Ive demonstrated before but they need a demonstration in a different text that
is more similar to their own. Demonstrations are opportunities for students to
watch me practice the steps of the strategy as I make them visible in both my
actions and my thinking process. See Figure 4.3 for advice on when to use which
method.
If I get children started right away, providing lean support, it might sound some
thing like this: So readers, I just showed you how to think about the what and the so
what in the minilesson. Get started trying this in a book you have chosen from the
library, and Ill be around to help you out. The children would then pull a book out of
their baggie and get started. I make sure all kids are engaged in reading before I begin
moving from child to child to offer support. If this group is meeting to practice a strat
egy for the second or third time, I might instead say, All week weve been working on
main idea. You practiced with me on Monday and Wednesday. Now that its Friday, I
bet youll be able to figure out the what and the so what without much help at all! Get
started and Ill be right over to listen to your thinking.
If I choose to give an example or explanation, providing medium support, I
might say, Remember when I read this book called Whales, and I got to the first sec
tion, I read the sentences. I said I knew I couldnt just say that the page is mostly about
whales because the whole book is about whales! I need to figure out what these two
pages alone are about. So I thought the what is whales and the so what is that whales
need to hunt to get their food. In this example, I simply reference the past teaching
where I first demonstrated the strategy. The key here is to be brief to allow most of my
time for coaching.
If I want to give my students shared practice, also offering medium support, I
might make an enlarged copy of a section from my whale book. Of course, this shared
text must be at or below the level of all of the readers in the group. I might say, Read
this to yourself and be thinking about the what and the so what of this page. The chil
dren would take a moment to read. Then Id say, Turn to your partner and talk about
what this page is about and so what about that topic? As the kids turn and talk, I listen
in. We could have a thirty-second discussion of the main idea of the page to help the
children understand not only possible correct answers but also the thinking behind
the answers.
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Degree of Support
State strategy only
Lean
Provide explanation/
example of the strategy
Medium
Medium/heavy
Heavy
Figure 4.3 Deciding How Much Support to Give a Reader Prior to Practice with Coaching
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
a strategy lesson constitutes the majority of the time. I spend, on average, two minutes
per student. I do not linger for two minutes with each student, though. Instead, I move
among them with the urgency of a plate spinner, giving them just the right support as
they practice the strategy in their own book.
Because I want to make sure that all children understand the expectations of this
part, I say something to them like, Now youre all going to get started with trying this
in your own book. As you work, you can read, think about your reading, or write
about your reading. Keep working on your own even when Im talking to someone
else. When I start strategy lessons in my classroom in September, my children are
usually all trained by the end of the month and I no longer will need to say this to set
them up before independent practice. In order for the coaching to go smoothly, I cant
have children deciding that theyre done practicing and just closing their books, or
interrupting me when Im coaching another student.
One of the hardest things to get good at is the pace at which we hand over the
reins to students to take over responsibility for the task at handwhatever that task
might be. Whether we call it gradually releasing responsibility, moving students from
the we do it phase to the you do it phase, the point is to support children so they dont
struggle.
The challenge is in the gradual part. The release is generally smooth when we
teach well, support the student as she learns, offer feedback and coaching as needed,
and then watch the students skilled performance.
During these strategy lessons, the secret for sensing the right pace for each child
is to coach mindfully, to get better and better at being aware of what signals the child is
sending. What is the child saying? How is he sounding? Whats his expression and
body language like? What is he asking me? In turn, coaching mindfully means I remain
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very aware of how much support I give the reader with the words and gestures I use to
get him to practice. For more information on how to be aware of this release of
responsibility, see the section later in this chapter called Explicit Strategies, Effective
Demonstrations, Just-Right Prompts.
I sometimes end this portion of the group by sharing what one or two students
practiced or realized. This helps children because it provides more models for the
strategy being practiced. When I do this, I make sure that I keep it very brief because
Im eager to send the children back to their seats with the final part of the lesson, the
link, and move on to other students. I also tend to be the one sharing, not the student,
because I want to make sure that I highlight clearly what hes done.
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Have all children work on their own, not listening in to another stu
dent being coached.
spent together and what I expect students to continue back at their own seats. I make
it clear in this part of the lesson that I expect them to continue the work weve started
with the book they are currently reading, and I remind them to practice as they choose
the next book.
In the link, I might ask older children to write down something on a sticky note
or in their reading notebook so that when I see them again for the next group or in a
one-on-one conference, Ill have a sense of how its going for them. Sometimes, these
tangible artifacts of their thinking make them more accountable in using what Ive
taught. It also reminds them to practice their new learning between this and the next
visit. For younger children, or children who benefit from visual reminders of what Ive
taught, I give them a three-by-five-inch index card with the strategy written on it or a
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
sticky on which theyve written the strategy in their own words. Finally, the link ends
when I repeat the strategy in clear steps.
A link would go something like this: As you go back to your own seat, I expect
that youll keep up this great work. You should keep practicing trying to determine the
main idea of each part of your nonfiction book by reading all of the sentences on a
page, asking yourself, What is the what and what is the so what of this page? and by
stating the main idea as a sentence. Remember that this is a strategy that can help you
any time youre attempting to determine the main idea of a part of a nonfiction book.
When you are able to figure out the main idea, please jot it quickly on a sticky note and
stick it on your page. That way, when I see you again Ill know how youve been doing
with this strategy. See you all soon.
In some cases, I find that certain children demonstrate theyre able to work inde
pendently before others. In these instances, I might do a staggered link where I send
children back as they become ready. When I stagger the link, I use the same language I
would use with the group to each child individually.
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might do, but you should know, this back-and-forth motion with the stick will
end with a broken plate!
Within minutes, each clown-in-training had his or her own stick and plastic
practice plate. We tried spinning, and the plates dropped to the ground; some of us
who were a little luckier got them going on the first or second try. As we practiced, the
clown moved to each of us, individually coaching us with quick prompts. She said,
Faster with the stick or Make sure its a circle, not back and forth and Thats it!
Sometimes, the clown didnt talk, but instead put her hand over our hand and like a
joystick on a video game made our hand move in the correct way to achieve platespinning success. The clown didnt stop us and do a whole extra demonstration when
our plates fell; she simply said, OK, pick it up. Try again! and offered little running
bits of advice as we tried again. As soon as most of what I heard from the clown was
Thats it! and Keep it going! I knew I could be on my own and be successful.
Three keys to leading an effective small-group strategy lesson are to use an
explicit strategy, do an effective demonstration (if needed), and provide just-right
support before and during coaching.
Just like the clown explained how to get the plate to spin step-by-step, so too do I
explain a strategy as a process. When the strategy was new, the clown showed me first
with some talk to demonstrate before letting me try it. In her demonstration, she
included not only a good example of what to do, but also showed common mistakes
and how to fix them myself. And just like the clown gave me little tips as I was trying,
so too do I need to give prompts to readers as they try new strategies.
Explicit Strategies
For small-group strategy lessons to function wellwith the teacher able to provide
individualized support to each learnerit is critical that the learners have a clear,
explicit strategy to support their practice. This explicit strategy is stated up-front for
the group at the beginning of the lesson.
As explained in Chapter 1, a strategy is like a how-to. Its a step-by-step deliber
ate and carefully selected procedure to achieve a specific end. Its not enough in plate
spinning, or in reading, to simply state the end goalGet your plate to spin!and
expect the learner to be able to achieve it. Instead, it is crucial that learners see the
process and hear the thinking involved in achieving a goal (Afflerbach, Pearson, and
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
Paris 2008; Serravallo and Goldberg 2007). At first, when learning is new, strategies are
explicitly taught, but eventually, a reader internalizes the process and needs only to be
metacognitive at points of difficulty. The strategy goes underground and the skill is
whats evident.
Our carefully planned and thoughtful teaching is so important. When students
understand an explicit strategy, experience solid demonstrations, and receive ample
supported and coached practice with responsive feedback, they are more likely to have
the agency to go within themselves for help when their reading breaks down.
Think about yourself reading something challenging like a legal brief. Most
likely, you chug along reading fluently, and all of a sudden you realize that youve lost
track of whats been written. At that point, a point of difficulty, you need to select a
strategy for reengaging with the text. As you consider possible actions, you might go
back to the last place you remember really understanding and reread. Then you con
tinue on to the next section and encounter an unfamiliar word. You slow your reading,
perhaps looking for part of the word you may know. You may break up the word part
by part, and then try rereading word as a whole. If those strategies or deliberate actions
are unsuccessful, you read around the word, looking for context clues that may offer
help with the word.
All of these are strategies youve learned well and practiced consciously at one
time. Now you resurrect them to use at points of difficulty. However, when everythings
going fine, the strategies stay underground.
A strategy helps readers break down an enormous concept, like inferring, into
steps a reader, new to this thinking, can follow. Inferring depends upon the genre, the
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text level, the readers familiarity with the topic, and the readers own experiences.
Therefore, it is important for readers, and us as their teachers, to have a repertoire of
possible strategies for each reading skill.
In Chapter 2, I introduced the concept that when a reader is working on a skill,
there is a way in which to do that skill with increased sophistication or depth. Thinking
of skills along a continuum is one way to come up with appropriate strategies for a
reader. For example, if I know that a childs visualization sounds mostly like a retelling, I
can place his ability to visualize on the lowest level of the continuum. I can look to the
next level to see what would be a next step for the reader. I see that it says that a child
next includes some details that are not explicitly stated. To come up with a strategy, I
would have to ask myself, How would I do that? I might go to a book and see when
Im able to describe beyond whats explicitly there. I might notice that I can:
Read what the text says. Picture a place that I know that is similar to the one
described. Use what I know from my own experience to add in extra details.
Or
Read what the text says. Imagine myself to be in the place and tap into my
senses. Ask myself, What do I hear? Smell? Feel? See? Try to add more detail.
Notice that in each of these examples, to achieve success with the skill, I lead the
reader to create increasingly more detailed images to enhance reading of the text and
deepen comprehension. Oftentimes, we introduce strategies by simply defining them.
As a good test of whether of not what youve offered is a strategy, ask yourself, Did I
explain not only what I want the reader to do, but have I shared how the reader could
use that strategy? See Figure 4.4 for examples.
Keep in mind that all readers experience confusion from time to time. There are
so many factors that influence a readers comprehension: the ability to decode the
words within the text, the capacity to maintain fluent reading, the genre and text struc
ture and the readers familiarity with them, the difficulty level of text, the readers prior
experience with the topic, the readers level of engagement, and on and on. Its impor
tant not to overgeneralize from this section that a reader needs only learn the strate
gies and will automatically be a star reader who can read anything.
There are a number of different strategies a reader needs in order to become
proficient. Some address the ways in which a reader manages text, some speak to the
cognition or thinking a reader does, and some concern the influences of context and
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
Skill
Strategy
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Not a Strategy
Visualizing
Inferring
Determining importance
Questioning
Synthesizing
Retelling
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planning. There is no one checklist to use when teaching a child to become a strong
reader. However, careful assessment and responsive teaching help us teach each reader
the necessary strategies to overcome the inherent challenges the reader will meet. It is
in the successful integration and orchestration of many strategies that our students
become strong readers.
Ensure that what you teach in a strategy lesson small group is, in fact, a strategy.
Doing so will help children become independent more quickly.
Effective Demonstrations
As mentioned earlier, some small-group strategy lessons provide new learning for the
group of students. It may be an alternate strategy to whats been taught to the whole
class, a strategy that you choose to preteach before the rest of the class learns it, or a
strategy to provide enrichment to a group. When learning is new, it is often helpful for
students to have an effective demonstration. Doing an effective demonstration allows
children to begin approximating what they saw right away, freeing you up to coach.
In an effective demonstration, I make the strategy visible so that it doesnt look
like the reader achieved the goal/skill through an act of divine intervention. When I
learned to spin plates, the clown did not simply say, See this? I can make this plate stay
up all day! Try to spin plates like me. Instead, she carefully showed me the steps it took
to get the plate up and spinning, and keeping it spinning, thinking aloud about her
process as she went. One time, she even made a mistake on purposewiggling the
stick back and forth in a way that would not yield a plate in the airto show us a
common error we might make. It didnt end there, however; she demonstrated how to
fix the problem.
This demonstration is a good example of showing the declarative, procedural,
and conditional knowledge needed for learning. The clown declared that she was
plate spinning. She then demonstrated the procedural or strategic actions she was
taking. Finally, she offered the conditional knowledge by explaining why she did what
she did. The resulting skilled performance was carefully explained and demonstrated.
In an effective and authentic demonstration, I will likely:
alert the reader to what will be demonstrated by explicitly stating the strategy
think aloud during each step of the strategy to illuminate the thinking
involved
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
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This is hard. A lot of the sentences talk about life on Earth and life on
teach in a strategy
Jupiter. But the paragraph starts out talking about the air. So I think
that the what of this page is either Jupiters air or life on Jupiter. Let
me keep reading to see what the next paragraph talks about. Instead of
in fact, a strategy.
air, a thick layer of clouds covers Jupiter. The clouds wrap the entire
planet like a blanket. Astronomers guess these clouds may be 11,000 miles deep [21].
OK, well that paragraph was certainly not about life on Jupiter so Im not
thinking that is the what of the page. But I also learned that there isnt air around
Jupiter, there are only clouds. So now Im thinking the what might be clouds on Jupiter
or maybe Jupiters atmosphere. Let me read one more paragraph to be sure. Jupiters
clouds are not fluffy and white like the clouds on Earth. They are formed into brightly
colored bandsorange, red, white, and tan. The bands are like belts that completely circle
the planet [21]. OK, now I can confirm that the what of the page is Jupiters clouds.
That is what most of the sentences are about. But so what about the clouds? Whats the
authors point about them? I could say that the authors saying that the clouds on
Jupiter are unlike the clouds on Earth. Or Jupiters clouds are there in place of air. So,
the page is about Jupiters clouds. So what about Jupiters clouds? Clouds take the place
of air on Jupiter. Did you see how I read chunk by chunk, thinking first what the page
was about? Thinking what are most of the sentences teaching? And then I thought
about the so what of that topic, trying to understand what the authors point was. Also,
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notice that there is not one perfect answer, but instead a few possibilities based on
what patterns we notice on the page.
In this demonstration, I set the children up to listen and watch, I showed them
some struggle, I thought aloud as I went, and I capped it off with one more breakdown
of the strategy. By doing a demonstration like this for a small group of readers learning
a new strategy, I have given them a clear vision for what to practice. They can now
begin to attempt this same strategy in their own books. This allows me as the teacher
of the small group to move between them, providing differentiated support in the next
phase of the lesson.
What did you notice about the demonstration example that was just
given that you already do when demonstrating? What new things will
you try?
Just-Right Prompts
Perhaps the most important aspect of the small-group strategy lesson is the portion
when you engage the students to try the strategy, providing support in the form of
coaching. This coaching is differentiated and individualized based on each students
approximated practice. When you notice the students attempt, you make an in-the
moment decision about how much support to give.
Finding just-right prompts means that you give as little support as possible for
students to be successful and not struggle. Too much support leads to an overreliance
on you. Too much reliance on the teacher means the student is farther away from
being independent.
Because the strategy is explained as a series of possible steps, the prompts that
are given can be reminders of each of these steps. Generally speaking, the more we say
in a prompt, the more supportive it is. The less that is said, the leaner the prompt is.
The prompts are the scaffolds that we put in place temporarily to help a reader transi
tion toward independence (Wood, Bruner, and Ross 1976; Pearson and Gallagher
1983). How lean my prompts are as a teacher depends on how close the student is to
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Strategy
Gradual Release
Picture the place.
Figure 4.5 Sample Menu of Strategies with Supportive and Lean Coaching Prompts: Visualizing in Fiction
independently. Even though they read at different levels and they all read different
books that they had chosen for independent reading, they all needed practice with
reading an unfamiliar word part by part, and then putting the word together as a
whole.
When I pulled the group together and supported them through coaching, I
noticed that they each needed a different level of support from me. By watching closely
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
and thinking about how close their approximations were to the goal, I decided on how
best to support each student. Those children whose approximations were close (they
could syllabicate shorter words, or words with familiar beginnings, but struggled with
longer words) needed lean support. Those who were farther from the goal came to a
long word and froze, often just repeating the first sound, and were uncertain about
how to go on. They required heavy scaffolding.
On Monday, it happened that three of the children needed heavy support
with this strategy, and one child needed lean support. The three children who
needed heavy support needed my help to see the syllable breaks by putting an
index card over part of the word, then the next part, so they could read part by
part, adding one syllable to the next as in the word anticipation: an- anti- antici
anticipa- anticipation. The one child who needed less support often responded if
I were to offer quick, lean prompts like, Add the next chunk and You know that
last chunk and Put it together. Often, I coached with specific compliments,
reinforcing what he was doing, saying things like, Thats it! Nice job changing
your voice.
I decided to see them all again on Wednesday after they had time for inde
pendent practice on Monday and Tuesday. On Wednesday, I used lean prompts for
the three children who initially needed heavier prompting, and also for the fourth
student. However, this time I encouraged the fourth student to practice in a new
book. This was an important move to make sure that the child was able to have the
same success not only with the one book with the few characters he was familiar
with, but in other books with other characters as well. For the three children that I
first coached by offering greater support, using almost complete sentence-length
prompts, I could now give leaner support. I could say things like, Chunk it
and Good job reading the word part by part, or That sounded like a word
you know!
At this point, I felt confident that the fourth student was able to continue on
without me. The following Monday I saw only three of the students, and
scaffolded them as they read in a new book. Over time, I gave the children multi
ple experiences and then I decreased support. The group was flexibleone stu
dent didnt come to the third meetingand it addressed individual needs though
they were in a group. See Figure 4.6 for a tabular representation of the three meet
ings at a glance.
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Monday 11/4
Wednesday 11/6
Monday 11/11
Lin
Heavy support
Medium support
Lean supportnew
book
Shanique
Heavy support
Medium support
Lean supportnew
book
Julia
Heavy support
Medium support
Lean supportnew
book
Marcus
Lean support
Lean supportnew
book
Not in group
Chapter 4: Guided Practice Toward Independence: Strategy Lessons for Comprehension, Print Work, and Fluency
Demonstration
Heavy
Shared practice
Medium
Example/explanation
Lean
State strategy
Over Time
How many times will
you see the readers in
the group?
How will you use
leaner supports over
time?
How will you support
transference to new
books?
Figure 4.7
through the engage portion of the lesson. As I move from student to student, I respond
appropriately by varying the degree of support based on what they write or say as they
practice the strategy. Also, because of the plate-spinning nature of a small group, each
student also has built-in wait time to allow him to process and practice the strategy
before being coached again.
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value time spent, volume, and variety of reading. Getting students started on
practice, with teacher support in the form of coaching, sends the message that
reading is improved when a reader practices. Instead of coming to a small
group to listen to a teacher go on and on about what to do, the children get to
work quickly. This allows for more time during the small group for reading.
In addition, following the lesson structure and pacing identified in this chap
ter allows students to return to their independent reading within a short
period of time to continue reading.
follow predictable structures and routines. The predictable structures for strat
egy lessons presented in this chapter will help readers access new content
(strategies). When structures remain consistent, students know what is
expected of them in a group. I dont need to explain how the group will go
the children already know their role and their jobthey need only focus on
learning the strategy.
Chapter
I took part in my first book club a little late in life. It was just the two of usEd and
me. He was a bartender, I was a waitress, and I was home on summer vacation trying
to earn some spending money for the following year at school. At that time, aside
from the books I had to read for classes at Vassar, I didnt really read much literature
or many best sellers or interesting current nonfiction, and Ed was appalled. He
decided wed start reading together and wed talk about the books after our shift, or in
the brief moments when I went to his bar to pick up the daiquiris and martinis to
bring to my tables.
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That summer, Ed introduced me to more than the value of talking about books.
He sparked a love of reading that I carried back to school in the fall, and carry to this
day. He also introduced me to some of my favorite authors, like Dorothy Parker and
Tom Robbins. He had this way of talking the books up that made me feel like I just had
to read them, and he gave me enough support with what Id find inside that I didnt
abandon ship halfway through.
Reading partnerships and book clubs play an important role in reading work
shop. Allowing time for talk helps children rehearse and revise their ideas about books,
practice behaviors with a peer that they practice when reading alone, and develop
communities around common texts. The teachers with whom I work most closely say
that having children in conversations around books is perhaps one of the most essen
tial times of day.
Whats Ahead
Having children talk about the read-aloud in small groups helps stu
dents develop a vision for what to do during their independent book
clubs.
In K2 reading workshop classrooms, children are paired with a peer who reads at the
same level (Calkins 2000; Collins 2004). These children meet daily to read and talk
about their books together. There are a number of ways that these children might
interact during partnership time. Children might work together to read and reread
part or all of a book to practice fluency and consider what is happening in the text.
They might stop on each page and talk about what a character might be thinking or
feeling. They might talk with their partner about words they need help reading.
In many classrooms, these partnership activities are offered to children during
whole-class minilessons, and the whole class has the same list of options for their part
nership time. Although there are some partnership routines and behaviors I teach to
the whole classsuch as choosing one book to read together, putting the book
between the pair before starting, and spending time with one book instead of jumping
from book to bookthere are many that are better taught as differentiated partner
ship activities.
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The past few years Ive worked in primary classrooms helping teachers differenti
ate partnership activities according to the level of the book that children are reading.
To do this, we first looked closely at the expected behaviors and skills that a reader
needs to practice at each given level, and then thought about activities that would
support them. Using Fountas and Pinnells book Continuum for Literacy Learning
(2007), we studied the grade-appropriate level. We looked at the authors descriptions
of the difficulties of the book and then at the kinds of behaviors and skills a reader at
this level should be practicing.
At level D, we saw that children should use beginning and ending letters in a
word along with word meaning to figure out new words, integrate sources of informa
tion (making sure it looks right, sounds right, and makes sense), analyze the story and
comment on events and/or characters, read known words (sight words) in a text auto
matically, and retell in sequence.
With the above goals in mind, we imagined what readers might do as they work
with a partner to reinforce these skills and habits. For example, if the goal was to ana
lyze the story content, we might teach partnerships to read the beginning few pages of
the book together, pause to reflect, and then talk about the text and their response to
what they read. Or, we might teach children the importance of character development
by suggesting they stop on each page to check the picture and think, What would my
character be saying here if she were talking? Figure 5.1 lists suggestions for possible
partnership activities to support skills, routines, and behaviors according to what a
reader needs most at level D.
We next made easy-to-read labels with a word or phrase describing the activity
and a picture to illustrate the activity. We created a separate sheet of labels for each
level with differentiated activities so that the we could easily introduce an activity
and stick the label on the five-by-seven-inch index card that became a partnerships
menu (Figure 5.2).
All of this prep work improved my efficiency during the workshop because I was
able to do several small groups during independent reading time to introduce the
differentiated activities. I could pull together not only one partnership, but sometimes
two or three partnerships (four to six children) that would benefit from the same
activity. By the end of the thirty-minute independent reading time, I could see five
different groups and introduce partnership activities tailored to each of them.
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Level D
Skills/Routines/Behaviors
Have students read the first few pages, stop and say
what they think. Read the next few pages, stop and say
what they think. Read the end of the book, stop and say
what they think.
Retelling in sequence
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I structured these groups as follows. I first told the children why they were gath
ered; I next explained the activity and showed them the label by putting it on their
menu card; and finally I had the children practice the activity in partnerships while I
coached. After I was sure the children had enough practice to replicate the activity
when they worked independently with their partner, I sent them off to continue read
ing alone and reminded them that when I said it was partner time, they were to take
out their menu and pick an activity to do with their partner. To give an example, I
describe a group I gathered to work on the skill of inferring about character.
For example, with one group I used an enjoyable activity I learned from my
colleague Marjorie Martinelli, who was inspired by the talking Elmo doll. In this
activity, readers were asked to push the belly of a picture of a character to make the
character talk. This helped the children infer what the character might be saying as the
dialogue hadnt been included. This worked really well with children who were reading
texts with simplistic amounts of words because it made them linger on each page to
think about what was happening in the story.
Two partnerships came together to form this groupone partnership read at
level E and one read at level F. I pulled both of these partnerships together because
when I watched their typical partnership routine, I noticed that they tended to just put
the book between them and read together. Although I wanted them to continue that as
one of the activities, because it helped with fluency and they supported each other with
print work skills, it was also important that they spent some time doing some compre
hension work. I felt that this activity would be highly engaging and it would help them
to think more about their characters and what was happening in their book. If making
meaning continued to take a backseat to print work and fluency, these students
progress might stall, which could adversely affect their engagement with the books
they read.
How long can your children sustain their partnership time? How pro
ductive is it?
What skills are your students practicing when they work in partner
ships?
see that I began the small group by telling children why they were gathered and ori
ented them. Notice that I gave them a compliment, which named and reinforced their
previous work, and I let them know how I knew that they could benefit from what I
was teaching them today. This is important because it reinforced my expectations and
accountabilitythat I watch them, listen to them working together, and notice who
they are as readers.
I began by saying, Readers, I was watching your partnership time yesterday and
I saw that you did a really nice job of reading with each otheryou put the book
between you, took turns reading aloud, and supported each other if you ran into diffi
culty. I want to teach you today that partners can do so much more than just read to
each other. Im going to start a menu with you today. Just like a menu in a restaurant
where you get to pick what food you want, this menu is one where youll get to pick
which activity you want to do with your partner. Each activity on this list is going to
help you to become a stronger reader, with your partners help. I already put read out
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loud to each other because you already know how to do that and it is one choice.
Today Im going to add a new activity, which is to make your characters talk.
TEACH: EXPLAIN AND DEMONSTRATE TO INTRODUCE THE ACTIVITY The first
activity I want to teach you today is going to help you think about the characters in the
books youre reading. You can use this any time the book youre reading is a story that
has characterspeople or animals. The activity is to stop on each page and push the
belly of the character and make it talk. Heres the label to remind you. I stuck a label
on each partnerships menu. The label read Talk! with a picture of a person with a
speech bubble.
This first portion of the teach section of the lesson set them up to be ready to
hear what I would encourage them to do. However, they still needed an example from
me. I then segued into some modeling with a familiar text. I chose a familiar text so
that they could focus on the strategy I modeled, not the content of the book. I kept my
demonstration brief to allow ample time for them to practice with coaching in the
next portion of the lesson.
Let me give you an example. I opened a familiar book theyd read with me, the
level C book, Worm Paints (Caple 2000) and read, Worm paints a picture (1). Then I
pressed the belly of the worm in the picture, Hmm. What might my character have
said here? I bet he said, Look at my picture! Im so proud of what Ive done. I cant
wait to show my friends!
Did you see how I read the words and then pressed the characters belly to
make him talk? Now you all try, I said. I ended the lesson with a recap of what
had been taught to make sure they knew what the point of my demonstration
was. This whole explanation, including the set-up and recap, took only a minute
or two.
ENGAGE: CHILDREN PRACTICE WHILE THE TEACHER COACHES At this point,
each partnership chose one book and put the book between them. One partner read a
page and then pressed the belly to make the character talk. When I noticed that a child
read without stopping, I whispered into the partners ear, Wait! Go back and make the
character talk, and that child repeated what I said to her partner. This helped one
child get into the habit of coaching the other. Another time, I pointed to the label on
the table in front of them as a way to nonverbally coach them, reminding them to use
the menu when they worked alone. After about one to two minutes of practice, I called
their attention back to me.
LINK: SEND THEM OFF BY ENCOURAGING THEM TO TRY THE ACTIVITY DURING
PARTNER TIME During the link of the lesson, I reminded the students that they could
practice this activity during partnership time, not during independent reading time. I
reiterated one more time what the strategy was and when they should use it: Nice job
practicing, everyone. So now you know that one fun thing you can do with your partner
during partnership time is to make your character talk by pushing the belly of the char
acter on each page. Today, when I say its partnership time, Id like you to take out this
menu, find the activity, and practice it. Do you think you can all try this? OK, have fun!
Plan out activities that correlate with the behaviors, skills, and habits
that students would benefit from practicing at each level.
and Up
Read-aloud clubs are small groups of three to five students who get together to discuss
something that has been read aloud to them. This type of small group allows students
to be supported because instead of the children reading a book independently and
coming to a club prepared to discuss, I provide support while the book is being read to
them. The second layer of support in this type of small group is that while students
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discuss the book, I listen in and coach the students. In this section, I first lay the foun
dation for this type of small group by discussing interactive read-alouds and wholeclass conversationstwo structures that support read-aloud clubsand then I discuss
read-aloud clubs.
Interactive Read-Aloud
Researchers have long regarded read-aloud as an indispensable part of the school
day, with some recommending several opportunities each day for teachers to read
aloud to students from a variety of genres (Calkins 2000; Collins 2004; Laminack
and Wadsworth 2006; Nichols 2006). Many have innovated a bit on the traditional
story time read-aloud to create an interactive read-aloud.
In the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project (TCRWP)s definition, the
purpose of the interactive read-aloud is to help children interact with the text, with the
teacher, and with each other. These interactions provide support for the kind of work
that children do when they are thinking about their books independently during inde
pendent reading, and for the kinds of talking children do when they meet with a part
ner or club during talk time.
During an interactive read-aloud, I preplan, with clear goals in mind, places to
stop and model my thinking, or think aloud, as well as places for the children to talk to
a permanent partner, or turn and talk; write about their ideas, or stop and jot;
dramatize an important part, or stop and act; or sketch to aid with visualizing, or
Read-Aloud Prompts
Stop and jot: Stop and write in a reading notebook, on a sticky note, or on a
notecard in response to a teacher prompt.
Stop and sketch: Stop and sketch what you visualize in one part of the book.
Stop and act: With a partner, dramatize a scene that was just read, or your
prediction of what will come.
Turn and talk: Talk to a partner about a prompt given by the teacher.
Think aloud: The teacher models his thinking aloud to give the students an
image of the kind of thinking one person has in a particular part of the book.
Figure 5.3 Read-Aloud Prompts
stop and sketch (see definitions in Figure 5.3). For example, one teacher recently read
Becoming Naomi Leon by Pam Muoz Ryan (2005) to her class of fourth graders. She
decided that her class would benefit from more practice synthesizing the text on a
literal and inferential level because they were very detail-oriented, but often didnt
think about the big picture. She planned think-aloud, turn-and-talk, and stop-and-jot
prompts strategically across one chapter in the middle of the book to support students
with these skills.
Turn and talk: How does what happened right here fit with what came
before?
Stop and jot: You all thought one way about this character earlier in the book.
How does your thinking now match up with that?
Think-aloud: Weve learned a lot so far about this grandmother. Im going to
just remind myself quickly of what I learned. She often uses humor when
things are hard to say, she seems to be a good role model, and shes very
responsible. Thats all adding up to quite a strong woman.
Stop and jot: If you think about the whole text, what do you think the author
is trying to teach us?
Whole-Class Conversations
A helpful common practice in scaffolding children toward read-aloud clubs is the
whole-class conversation (Calkins 2000). These whole-class conversations are not in
small groups but rather, as the name would suggest, with the entire class. Before dis
cussing ways to use small groups from the read-aloud, it is important to understand
this foundational component of balanced literacy.
In TCRWP classrooms, whole-class conversations happen several times a week.
The entire class sits in one circle and has a discussion about the book after the whole
or a significant part of the book is finished being read aloud to them. This is highly
supportive because the children have the help of the carefully planned prompts to
guide their thinking along the way, and they have the assistance of the teacher, when
necessary, to guide or steer the conversation, to enforce active listening, or to coach
children when they are having difficulty.
The children can learn very quickly to respond to an initial request from the
teacher: OK, whoever wants to start the conversation, go ahead and start us off.
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One child will likely share an idea he had when he was turning and talking to a
partner, or will talk about something he had jotted down. The other children
then need to listen to what the first child has said, and then formulate their own
response.
While children talk, I listen and take notes and think about ways to ratchet up
the work theyre doing. I keep in mind the conversational skills and comprehension
skills the children exhibit. I make a decision about what to teach and which method
to use. More detail on methods for teaching into talk are presented later in this
chapter. I also keep track of who talks and who is quiet, to ensure a balance of voices.
When it feels like the conversation is a bit stilted, or when there is an explosion of
many children who want to talk at once, I might have the class turn and talk to a
partner about what theyd say next if it were their turn to speak to get everyone talk
ing, and then reconvene children to whole-class conversation again. At other times, I
might choose to fishbowl a few children to provide a model for how a good conver
sation looks, while other children watch and research and prepare to state what
theyve noticed.
The way that I listen during a whole-class conversation, and the way that I teach,
are the same as when Im working with a club. For many teachers, its helpful to learn
to do this first when the whole class is engaged in one conversation, and then move
that same way of teaching to small-group conversations.
Perhaps, for example, Im listening to a conversation and notice that the children
who are speaking have great ideas, but they really arent listening to each other or stick
ing to one topic. I may decide to interrupt, saying, I notice that so far weve had about
four different ideas laid out. This is a great way to start a conversation, but now we
need to pick one and really listen to what that persons said, thinking, How would I
respond to that idea? Janie, why dont you repeat the idea you just had and everyone
elses job is to listen and think, What would I say back to Janies idea? This is a teach
ing point and a method that I would use with the whole class or with a small group
having a conversation.
I keep notes over time, set goals for the class conversations, and tailor read-aloud
plans to support better conversations. These whole-class conversations occur once or
twice every week from September on.
Read-Aloud Clubs
When independent book clubs are on the horizon, I recommend teachers begin
grouping their children into clubs to discuss the read-aloud. About a month before
independent book clubs, I take two sets of read-aloud partners and put them together
for a group of four. During the actual read-aloud, children will still independently
sketch or jot, will still turn and talk to or act out a part with a partner, and will still
witness my thinking during think-alouds. What changes, though, is that time will be
devoted to having children sit with their club and attempt a sustained conversation
independent of my guidance.
Sometimes I use the time originally earmarked for whole-class conversations to
instead have read-aloud club time. The instructional methods during this time stay the
same as during whole-class conversations, except that I now need to move quickly
between the multiple groups occurring simultaneously in the room instead of listening
to only one conversation. Because these clubs were scaffolded with prompts during the
read-aloud, children can usually sustain conversation longer than they would have
been able to from their independent reading alone.
Read-aloud clubs not only benefit the students, but also the teacher. If I am
new to conferring into conversation, knowing the book well allows me to jump
into the midst of a conversation and have a sense of whats going on. Later, when
the children are in independent book clubs, I may not know every book that
every club is reading, making the listening in for teaching opportunities even
more challenging.
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struggle, however, with coming up with ideas. Without ideas, its impossible to have a
conversation.
Book introductions can be used to help students read with a lens of inference,
interpretation, visualizing, making connections (activating prior knowledge), or deter
mining importance. Reading with a specific lens helps the children enter the text with
attention toward that skill. Front-loading the information for readers so that they read
with attention allows them to actively think as they read.
There are other instances when students may be inexperienced with the genre of
the book theyve chosen, a setting in the book, a concept integral to the meaning, or a
book format. In these instances, I can decide to provide a chapter introduction to sup
port prior knowledge. These introductions are especially helpful with genres like histor
ical fiction, when a reader might not know anything about the historical time period,
and knowing about the time period has a tremendous impact on the ability to get ideas
and the ability to monitor for sense. I am reminded of a classroom I recently visited
where a club was three-quarters of the way through Anne Frank: Diary of a Young Girl
(Frank 1953) and was discussing the book with no mention of the Holocaust! Helping
readers establish prior knowledge before and during the reading of the text will posi
tively affect their ability to think and talk about the book more deeply.
In the case of either type of introduction, I have learned I need to be very
familiar with the text. Speaking to readers in generalities is not as helpful as speak
ing in specifics. It is also the case that I will probably introduce a small portion of
the text, not the whole book. This is to ensure that children will remember the
introduction.
I prepare introductions for a chapter or two at a time. I often find that once I
have introduced a few chapters, the club can continue without me. In other cases,
children will need chapters introduced to them throughout the course of the book.
When I find myself providing this much support, I am careful to make sure that I give
less and less support in subsequent books with the eventual goal of having them work
independent of me.
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its essential that I still see the children in the group as individuals. I study what makes
each reader unique and I find commonalities. I look at my notes for the kinds of goals
weve clarified together in past conferences and I think about how close the students
are to meeting those goals. The common goal becomes my small-group teaching point
and I keep in mind what I know about each individual for the coaching part of the
small-group lesson.
For example, I recently met with a fourth-grade club that was about to begin
reading Fantastic Mr. Fox by Roald Dahl (1970). I learned from their classroom
teacher, and the notes shed taken on past conferences, that the students used
sticky notes profusely, though for different reasons: some of them exclusively
marked events that they considered important and used their sticky
note to retell (e.g., The man just went downstairs) and occasionally
in the group as
individuals.
conversation, it was likely that they got little more than Yes, I read that part too
in response from another club member. Figure 5.4 shows samples of the kinds of
sticky notes that tended to permeate their books; notice how literal the thinking on
each of them is.
This club needed help with inferring so that they would each get some ideas
about their characters or the events in their books, not just retell the events. These
ideas could then be brought to a club and discussed. When book club members
bring ideas that are conversation-worthy, not just notes that retell literally what hap
pened in the book, they are able to debate and consider each others perspectives.
Often, just by coming with more quality ideas, the childrens conversational skills
improve as well.
CONNECT AND COMPLIMENT: BEGIN BY STATING A PURPOSE FOR THE
GROUP I began this group as I begin most: stating a purpose for why Ive pulled
them together. In this first part of the lesson, I wanted to let them know what strategy
we would be working on together, as well as give them a rationale for why I thought
this would be a good strategy for them to work on. I couch this new learning inside of
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Figure 5.4 Sample Student Sticky Notes in the Chapter Introductions to Help Readers Deepen a
a strength theyve demonstrated. This shows themand methat they are ready for
this new learning.
Readers, I pulled you together today because youre about to start this new
book, Fantastic Mr. Fox by Roald Dahl. It is one of my favorites and I wanted to talk to
you a bit before you started. I want to talk to you about how when you read, Ive
noticed that youre all really focused on the plot. You pay close attention to what char
acters are doing and saying and are about to do. I noticed because this is what you
typically jot on your sticky notes.
I want to tell you today that you can take this noticing one step further and start
thinking critically about the characters. In doing this, youll be able to bring strong
conversation-worthy ideas to your book club. This means that your conversations will
start to get a little more exciting.
One thing you can be thinking is, What kind of person is this? and Do I
like this character or not? and Would I make the same decisions as the character
if I were in his or her shoes? This kind of thinking will make it more exciting to
read, and will also help you have really lively conversations when you meet as a
club tomorrow to talk. Im going to tell you a little about what youll be reading
about in the first few chapters, and some of what you might be thinking about
when you get there.
TEACH: INTRODUCE THE PORTION OF THE TEXT THE CHILDREN WILL READ
IN THE FIRST SITTING Before this lesson, I read and preplanned what I would say to
this group. I had to be very familiar with the details of the text because as I read to
plan, I came up with thinking prompts that encouraged them to try the strategy I
would propose. In this way, it felt almost like I gave them read-aloud prompts, but for
a book that they would read independently.
The first chapter is called Three Farmers because they are some of the
important characters in the book. Roald Dahl writes that they are rich and they are
nasty so you should think as you read about them, Do I agree or do I have other
words to describe their actions? Youre going to read about the kind of food they
like to eat, and how they are with other people, and all the while you should think,
What kind of people are they? Stop and jot a sticky note describing the kind of
person you think each of them is. Think about whether or not you like the charac
ters, and jot why. Lets put a blank sticky note on that page so when you get to it,
youll remember to jot an idea. Notice that I gave them questions to consider as
they read, and also embedded a few text details so that when they got to that spot in
the text, they could better remember what my prompts were. Planting blank sticky
notes in spots is a nice trigger to remind them to stop, think, and write when they
get to that spot.
The second chapter is called The Fox and hes an important character too
you can tell from the title of the book. Roald Dahl writes in this chapter about Mr. Fox,
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his wife, and his children. You should think about these characters, too. Youll read how
Mr. Fox talks to his wife and you should think, What kind of person would talk like
that? Youll read that his nightly routine is to steal from the farmers from the first
chapter and youll think, Do I agree with what hes done? Would I do the same thing if
I were in his shoes? At the end of the chapter, youll see the farmers again. At this
point, you can remember what you were thinking about them before and see if you
have anything to change or add to your first idea based on what you now know from
meeting them again. Go ahead and put a sticky note on a spot where you think youll
be jotting.
Across this introduction, the children heard different phrasings of questions
asked with the same goal in mind: thinking critically of the character. It was not
important to me that they remember each question exactly where I said it. What was
important was that they thought about characters and that they stopped and jotted to
hold onto those ideas. I again had them place a sticky note in their books, this time
giving them a little more freedom about where it went. The next time they placed a
sticky note was back at their independent reading spots, entirely on their own, when
they were moved to jot something.
ENGAGE: SET THE CHILDREN UP TO PRACTICE, AND GET READY TO COACH
OK, remember I told you to keep track of your thinking about the characters.
Youll be thinking as you read, What kind of people are they? Do I like them?
Would I do the same things they do if I were in their shoes? When you find a
blank sticky note, thats a reminder to you to stop, think, and jot. Go ahead
and get started while youre right here with me and Ill come around and help
you out.
At this point, the children began reading, and as in any other small-group con
ference, I spent time coaching. Every child was working independently at this point
they were not waiting for me to come to them, and they were not listening in to what I
said to another reader. As they read, I moved among them, spending just a fraction of
a minute with each child and whispering quick coaching prompts like, Remember,
think about what kind of person would do that and Would you have done the same
thing? and Jotdo you like this character? Why or why not? to scaffold their prac
tice of the work I just described.
Id gotten to each student once or twice during the engage section, and I was confident
that they could keep going without my help, I sent them off to work independently to
read the remainder of what Id introduced.
Everyone stop reading and look up for a moment. Youre going to go back to
your reading spots now and I want you to keep reading the rest of Chapters 1 and 2 on
your own. Remember what were practicing here: writing down ideas about the char
acters based on the kind of people you think they are, whether or not youd make the
same decisions if you were them, and whether or not you like the character. Take a
quick second to jot down what your work will be when you go back to your seat on
this purple sticky note so it can be a reminder to you. I gave them each a sticky note to
put on the cover of their book. They wrote their goal for themselves in their own
words on the notes. Great. That can be your bookmark now. Remember, no need to
write down whats happening in the bookjust your ideas. OK, off you go.
Helping Children Read with a Skill Focus
Keep in mind your (skill) goal for the readers in the group.
Introduce the section by giving away bits of the plot and the kind of
thinking students should be doing at each part of the section being
introduced.
If part of the goal is to have students jot as they have ideas, you or
the students can preplant sticky notes as a reminder to stop, think,
and jot.
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their own experiences and the historical time period or genre of a new book. Smallgroup work to enhance prior knowledge helps their reading, and discussion, of
the book.
Preparing for a chapter introduction to help readers establish prior knowledge
requires that Ive read, or at least skimmed, the covers of the book and the chapters Ill
introduce. Its also essential that I know the children. What are their strengths as read
ers? What types of content knowledge do they have, and what would they benefit from
having introduced to them?
A club with whom I worked at PS 158 on Manhattans Upper East Side
recently chose to read Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis (1999). This
book posed a number of potential challenges for these fifth graders: the book is
set during the Great Depression, a time period they had not yet studied in social
studies; the book takes place in Michigan and they are New Yorkers; the main
character is in the foster care system and they all live with their parents; and there
is heavy mention of jazz music and I doubted they had much experience with the
musical genre.
I looked closely at the book to see how much support there was for the time
period and the concepts for a reader without prior knowledge. It seemed like the city
wasnt so essential to the first chapter and because they are city kids, being able to
visualize and imagine another city wasnt that hard. Introducing all of this at once
would have been overwhelming, so I decided only to introduce the concepts that
would help with the first few chapters. Jazz doesnt come up in the first two chapters,
so I thought I could introduce that at a later time. The biggest priority seemed to be
the fact that the main character, Bud, is in the foster care system, and I also felt it was
important to talk a bit about the time period so theyd be able to imagine how the
characters looked, and how the place might have looked, from the very beginning of
the book.
CONNECT AND COMPLIMENT: BEGIN BY STATING THE PURPOSE FOR THE
GROUP AND REINFORCE A STRENGTH I began by pulling the students together to
establish the purpose for the group. This is a book they chose for their book club, so
they already had some excitement around reading it. They might have even been a
little bothered that I was taking up their reading time with a small group! Because of
this, I wanted to get them excited about what I had to say, and to convince them that
what I was going to teach them would help them with the reading of the book. I estab
lished the purpose alongside a related strength.
Im pulling this club together today because youre about to start this amazing
book, Bud, Not Buddy. I remember the first time I read this book I couldnt put it
down! The characters really came to life for me and I was so interested in reading
about the time period.
I know that as a group, you are all very detail-oriented readers. I know that you
like to know and understand whats in your books or else it becomes frustrating. I
want you all to have the same experience with this book that I did: to fall in love with
the characters and really be able to envision the setting. One thing that might be tricky
is that its possible that youve never read about the setting or themes that are in the
book. So I thought Id teach you all a little about them before you get started.
TEACH: INTRODUCE ELEMENTS OF THE STORY (THEMES, CONCEPTS, TIME
PERIOD) TO HELP WITH PRIOR KNOWLEDGE In this small group, I employed a
very different method than I used in my other small groups. Because the group was
focused on establishing prior knowledge, I would not simply give them a little lecture
on the content. Instead, I wanted to support them with the things readers do to get
prior knowledge for themselves, so the next time they encountered historical fiction
and I wasnt there to help, theyd have some experience with working through that
challenge on their own. Notice that I chose to use a bit of guided inquiry.
Me: Lets all take a look at the front cover. Tell me what you see.
Annalise: I see a black-and-white photograph of some musicians. It looks old-
fashioned.
Gregory: I see a boy sitting on a bench. Hes wearing funny clothes. I think I saw
period a little bit. This is set in the 1930s in America, so thats probably why
you noticed things looked old-fashionedit was almost eighty years ago!
Back then, people often wore collared shirts and suspenders like you see this
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character wearing, and dress shoes every day, not just on special occasions.
People didnt really wear jeans, like you do, or T-shirts. Here, I brought a cou
ple of other pictures of people at that time so you can see what I mean. [I
pulled out a few pictures I quickly downloaded from Google Images. I wanted to
help them develop a sense of the world of the story. On the cover, you just see a
boy with his suitcase, which doesnt help much with what others might have been
wearing, or what settings typically looked like.]
It was also a very poor time. Many people were losing their jobs or were
getting paid less. It was a time called the Great Depression. People some
times had to line up to get food for free from the government, and they had to
take any job they could just to afford their rents. Many people were very sad,
and many were very poor.
The main character, Bud, is especially poor. You were right to notice that
from the suitcase, Melissa. Bud does not live with his parents. He is in the foster
care system. The foster care system is a government agency that finds temporary
homes for children whose parents cant keep them. In the first couple of chap
ters of the book, Bud and his caseworkerthats the person whos in charge of
making sure hes taken care ofare discussing where hes going to go live, and
we get a little bit of a glimpse of what it was like for him in a foster home. [As I
introduced aspects of the time period, I also tucked in how what I was saying con
nected to the kinds of things the students noticed when we were looking at the front
cover. This helped them connect new learning with what was already known.]
As you read, youre going to have to do extra work to imagine and pic
ture the time period. Use these images I brought for you, the front cover, and
any details the author gives you. Youre also going to have to think about what
it must be like in foster care. You might jot down thoughts or questions you
have to discuss with your club mates when you meet tomorrow.
I ended by making it clear that when they read historical fiction about an unfa
miliar time period, they needed to make sense of what they could, and they should
also ask questions. Their club is a place to not only announce and discuss ideas, but
also a place to help them to fix up confusion and to have questions answered.
ENGAGE: HAVE THE STUDENTS START READING, AND GET READY TO COACH
After this rich introduction discussing concepts and the time period, I wanted to see
not only what students understood but also how they applied this new understanding
in the midst of reading. Therefore, I didnt send them back to their seats right away,
but instead I kept them for a few minutes to allow me to check in and coach as neces
sary. Go ahead and start reading, and Im going to check in with you to make sure the
book is making sense to you. Well read here for a just a couple of minutes and then Ill
send you back to read on your own.
All of the children started reading, and I made my way to each of them for just
a handful of seconds each. When I was with a reader, the other readers continued to
work independently and didnt listen in to my brief conversation. I made my way
around, questioning, prompting, and coaching for their ability to visualize the set
ting and the characters in period dress and to understand the details of the concept
of foster care. I said things like, Tell me what you know so far about foster care
and What are you thinking about the time period? and What are you picturing
in this part?
felt secure that the readers could continue on without my help, I sent them back to
their seats. Im going to send you all back to your seats now to keep reading. Keep
doing a great job of visualizing the places that are described in the book, the kinds of
dress the characters are in, and the kinds of experiences Bud, who is in the foster care
system, is having. When you meet with your club tomorrow, one of the things youll
probably want to do is to come with questions and your own thoughts about the time
period and about foster care to make sure you all understand important elements of
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Deciding on a Method
In Conferring with Readers: Supporting Each Students Growth and Independence,
Gravity Goldberg and I (2007) wrote at length about different methods of instruction
for teaching into talk. The methods that I most commonly use when teaching into
conversation are:
demonstration
ghost partner
proficient partner
Lucy Calkins (2000). When using this method, I move around the periphery of the
club and whisper in quick coaching prompts. At times, I whisper in prompts that get
the child to think or talk in a new direction. Other times, I whisper in sentence starters
that the child is meant to repeat and finish.
In both partnerships and clubs, the benefit to whispering into a childs ear as
opposed to just saying my prompt aloud for all to hear is that it forces children to take
on the language of conversation. When Ive used ghost partner a few times with a club,
the students start naturally using the language that I once whispered in.
Whenever I choose the ghost partner method, I am sure to stick to one specific
teaching point so all of my whispering is aligned to that one strategy. I use ghost part
ner more frequently in clubs than in partnerships because it sometimes feels awkward
when there are only two people talking and Im whispering in one of their ears, though
I do find it helpful in partnerships when the conversation is in a lull and neither per
son is currently speaking. See Figure 5.5 for examples of prompts that are aligned to
specific strategies.
PROFICIENT PARTNER In the proficient partner method, I assume the role of one of
the members in the club. After listening to the club talk, I decide on one strategy and
make comments only pertaining to that one teaching point. At the end of a short
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Strategy
When you hear an idea that is
different from one you had, try it
on for size. Think about places in
the text that fit with, or go against,
that idea.
amount of time, I stop the conversation and highlight the role Ive just played in the
club so that students become aware.
For example, when listening to a third-grade club discuss their A to Z Mystery
book, I noticed that they had nice club behaviors like listening to each other and using
body language to show they were listening, such as nodding heads and facing the
speaker. When I listened to what they were talking about, I noticed a preponderance of
predictions. One child laid out a prediction, then the next child laid out another pre
diction, then another child laid out a different prediction. I wanted them to linger on
one prediction for a while, consider what evidence they had from the story that that
prediction would come true, and then move on to a different idea. I decided to take on
the role of a proficient partner and interjected with thoughts and questions focused on
that one prediction.
I first said, Oh! Thats an interesting prediction. Lets think about why shes the
main suspect. What makes her suspicious? Once the children talked for a while, I
stopped again and said, Yes, but shes busy driving a taxi all day so how could it have
been her? Im not so sure anymore. After that comment, some children started refer
encing some other parts of the text and had some things to say back to me. Then,
another child shared her prediction and I said less. I just interjected, What do we
think about that idea? and let the children talk it out.
After a few minutes had passed, I stopped the group and said, Did you see how
when someone has a prediction, its fun to stop and think about it for a while? We can
stop and think about it by considering the reasons that prediction would come true,
and the reasons it wouldnt based on what weve read so far.
One important caution in the proficient partner method is that children can
become dependent on you to swoop in and save the conversation with some good
ideas and questions. Sticking to one teaching point and articulating what you just
coached them to do help support them toward independently practicing that strategy
again on their own, without you there.
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period of practice, I link what they just did to their independent practice by reminding
them of my goal for them.
Moderate Support
Chapter introductions
Skill introductions
Strategy lessons
Differentiated
partnership work
Conferring with
children while they
talk about books
Independence
Independent
partnership work
Independent book
clubs
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Chapter
I think most people have a memory like mine. For me, it happened in second grade
when Mrs. Nichols read aloud James and the Giant Peach. I remember sitting on the
carpet squares in front of her large wooden rocking chair, listening intently to
Auntie Sponges and Auntie Spikes voices coming from my teachers mouth. I can
remember having this aha moment, thinking: Oh. So thats what its supposed to
sound like.
Now, mind you, I was read to a lot as a child. I wasnt one of those children who
came to school having little experience with books. I had a whole bookshelf of books,
and I insisted on my favorites being read to me over and over. My parents were great
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readers, and Im sure my kindergarten and first-grade teachers were as well. But there
was something about the way Mrs. Nichols read the story aloud that finally clicked for
me. I heard and saw the story in my head as if it were right in front of me. She was
probably the most fluent and most expressive reader Id ever encountered and it
helped me to better comprehend.
Hearing Mrs. Nichols read changed the way I heard myself read, when I read
out loud or when I read in my head. It also changed how I understood what I read.
It was then that I began to understand that hearing the story fluently and expres
sively is part and parcel to being able to comprehend the story. For most children,
the two are inextricably linked. Kuhn (2008) writes that fluency contributes to a
readers comprehension in two ways: accurate, automatic word recognition and
the appropriate use of prosodic, or expressive, features such as stress, pitch, or suit
able phrasing (4).
Fluency instruction has recently gotten a bad name with the No Child Left
Behinds Four Pillars mandates, and DIBELs (Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early
Literacy Skills) assessment. Some have taught children to read fast, timing them with a
stopwatch, which often means comprehension gets the backseat. This is not what I
believe about fluency instruction. Instead, I believe its about helping readers to link
their understanding to their fluent reading and vice versanot just trying to make
their reading sound good.
Fluency is something that is learned in part from models like Mrs. Nichols, but
also from guided practice with a fluent reader and from plenty of independent prac
tice. Small groups can go a long way toward helping readers to become more expres
sive. In this chapter:
I take a spin on whole-class shared reading and suggest that it can be used as
small-group work during reading workshop for great benefit as its assess
ment-based and targeted toward the needs of the readers in the group.
I offer a structure I call warm-up and transfer groups. These groups scaffold
children by giving them a chance to practice in a book that is easy for them,
and immediately transfer the felt sense of fluent reading to their independent
books.
I write about one way to engage children in fun and exciting rereading with a
purpose by grouping them in performance clubs.
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
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When and if the students become disfluent, have difficulty figuring out a word, or
stumble through a portion of the text, I may stop and use that teachable moment to
provide support with print work or fluency instruction.
I might say, Hold on, that sounded choppy. Lets see if we can read that again
and this time try to sweep our eyes under the line a little more quickly and put our
words closer together as we say them. I may also stop during shared reading to ask the
children to predict what might come next, to respond to the text, or to retell the text,
helping them all the while monitor for comprehension. I will also likely offer words of
encouragement as children read correctly, again, noticing and naming (Johnston 2004)
what theyve done well, saying, Thats it! Nice smooth voices on that last page!
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
A third benefit is that when children are in a whole-class lesson, it is likely that a
few students engagement will falter at points. I find that this is often the case with
children who most need the lesson in the first place! When children are in a small
group, it is easier for them to stay more engaged, and for us to notice and reengage
We can match the text level to the group (choosing a text that is
above their independent level).
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At the end of the lesson, I recap what we worked on together. I again state the
strategy clearly and in the same language, and strongly urge the children to continue to
practice in their own books back at their seats.
the first few pages of the next chapter together as a group because I want to
practice reading a little more smoothly when there are a lot of words on the
page. Ive noticed that the books youre reading have more words on each page
than they used to. Also, the words often go all the way across the page instead
of being written in short lines. For example, you used to read books like Mr.
Putter and Tabby and the pages looked like this. . . . [I held open a copy of a
book they all knew.] When you read these books, you read smoothly and with
expression. You made your voice sound like the characters and when you read
narration it sounded smooth, like how you talk. But now youre reading books
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
This next section is the same excerpt, but this time with slashes in places that do
not maintain the authors syntax. A reader who reads and pauses like this is
probably not reading with meaning. Notice that it is possible to read in manyword phrases but read in such a way that confuses the meaning even within a
sentence. Try reading this aloud to see if you can make sense of what you read
when you pause where the slashes appear.
Miss Mackle held / up a big / glass jar with the names of / everyone in
Room 2B. /
Today, she said, we / will pick secret pals. /
Everyone / looked around the room and / pointed at somebody. /
Harry pointed at me. /
I pointed at Harry. /
Just a minute, Miss / Mackle continued, / when I say, pick / a
pal, I mean / pick a pal out / of this jar. /
Everyone stared at / the jar and groaned. /
For one week, / Miss Mackle continued, you / will send letters
and little / homemade surprises to your / secret pal. / On Friday, you will
/ bring a letter to school / saying who you are. / I hope this / activity will
promote writing / skills and new friendships. (34)
Figure 6.1 Understand Parsing, or Phrasing
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that look like this. . . . [I held open a copy of a book at the new level with a visi
ble change in text density.] Big difference, huh?
Were going to practice today really thinking about whats happening in
the story and how the characters are feeling, and were going to practice mov
ing our eyes more quickly across the page to read it so it sounds like were
talking. This way, youll read your new books with the same fluency and
expression that you read your old books.
TEACH: EXPLAIN THE STRATEGY AND GIVE A BRIEF EXAMPLE We will read
thinking of whats happening, and whether its the narrator or a character who is
speaking. We want to make sure our voices match whats happening on the page.
Before we start, itll help to remember whats going on.
For example, if I were to practice reading our read-aloud Olivia (Falconer
2000), I would first have to make sure that I knew what was going on. I would remem
ber that Olivia lives with her family and all of the pages so far have been talking about
the things she likes to do. Then, I would look to see if its narration or dialogue and
think about who is speaking to make my voice match whats happening. Here, on this
page, I see dialogue marks so I know someone is talking. Also, I know that Olivias
mother is trying to get her to go to bed and she seems kind of annoyed, so Id make my
voice sound like that when I read it. (Id read aloud the sentence.) Every day Olivia is
supposed to take a nap. Its time for your you-know-what, her mother says. Did you see
how I made my voice match what was happening?
ENGAGE: HAVE CHILDREN READ IN UNISON, WITH AND WITHOUT
TEACHER SUPPORT
Me: Lets try it. Begin by telling your partner whats happened so far and how the
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
Allison: She was worried shed forget and get stage fright.
Marcus: But in the end I think she said shed come since Pinky was so nervous.
Me: OK, you all seem to remember pretty well. So were going to use what we know
this [points to text]this whooooole thing is one sentence. You read all the way
to the period. Try again.
[All four children in unison, without me: Pinkys Part. A monkey? This time they
read it without me because they had already practiced reading once with me. I
released scaffolding. Also, by being quiet I could better attend to what I heard them
saying as they read, and responded as necessary.]
Me: Thats it! Nice expression.
[All four children, in unison, without me: Pinky couldnt believe his eyes. It had been
two days since the tryouts, and the cast list had just gone up on the bulletin board in
the main office.]
Me: Better with the smooth reading. Look to where the next sentence ends . . . right
here! Read it till the period. [I almost pretaught. I anticipated that this long sen
tence might trip them up, so I gave them a heads-up of where I expected them to
read to before pausing. Notice my voice was still absent as they read this sentence.]
[All four children, in unison: There under Monkeys were six names. One of them
was his. He kept closing his eyes and opening them again.]
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Me: Is this him talking or the narrator? [I interjected when needed, quickly prompted
their thinking, and then got them reading again. I dont want to pause and linger
too long in discussion because it would break the flow of the reading and might
interfere with comprehension.]
Lijuan and Marcus: Narrator.
Me: Right, lets read it again and make it sound like a narrator.
[All four children, in unison: There under Monkeys were six names. One of them
was his. He kept closing his eyes and opening them again. We continued in the group
like that, reading together for about another five minutes or so. The entire group lasted
page just like this one. Practice when youre reading in your head, or out loud
with your partner during partner time, smoothing out your reading. Remember
to think of whats happening, and whether its the narrator or a character who is
speaking. Make sure your voice matches whats happening on the page.
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Review why you have pulled these particular readers, and choose a
text where the children will have an opportunity to practice the strate
gies that will benefit them.
Repeat the work youve done together at the end of the session, and
encourage children to replicate it in their own books back at their seats.
As you attempt these small groups on your own, it might be helpful to reference
Figure 6.2, which offers help with predictable challenges students have when trying to
read fluently, and the coaching support we might give them in a small group.
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
If the Reader Is . . .
Reading choppily, in two- or threeword phrases
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Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
two engage sections. If I felt that my readers needed more support, I might have cho
sen to demonstrate or explain what I meant by fluent reading before having them try
it. Since this was common knowledge in this classroom, and students were familiar
with what I was describing, I decided to get them started right away.
In the first engage portion of the lesson, students practiced right away with a text
that would be considered easy for each of them. Then, I had them read a just-right
book from their book baggie. When they read the easy and the just-right texts, I
coached them as described in Chapter 4, moving quickly between each child, offering
lean prompts.
Finally, I ended the group with a link to let them know that I expected them to
continue practicing what we just practiced in the group when they read independently.
CONNECT AND COMPLIMENT: STATE THE PURPOSE FOR THE GROUP AND
REINFORCE STRENGTHS First graders, I pulled you together for this group today
so that we could work together on reading smoothly and expressively. Weve talked
before about how reading should sound. Weve talked about how you want to read the
words not like a robot, but instead smoothly, like how you talk. You should pause at
the end of ideas, but not after each individual word. When something is exciting in the
text, your voice should sound excited; when there is something sad happening, your
voice should sound sad.
I know that each of you knows what I mean. When I was listening in yesterday
during our shared reading lesson, you all had great expression! You made your voice
sound mad at the part of Three Billy Goats Gruff when the troll was angry about who
was on his bridge. You all made your voice sound angry! Whos that tripping over my
bridge? So I know you can do it.
Ive noticed that sometimes when weve read together in conferences, or when
you read with a partner during partner time, you pause a lot as you read, instead of
reading to make it sound smooth like the way we talk.
So, I have a secret trick for you that I hope is going to help. Im going to give
each of you a book that has much fewer words on the page, shorter sentences, and
easier words. This way, you can be concentrating all of your energy on thinking about
whats happening in the story and how to make your voice sound based on whats
happening. Youll start by reading that and getting the feel for how you should sound.
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Then, youll take a book that youve chosen thats a just-right level, and youll try to
read that one with the same voice as you read the easier one.
ENGAGE, PART ONE: READ AN EASIER TEXT (OR SHARED READING OR
FAMILIAR TEXT) WITH COACHING OK, heres a book for each of you. Go ahead
and read out loud in a quiet voice to yourself, and Ill listen in.
Each child read her own book, not the same title. This was not shared reading, it
was still independent reading, but at an easier level. I separated the children a little bit so
that the other voices didnt become distracting. As the children read, I listened and
assessed. If I needed to intervene, I used quick prompts that didnt interrupt the read
ing. I was careful not to say a lot because I wanted to make sure that the majority of the
time was spent with them practicing and getting the feel for fluent, expressive reading.
Most of my coaching during this phase of the lesson was to positively mark
appropriate expressive reading. I had many opportunities to do this since children
were reading books that were easy for them. I would say, That sounds smooth! or
Good job matching the feeling with your voice. These positive coaching prompts
help children to become self-aware and metacognitive about their own fluent reading.
I want this awareness to transfer into the next phase of the lesson.
ENGAGE, PART TWO: READ A JUST-RIGHT TEXT WITH COACHING After a few
minutes of practice, I moved the children who demonstrated fluent and expressive
reading in the easier books into their just-right books. If a reader was still struggling to
read fluently in a book a few levels below what he usually read, this would have been
an indication that extended practice in the lower-level book would better help him
than moving into harder texts.
For the children ready to transition, I said, OK, now take out whatever just-right
book youre reading and try to read that book in the same smooth, expressive voice as
you read the last one. Ill be around to help out. Dont forget that not only are you
reading expressively, you are also reading to understand the text.
As the children began reading their just-right books, I used the same coaching
prompts from the first phase of this lesson to encourage them to read smoothly and
with expression. See Figure 6.2 for some examples of coaching prompts to respond to
predictable situations that might arise in the group.
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
seven to ten minutes altogether, I sent the children back to their seats to continue inde
pendently. I had been able to coach each reader with prompts that either supported or
enhanced her performance. I then said to the group: You all did an excellent job prac
ticing that. When you go back to your seats, Im going to ask you to keep an ear out for
how youre reading. If it starts to sound choppy, or if it starts to sound like youre no
longer paying attention to whats happening, I want you to pretend like you have me
whispering in your ear, telling you to go back and try it again! If you feel like you need
a break from your just-right book, you can take out the easier book I just gave you and
warm up a little on your own before jumping back into your just-right book. OK, off
you go!
Have the children practice in a text that is one or two levels below
their just-right reading level (while you coach).
Have the children practice in their just-right book (while you coach).
Performance Clubs
Last year, I listened to a teacher inservice workshop at Teachers College with visiting
lecturer Timothy Rasinski. Rasinski is widely published in the field of reading instruc
tion, particularly in the area of reading fluency. He had the audience singing songs
with the lyrics posted on an overhead projector and chorally reading poetry and nurs
ery rhymes from an overhead projector. The audience members laughed and clapped
and had a wonderful time.
Rasinskis point in his presentation is that singing and reading poetry and nurs
ery rhymes are fun and engaging. Not only that, he quipped, but short predictable
texts when read repeatedly are shown to drastically affect a childs ability to read flu
ently. He cited research that showed that middle school children who did shared
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reading of poems and songs for thirty minutes a day, three days a week, for twelve
weeks made one year of progress in fluency. One year of progress in just three months
(Biggs and Homan 2005)!
This experience and the research sold it for me. Kids need to be singing and
reading poetry in school, even in upper elementary school and middle school, and
especially readers who struggle with fluency. I began thinking that this would be an
engaging way to help children who are often disengaged with reading and/or those
who struggle with fluency, to work together in small groups. Other researchers have
found success with adolescents as well. Ash (2002) and Kuhn (2008) frequently use
daily oral and shared reading as part of their intervention plan for readers who
struggle in middle school. (See Figure 6.3.)
I worked in a third-grade inclusion classroom at PS 63 in the East Village of
Manhattan. In the classroom, there were many children who read below grade
level, and when I asked their teachers what was holding the students back, they
said that when they tried to assess the children in higher levels, their fluency was
drastically stilted.
I pulled one group of students together and told them that they were specially
chosen because their teachers told me that they were kind of the actors of the class
room. I had heard that they liked to put on shows for their classmates, and that per
haps theyd like to be part of a club with me: a performance club. This club would
meet a few times a week and theyd have work to do in between our meetings. Then, at
the end of the week, they could perform what theyd been working on for the rest of
the class. My proposal was met with cheers.
Humorous poetry by favorite childrens poets like Shel Silverstein and Jack
Prelutsky or Paul Janeczko (whose latest is A Foot in the Mouth: Poems to
Speak, Sing, and Shout)
Classic nursery rhymes
Readers theatre scripts (many of which you can find for free from websites
such as www.aaronshep.com/rt/, www.teachingheart.net/readerstheater.htm,
and www.storiestogrowby.com/script.html)
Songs
Figure 6.3 Sources for Texts to Use in Performance Clubs
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
What are some of your favorite songs, poems, and plays that could be
used in this type of small group?
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By Wednesday, one of the girls in the group ran up to me and said, Guess what!
We made up hand motions to go with each line! and she pantomimed the first few
lines of the poem for me. They were really taking this seriously!
On Thursday, we met for one more quick meeting to make sure they were ready
for the next days performance. We practiced reading it fluently and expressivelyand
with hand gestures!how they wanted to perform it the following day. They selfassigned some homework to read it to a few more people at home to get ready.
On Friday, their performance was celebrated by the whole class, which motivated
them to try a new poem for the following week. The effects it had far surpassed flu
ency, in my opinion. The children started to experience the power and celebrate the
success of reading in ways that they hadnt in perhaps some time. As struggling read
ers, reading for them was often intimidating or a challenge. They sometimes checked
out, or got tired, or gave up. But having an end goalwith their peers as an audience,
no lessreally helped motivate them to practice and practice and reread, something
they were often reluctant to do. In just a few weeks, their teachers reassessed them, and
each moved to the next higher-level book for independent reading.
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Sell the club to the group members in a way that makes it feel
exclusive and special.
Start the week with a shared reading club and give each reader his
own individual copy.
End the week with a brief performance, allow the other children in
class to celebrate the groups hard work.
The ideas in this section could also easily be applied to readers theatre. Many
scripts of popular childrens books are available on the Internet and at bookstores, or
children could make their own. Poems, songs, or scripts, when the promise of per
Chapter 6: Reading with Fluency and Expression: Shared Reading, Warm-Up and Transfer Groups, and Performance Clubs
formance is at just at the end of the week, all have the ability to engage childrens
excitement and motivate them to read and reread to get ready to share with others.
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in your class who would love to perform? Can you think of others youd like
to try in a shared reading small group?
teach toward independence. Within each of the different structures presented
in this chapter, I showed how I released support across the course of one les
son and over time. In the shared reading group, I let my voice fade out and
only interjected briefly when needed. With the warm-up and transfer group, I
gave students a model for how they can warm up on their own during inde
pendent reading when they notice their fluency is starting to falter. In the
performance club group, I set them up to independently practice their poem
multiple times across the week without me.
teach strategies explicitly so that readers become proficient and skilled. The
groups presented in this chapter differ a bit from the groups in other chapters
of this book in that I expect that children will synchronize a few strategies as
they attempt to read a book fluently. In every case, though, I said up-front at
the start of the group what my goals for them were, and I stayed focused on
the blend of goals as I coached them, offering support.
value time spent, volume, and variety of reading. Reading easier books to warm
up to harder ones or reading poems, songs, or scripts intermittently through
out workshop to practice fluency helps children read a variety of materials
and read more. When children get discouraged or disengaged, they might drift
off or lose attention to their reading. These groups help children to reengage
with purpose.
follow predictable structures and routines. In this chapter, I presented three
clear structures for helping children with fluency. Remember, also, that the
structure of strategy lessons, as presented in Chapter 4, can be used for this
goal. Regardless of what structure you choose, children will know what is
expected of them in that kind of group as they return to the same kind of
group again over time.
Chapter
My brother, sister, and I had a Nintendo system in our basement when we were kids.
We went downstairs, sat in beanbag chairs, and played Super Mario Brothers. There
were only two controllers, so we had to take turns. When it was Nicks or Melissas turn,
they passed from level to level. When it was my turn, I kept playing through level one,
trying desperately to get past the stage where I jumped from toadstool to toadstool and
onto the levels with the moodier music, the mazes, and the dragons shooting flames.
Unfortunately, I ran out of lives and my turn ended. I could only take so much redun
dancy before my patience wore out and I stopped going down to the basement to play.
Constantly repeating the same level in Super Mario Brothers caused me to
become disengaged and disheartened, and to just give up. This could likely happen
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with the readers in our classrooms, too, if they have to return month after month to
the same few baskets of books in the classroom library that are at their independent
reading level.
What also begins to happen is that for children who dont make adequate
progress in their reading levels, the books that are available to them begin to be largely
inappropriate for their age and maturity level. Sure, there are hi-lo books that I wrote
about in Chapter 3, but most childrens literature is written with the intent to match
the age of the child reading the bookthat is, a second-grade book typically has
characters that are around seven years old who encounter problems seven-year-olds
would encounter. Its hard to convince a middle school student reading on a thirdgrade level that reading about two eight-year-olds who get into a magic tree house and
go on adventures is enticing.
Reading below level also has implications for the amount of access
Children do not
reminds us that for children to maintain their progress, they need several
have levels.
hours a day reading just-right material. When children spend time with
printed material in science, social studies, or math that is above their reading
level, not only does this time not help them become stronger readers, but they also
wont be able to learn the content.
Keeping an eye on childrens reading levels and supporting their movement
through these levels are essential to their success with reading, with other school sub
jects, and with life. We need to make sure we are supporting readers to have a strong
start at reading in kindergarten and first grade, and that they continue making ade
quate progress. At the same time, its important that we dont overemphasize this con
cern with levels to children.
As the assistant principal of PS 158, Dina Ercolano says, Children
do not have levels; books have levels. Levels are one tool that we as teachers use to
help children work within their zone of proximal development (ZPD) and that
children can use to quickly find books that theyll be able to read. Creating in chil
dren an overawareness of what level they read on can have detrimental effects to
the kind of culture we try to create in a reading workshop.
In the video gaming world, you can buy video game strategy guides or, colloqui
ally, cheat books. One of the bigger publishers of these guides has the tagline, Get
the strategy you need when you need it scrolled across its Web site masthead. In our
classrooms, there are many children who, like my brother Nick and sister Melissa, can
progress through levels at a fine pace. Then there will be other students, like me, who
need some strategies. These children need us to give them the strategy guides through
targeted small-group conferences to help them to move with independence to the next
level. In this chapter, I talk about how to get to know book levels and childrens skill
within a book level to help you group them appropriately, and then I introduce a
small-group structure. Specifically, I will:
help you to understand how to look at a childs progression through reading
levels to determine whether or not the individual is making adequate progress
give advice for how to get to know leveled books so that you can develop your
own strategy guides for the levels to use during group conferences
show how to get to know each reader within a level so that you can determine
which difficulties, of all the potential challenges a new level poses, this partic
ular reader could use support with
introduce a small-group structure called text-level introduction groups that can
be used to help support children to the next level, as an alternative to guided
reading
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Each of these variables can be seen in any combination, which makes pinning
down the number of months a reader should spend in each level challenging.
Fountas and Pinnell, in their book Guided Reading (1996), offer benchmarks to
correlate reading levels to grade levels. The number of books a child needs to read
before progressing to the next level varies from level to level. Children at lower
levels typically move more quickly. Books at lower levels are short and frequently
reread, whereas it can take a week to read books at levels W, X, Y, or Z. See Figure
7.1 for a chart of reading levels ranges aligned to grade level across four months of
the year created by TCRWP. What you will notice is that there is much more move
ment when children are reading lower levels, as in, say first grade, than in higher
reading levels, such as in fifth grade.
Grade
September
November
March
June
Preemergent
Early emergent
A/B/C
B/C/D
C/D/E
E/F/G
G/H/I
I/J/K
I/J/K
J/K/L
K/L/M
L/M/N
L/M/N
M/N/O
N/O/P
O/P/Q
O/P/Q
P/Q/R
Q/R/S
R/S/T
R/S/T
S/T/U
S/T/U
T/U/V
T/U/V
U/V/W
U/V/W
V/W/X
Figure 7.1 Independent Reading Level Benchmarks (Teachers College Reading and Writing Project)
177
When I look at a class set of reading levels, I keep in mind what I know from
Fountas and Pinnell, from Richard Allington, and from my own experience. I go
through and highlight any children who are of concern because they havent
progressed at an expected rate, because they are far below grade level and just eking
their way slowly from level to level, or because their current level is far away from the
grade-level benchmarks. Figure 7.2 shows one third-grade class years worth of read
ing levels. (The data are real but the names have been changed to protect the students
Student
September
November
March
June
Mamotaz
David
Patti
Rabbil
Jamel
Natalia
Michael
Kayleen
Malik
Jonathan
Sarah
Nelson
Jill
Drew
Cesar
Dora
Christian
Kristian
Rick
Lateek
178
privacy.) As I look at the data, I ask myself, Whom am I worried about? Whom do I
have questions about? Who do I think is making adequate progress?
Knowing that a third grader should start the year around level L and end the
year around level O, there are a few children whose profile raises some red flags.
Malik, Sarah, and Rick are concerns because it seems as though they all hit a slump.
They made progress, but not enough progress. They are leaving third grade at almost
the same level they started. And, in a lower-income community like this one, summer
slippage is a particular concern. It is likely that theyll start fourth grade at the same
reading level they started third grade. Mamotaz and David are concerns because they
entered third grade on-level and are leaving slightly below. They also have not made
adequate progress. Rabbil and Lateek have made some nice gains and need to have as
strong of a year next year to catch up. Many students, including Patti, Nelson, Drew,
and Cesar, are making beautiful progress and leave the year strongly on or above
grade level.
When you look at your class reading level data, whom are you con
cerned about? Who is making adequate progress?
179
youll be familiar with a series, which will help you in your individual and group con
ferring as well.
Once youve chosen your books, read with this question in mind: What makes
this book harder than the one that was one level before it? You might think in terms
of reading skills. That is, how is it that I predict or infer or question differently in this
book than I did in the last? Alternatively, you might think about text difficulties. That
is, what are the ways in which the text is structured or the vocabulary is chosen that
make this book more challenging than the level before it? (See Figure 7.3.)
Often, when I offer this advice, teachers say to me, Isnt this already written
down somewhere? Although there are guides, like Fountas and Pinnells Leveled
Books, K8 (2005) or Continuum for Literacy Learning (2007), it is essential to actually
do our own reading of childrens literature and analysis of what strikes us as difficult.
The guides can be used as a reference. In doing so, we develop a felt sense for the level,
and this helps more than any discrete list of text difficulties you can find in a book. In
addition, considering the potential challenges allows you to plan your instruction for a
child. Without the firsthand experience to anticipate challenges, it will be difficult to
Retelling/synthesizing
Sentence complexity/syntax
Determining importance
Vocabulary
Words
Questioning
Illustrations
Inferring
Visualizing
Also consider:
Content
Fluency
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articulate and explain them to a child. Also, once you get to know the difficulties at a
level, it will help you to begin to create language around the strategies for approaching
the difficulty. Often I find myself saying, What did I do when I encountered that par
ticular challenge in a text? Or, if it is hard for you as an adult proficient reader to pin
down your own strategies, you might think, What steps would a child reading at this
level benefit from learning to handle this challenge?
A few words of caution with this work. Sometimes youll find that there arent
such big differences from one level to the next. A to B and P to Q are examples of this.
In other levels youll find there are more drastic differences, such as from J to K or K to
L. Its important to not get carried away thinking that there is always this whole huge
set of newness at every level. It might even be better to begin by looking at every other
level of books that represents the range in your classroom, arranging them in a contin
uum. This way, youll see the differences in texts more clearly as you gain a sense for
how challenges and difficulty increase.
The second caution is that doing this work puts a lot of faith in the levels that are
provided to you for the books in your classroom library. Be sure that when you go to
use a book for this inquiry, its been leveled correctly from a reliable source. Know that
there are books out there that are leveled in surprising ways.
For example, Donovans Word Jar by Monalisa DeGross (1998) is a short chapter
book with a very simple narrative about a boy who collects words. One day, his jar of
words gets full and he doesnt know what to do about it. He asks around, discounting
everyones suggestions until one day he visits his grandmothers nursing home and
finds his solution. The residents at the home begin taking words out and appreciating
them, and Donovan realizes that words are best used when shared with people. Very
simple, nothing too hard. Looking at it, Id think its probably an L. When I looked up
the level, it turns out its an N. N?! The only thing I can figure is that its higher than I
would have expected because there are some complex vocabulary words through
outthe words in his word jar. Ive also seen books that are leveled very differently
than I would have thought because of some more mature content, or a setting that
might be unfamiliar. Just one challenging element can throw a book into a much
higher level.
Leveling childrens literaturewhich wasnt written with the constraints of a
basal reader, controlling words and sentence length and content (and thank goodness
its not)is not an exact science. You should not extrapolate that all N books are the
same, but you can make some generalizations from this inquiry that will help inform
your practice. Also, readers bring different experiences and prior knowledge to a book
as well as different understandings of syntax based on the language spoken at home.
These may make a text more accessible to one reader than another. Again, leveling is
not an exact science, but it does offer us ways to more closely match readers and texts,
making instruction more precise and productive.
Lets get back to the procedure for the inquiry. After reading, I find it helpful to
create a sort of strategy menu or cheat sheet to synthesize all of the information Ive
gotten from the book together with possible strategies to teach and questions to ask to
assess and research. If you begin by thinking about text difficulties, you can follow this
procedure to develop your own strategy menu:
4. Questions: Think about questions you would ask to assess how a reader is
handling the text difficulty.
Alternatively, if you begin by thinking about the skills and how they are different
from level to level, you might follow this procedure:
1. Think skill by skill about all of the ways the text might force a reader to use
each comprehension skill.
2. Consider strategies to help a reader who would struggle with that skill.
3. Consider questions that you could use to assess the use of the skill.
Regardless of what procedure you follow, I recommend a four-column chart
with one column for the text difficulty, one column for the skill, one for a question you
might ask while assessing the reader, and one for possible strategies. Such a chart
might look something like Figure 7.4, which I created with teachers at PS 277. To make
this chart, we read a few level P books to get to know the level; then we used Fountas
and Pinnells Continuum for Literacy Learning (2007) to cross-check what we were
noticing in the texts with a reliable reference; finally we came up with the questions,
skills, and strategies we might use to assist the reader.
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182
Text Feature
Ideas and themes that
require the reader to
take an unfamiliar
perspective
Questions
Skills
Acknowledge
perspective
How is the
character
similar/different
from you?
Activating prior
knowledge
Activating prior
knowledge
Inferring
Making inferences
Extensive use of
figurative language
that is important to
understanding the plot
Find an example of
figurative language.
Activating prior
knowledge
Visualizing
Monitoring for
meaning
Making inferences
Activating prior
knowledge
Visualizing
Making inferences
Strategies
Ask yourself, What
idea or theme do I see
in the book that is
also true in the
world? Think about
what your ideas are
about that theme in
the world, compare
that to your ideas
from the book.
Identify how
characters are
similar/different from
yourself, for example,
where they live, daily
life, family structures.
Use what you know
about what makes
your character unique
to add to your
thoughts about him or
her.
Use what you
know already about
the story to
determine what
might be
happening.
Make a movie in
your mind of the
scene to help you
figure out whats
really happening.
Think about your
own experiences
that may be similar
to the setting in the
book.
Text Feature
Questions
Skills
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Strategies
Have you been in
places like this one?
Use what you know
to help you picture
this setting.
Think about other
books, movies, TV
shows that may be
set in a similar
setting.
Complex elements of
the genre of fantasy
Activating prior
knowledge
Longer (fifteen-plus
words), complex
sentence structures,
including dialogue and
many embedded
clauses and phrases
Identify complex
sentence. Please read
this aloud for me.
Listen for fluency,
phrasing, and
intonation.
Utilizing fix-up
strategies:
monitoring for
meaning
Fluency
If a sentence is not
making sense, a
comma can be a
clue of where to
break the sentence
up, for example
what do I
understand about
the first part of this
sentence?
Many longer
descriptive words
adjectives and adverbs
Utilizing fix-up
strategies: decoding
Visualizing
Visualize something
you have done thats
similar to whats being
described as being
magical in this book
(maybe you havent
ridden a dragon, but
have you ridden a
horse?).
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Text Feature
Many new vocabulary
words that readers
must derive from
context
Questions
Were there any
words you read that
you could sound out
but didnt know
what it meant?
What does this
word mean?
Many complex
multisyllable words
that are challenging to
take apart
Skills
Monitoring for
meaning
Making inferences
Utilizing fix-up
strategies: figuring
out new vocabulary
Utilizing fix-up
strategies: decoding
Visualizing
Utilizing fix-up
strategies:
monitoring for
meaning
Synthesis/Retelling
Strategies
Stop when you get
to a word that
doesnt make
sense.
Read the
sentences before
and after the tricky
word to look for
clues about the
meaning of the
word, for example,
partner sentences.
Chunk the word
into piecesread
the word syllable by
syllable.
Look for root
words you know,
prefixes you know,
and/or suffixes you
know.
Use what the
author is describing
together with what
you know about the
place/people like
that to develop a
picture.
Add details to your
mental picture using
all of your senses:
what do you hear?
See? Smell?
Text Feature
Questions
Skills
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Strategies
Fluency
Read it in a smooth
voice, like talking. To
do this, try to find
phrases inside of each
sentence. Sweep your
eyes under the line,
chunk by chunk.
Fluency
Fluency
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readers reading notebook. (See Chapter 2 for more ideas for ways to make reading
visible, and advice for assessing in reading.)
The goal now is to look across all of the information you have and think
about the instructional support the reader may need. Providing instruction within
the childs ZPD (Vygotsky 1978) will increase the potential for successful learning.
When considering the ZPD, you provide the scaffolding necessary so that the child
is able to approximate the new skill with support. Eventually, the child will gain
control and no longer need support by a more proficient other. This way, you are
not looking for a deficit, but instead you are looking for connecting what the child
knows and supporting the beginning of new learning that you will work to
strengthen.
For example, I recently worked with a student who had been stuck in a level K
for months. It was the winter of her third-grade year, and her teachers told me that any
time they tried to assess her in a level L, to see if she was ready to move to the next
level, she demonstrated perfect accuracy and strong comprehension but had a hard
time with fluency. I looked at her conferring notes and found that her fluency had
been strong in her level K books, and she had worked on inferring, a higher-level com
prehension skill.
We determined that in order to support her as she moved to the next level, we
might work with her on reading fluently in level L texts by relying on her strength
of reading fluently in level K books. When I looked at the level K books she was
reading, and then at the level L books that I wanted her to read, I saw that there
were a number of new text formatting changes at level L that might be affecting her
ability to read fluently. Words were now stretched across a whole line, instead of
being broken up in phrases. Words were sometimes hyphenated across a line.
Sentences were longer and more complex. There was more text on the page, and
less white space. To teach her to use her strengths in level Kbeing able to read
phrases fluently when the author had broken it up for youI needed to teach her
how to phrase a sentence herself when the lines and the sentences were longer and
more complex. I could also show her how in a level K book, a page is often equal to
about a paragraph in a level L book, so shed have to pause and think within a page
instead of at the end of each page in order to maintain her comprehension, thereby
affecting her fluency.
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next few weeks. We first deepened her reading in level P texts. Then, when we were
ready to move to a level Q, we used the newly established strengths to build on as we
introduced the next, more challenging text level.
The beauty of using this kind of small group as an alternative to guided reading is that
we give students support with the next level while still allowing choice of book, and the
support that is given is strategic in nature, not based on the specific vocabulary or plot
of a specific book. Giving strategic support will likely help the child transfer this learn
ing from book to book, because strategies generalize to other texts. Capitalizing on the
element of choice also positively influences engagement.
As with all small groups described in this book, its imperative that the children
who are grouped together need the same instruction. Though groups are flexible and
ever-changing based upon students growth, having children with like needs in the
same group offers us better opportunities to meet individual needs. Its best to pull
together a group of level L readers who need the same support. Depending on the size
of a class, and the diversity of levels within a classroom, it could be more productive to
make a few different groups of readers, even though they are reading at the same level.
In other classrooms, it may work out that all of the readers at the same level could
benefit from the same instruction.
In a text-level introduction group, readers with like needs are pooled together
with a book of their choice at the next level in hand. For example, I might pull a group
of fifth graders together who are going to be new to level U books and need support
handling multiple plotlines. I want to teach them about how there may be switches
between the plots from chapter to chapter, and that theyll have to keep up with those
changes and consider how one plot affects the other. Unlike in guided reading where I
introduce the book, in this type of small group, I will introduce the text characteristics
or features, along with strategies to handle those characteristics. Introducing the book
would be impossible, as each child is holding a different book! It is important, how
ever, that children are reading the same genre, as text characteristics and difficulties
will vary with different genres.
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190
to tackle a new bookone that may be a bit more challenging. I know you all have
been so eager to start reading these books youve chosen. I see you picked a Horrible
Harry book, Michael. I think youre going to find Harry quite a funny character! And
Josephine, you chose Pinky and Rex and the New Baby, huh? Is that because you have a
new baby at home? Youll have to see how Pinky and Rex deal with that. And it looks
like youve chosen an Amelia Bedelia book, Jonas. She is something else!
Part of enjoying these new books is going to be reading them with excitement
and expression just like you read your last set of books. Whenever I would come over
to you in partnership time and you were rereading scenes with dialogue, acting out the
characters, it was so convincing! I felt like I had jumped right into your story. I want
you to have the same feeling when you read these books.
I can tell by the way youre all holding your book that you cant wait to dive in.
Before you start, I want to talk to you about a few strategies that are going to help you
when you come across some tricky parts in your new book. When you tackle a more
challenging book, reading smoothly is sometimes challenging. Lets investigate a few
strategies that will help you read smoothly in these books.
TEACH: INTRODUCE DIFFICULTIES AND STRATEGIES There are a number of
ways in which these books make it harder to read smoothly than the books youve
been reading. The first is that youll notice that in these new books, the words go all the
way across a line, whereas in the other books, the lines are shorter. Thats because in
many of the books youve been reading, the author is trying to help you to read in
chunks, or phrases. Now, when you get to your new book, youre going to have chunk
these longer lines for yourself. Watch me read this part in chunks. I briefly demon
strated how I swept under about five words, then another five, and then another four,
and reached the period at the end of the sentence. I used my finger so they would not
only hear, but also see, what I demonstrated.
The next thing I want to tell you about is that sometimes in these books youve
just chosen, when the word wont fit on a line, the author will break the word up and it
will go across two lines. On the first line, youll see a part of a word and then a hyphen,
and on the second line youll see the rest of the word. I pointed to a few examples so
they could see what I was describing. To keep reading smoothly, youll need to notice
when words are broken apart and then whip your eyes around to the next line quickly.
A third thing thats going to make reading smoothly a challenge is that there
are many more lines of words on a page in these new books. I showed them an
example of a page from a level K book and a page from a level L book to demon
strate my point. Authors who write these books have more to say when they are
telling their stories, and youll need to really think about whats happening because
a lot more is going to happen on each page. To read smoothly, focus your eyes on
the book and make sure that your eyes go straight across the line. If you feel like its
challenging, you might take a note card like this one, and put it halfway down your
page so that you read part of a page, take a little break and think, and then read the
rest of the page. Again, I demonstrated what I was talking about.
ENGAGE: COACH THE STUDENTS IN TRYING THE STRATEGIES OK! The time
has come for you to start reading. Im going to have you stay here for just the next
few moments while youre reading your books. Remember to do all the great work
you were doing in your other booksthink about whats happening and think
about your ideas and make sure your reading is making sense. Another goal is
going to be for you to be reading smoothly. So if things get tricky, remember those
strategies I taught you to help you chunk the words within a line, put words
together that are broken up across two lines, and use a card to break up a page
thats really full of words.
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At this point, the students each began to read and I made my way around, coach
ing each one as needed. I helped the children reflect on whether or not theyd benefit
from using a card to split up a page, I coached them to move their eyes quickly to the
next line, and I coached them with breaking up a long line of print into sensible
phrases that sounded right and made sense.
I offered each child about two forty-five seconds to one minutes worth of coaching, I
called their attention back to me.
Readers, youre doing great work. As you keep reading this book youve cho
sen, youre going to have to keep working on that smooth reading weve been talking
about. Make sure youre chunking within each line, whipping your eyes around
when you see a word broken up across two lines, and using a card if it helps you to
break the page up into smaller parts. Keep in mind that this reading smoothly shows
that youre understanding what you read, and that when you read smoothly, it helps
you to better understand as you read. Take a moment before you go back to your
seats to jot some of the things you practiced with me today on a bookmark that
youll keep in your book as a reminder. At this point, the children jotted down the
strategies in their own language. This helped to hold them accountable and was a
support to them as they continued independently back at their seat.
When you feel like youre starting to get tired, or youre losing track of your
reading in any way, you may decide to take a break. The rest of your baggie still has
level K books in it, which should feel very comfortable to you. You can take a break
whenever you need to and get back to the level L book when it feels like its time.
Im going to meet with you all in a few days to coach you some more with your
reading so youll have some more help very soon. Congratulations, readers! You should
each be so proud of yourself for your hard work.
Children are grouped because they are all working to move to the
same new level.
The teacher gives strategic support to the readers for text difficulties.
The group follows the connect and compliment, teach, engage, link
structure.
A child should keep texts at their old level and the one book that
was practiced in the group to work on that week. More group work is
often necessary before a child is secure in the new level.
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You can see from the notes that they all demonstrated proficiency with level P
when assessed using a running record the following week. These students went on one
month later to a group designed to help them move from P to Q, and by June each of
the readers in this group was assessed to be able to read level R independently. That is a
lot of growth in a short period of time!
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196
handle those challenges is some of the best preparation you can do to lead
these groups.
value time spent, volume, and variety of reading. When children are stuck in a
level for a while, it is not uncommon to find that their engagement level, vol
ume, and interest in reading might drop. I often hear children say, But I
already read all the books at my level! in protest. This is one of many indica
tors that a child is disinterested in the books at her level and wants help transi
tioning to the next level.
follow predictable structures and routines. The text-level introduction group
follows a very familiar structure: connect and compliment, teach, engage, link.
This predictability helps children know what is expected of them and what
their role is throughout the course of the lesson. Whats new is how you
engage the children from the start and the teaching that fits inside of this
lesson. Maintain what you know about good coaching as explained in other
chapters in this book.
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Chapter
FPO
After reading this book, you might be thinking, Wow, I have a lot of planning to do.
Truly differentiating instructiontailoring teaching points and teaching methods and
teaching materials to individuals and small groupsdoes take forethought. However,
careful systems for management, organization, and scheduling will make the integra
tion of the ideas presented in this book realistic and attainable.
At one point I realized that as a teacher, I put my planning time and energy
almost exclusively into my workshop minilessonsthe part of the reading work
shop that lasts seven to ten minutesand then I operated on the fly for the
remaining forty minutes of small-group and individual conferring. A major shift
198
students performance, when I shifted to spend more time planning the independent
reading time of my workshop while still continuing to plan minilessons based on
careful assessments.
Throughout this book, Ive shared ideas on how to create conferring menuslists
of questions, skills, strategies, and prompts that will equip you with a variety of ways to
respond to childrens reading while conferring. These conferring menus are one way to
prepare for group conferences. In addition to this planning and preparation, its also
helpful to have a clear sense of how to manage and organize the reading time. In this
section, I answer questions that often arise in regard to managing it all. I will:
review reading workshop basics to give you a possible context in which to con
duct the small groups described in this book.
help you to visualize the room by offering classroom management principles
that allow small-group work to take place
give advice on how to keep track of the small-group work through effective
note-taking systems that allow you to follow up on past teaching
offer tips on how to schedule yourself to ensure you meet individual needs in a
way that is fair and balanced across the week
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200
was essential that we got to our own work as quickly as possible. As we worked, Mr.
Vieth made his way around the classroom, providing compliments and coaching as he
saw fit. Sometimes, he sat beside one or a group of us and modeled a new technique
that he thought might help our piece. Other times, he just gave a passing tip or
reminder or compliment based on what he saw. At the end of the class period, he gath
Reading workshop
ered us back to the corner of the room where we began the period. Before
makes indepen
dent reading an
instructional time.
the bell rang, he shared one students successes and offered us advice on how
This art studio class is a perfect example of what happens in a reading
workshop. There are certain predictable structures in place: there is a lesson at
the start of the period, there is lots of time for independent work, the teacher
confers and works with small groups of students, and the period ends with a teaching
share. Even when the whole class is engaged together in study of a particular medium or
form of art, there is still choice within the framework for students to choose the topic of
their emerging work.
Reading workshop makes independent reading an instructional time. It is a
highly structured and predictable framework in which we as teachers provide direct,
explicit instruction at the beginning called the minilesson, which supports students in
conferences and small groups, allows time for students to discuss their books and
reading work with others in partnerships and book clubs, and ends with a teaching
share. The TCRWPs vision of reading workshops is one that follows units of study,
about one per month, where the whole class is engaged in inquiry into a common
topic such as a genre, story element, or a reading habit or skill.
For example, a class might spend a month studying nonfiction reading, then
move into a unit on inference and interpretation, and then move on to a character
study. Across a childs elementary school career, units of study are revisited with
increasing complexity so that there is a spiraling effect to the curriculum, each year
building on the next. For example, in first grade, children might be in a character unit
of study focused on getting to know their characters like friends and learning all they
can about the characters. Then, in second grade, a character unit might be focused on
inferring about character, determining character traits beyond whats explicitly stated.
Then, in upper elementary school, children might track a character throughout a
series of books, synthesizing information across texts. In fourth or fifth grade, students
might study how secondary characters impact main characters and/or how to track a
characters internal and external journey across a text.
Reading workshops have been written about extensively by Lucy Calkins in The
Art of Teaching Reading (2000), Sharon Taberski and Shelley Harwayne in On Solid
Ground (2000), and Kathy Collins in Growing Readers (2004). Even when there is an
ongoing class unit of study, children still have choice of books and work to read those
books at their own independent level. Reading workshop is a highly effective way to
manage students who each read self-selected books and to engage in rigorous, assess
ment-based instruction. Below I describe each of the components of the workshop in
more detail. It should be noted, though, that even if you dont have a reading work
shop up and running, it is still possible to implement the types of small-group work
described in this book instead of, or in addition to, the types of small-group work you
currently use with your students.
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202
times, we might highlight one or two students whose work can serve as a model for
todays lesson.
The second part of the lesson is the teach. During this part, we usually demon
strate but sometimes use a different method such as example and explanation or
inquiry. The students job during this part of the lesson is to watch and listen atten
tively as they will soon have a chance to practice the same strategy. Most teachers find
it helpful to refrain from calling on students to be involved with this part, or answering
questions, as that sometimes interferes with the clarity of whats being demonstrated
and often causes the lesson to run longer.
Next, the students have an opportunity to practice the strategy during the active
involvement. We find it important that all students have a chance to try the strategy,
not just a few, so we typically ask children to do one of three things: turn and talk to a
partner, stop and jot on a sticky note or in their notebook, or practice out loud or
quietly to themselves. Each of these options is instead of calling on one or two children
to demonstrate their understanding.
The final part of the lesson is the link. In this part, we review whats been taught
and reframe that days teaching point in the context of the larger goal. Often, I will
remind children that they are building a repertoire and that todays lesson is not an
assignment, but is instead intended to help them when they encounter a challenge that
would warrant the use of the strategy.
baggie allows students to stay put during reading time. The sticky notes and notebook
are to encourage students to jot thoughts, ideas, and questions about their books as
they read. The notebook might also be used for longer responses to reading that could
take place at the end of a workshop period or at home.
Once situated, students spend a large chunk of time reading independently,
and on some days meet with a reading partner or a reading club for a variety of
purposes including discussing their reading, stretching and elaborating on their
ideas, helping each other clarify confusion, practice reading fluently, or roleplaying favorite scenes. We may choose to structure the weeks in different ways.
Many primary teachers make time for partnerships every day, whereas in the upper
elementary grades and middle school, students might meet a few times a week. This
is because children in primary grades often need help sustaining independent read
ing for an entire workshop period. Children in older grades can sustain independent
reading and conversation for longer periods of time and are better off having con
versational time set aside fewer times in the week, for longer each time.
During independent reading time and partnership or book club time, we are
actively involved in instruction. We make our way around the classroom working with
individuals and small groups of students in conferences. During this time, the smallgroup instruction described in this book takes place. This independent time is essential
as we tailor instruction to individual needs, keep careful notes on what weve taught,
and follow up on past teaching.
203
204
205
Tuesday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Partnership
(10 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Partnership
(10 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Wednesday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Partnership
(10 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Thursday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Partnership
(10 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Friday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Partnership
(10 minutes)
Read alone
(15 minutes)
Share (5 minutes)
Tuesday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(30 minutes)
Partner
(10 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(40 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Wednesday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(30 minutes)
Partner
(10 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Thursday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(40 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Friday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(30 minutes)
Partner
(10 minutes)
Share (5 minutes)
Tuesday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(25 minutes)
Book club
(15 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(40 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Wednesday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(40 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Thursday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(30 minutes)
Book club
(15 minutes)
Share
(5 minutes)
Friday
Minilesson
(7 minutes)
Read alone
(40 minutes)
Share (5 minutes)
206
library to have double copies of those titles for the children to borrow), and also keep
up an independent reading life outside of the partnership. These partnerships meet a
few times a week for about ten minutes each time for discussions. In the upper grades,
where the books are more complex and the instruction is often more likely focused on
comprehension skills and strategies, the partnership time is spent sharing their writing
about reading and using that writing about reading as a springboard for longer discus
sions where partners come to new insights and ideas about their books.
When we decide to launch book clubs in our class, we often put two partner
ships together to form a group of four. Again, each member of the club reads at the
same reading level and has similar tastes in books. When part of a book club, members
choose books together and set plans for how many pages theyll read before their next
meeting time and the kind of work theyll do as readers. They meet a few times a week
to discuss their books, using their own writing about reading and ideas from reading
the book independently to ground their discussion.
one group in the classroom, I need to know what the rest of the class is doing. Also, I
need to have a sense of where I will conduct my groups to allow for quick transitions
and good use of instructional time.
207
208
To Create a Productive
Context for Learning . . .
Create charts from minilessons
to show a teaching point and
example.
Teach children who need extra
support how to work on their
individual goal(s) they are being
taught in conferences. Have a
place in the childs notebook or
in the childs baggie where the
goal is clearly stated. You may
determine the goal with the
support personnel.
Establish a place in the room
where extra supplies are kept.
Allow children to go to that
center without permission.
The Result
Figure 8.2 Creating a Productive, Independent, Reading Workshop: Anticipating and Responding to Potential
Management Problems
To Create a Productive
Context for Learning . . .
Decide what your rule will be
about bathroom and water: can
they go during independent
reading or do they have to wait?
Make your rule clear and post it.
The Result
Children know what is
acceptable to do and
what is not acceptable
to do during workshop
time.
209
210
To Create a Productive
Context for Learning . . .
Teach children to set appropriate
goals with partners and clubs
based on their knowledge of
themselves as readers and their
own rate of reading.
Make sure that children have
independent books as well as
partner/club books in their
baggie.
The Result
Students know they
will be reading more
than one book at a
time and have ways to
self-manage goal
setting.
Students learn to
respect others right to
some quiet time for
reading. They also
learn how to hold
their thinking for
sharing later.
work with them in an intimate setting on the floor. This is a particularly helpful solu
tion in small classrooms.
Sometimes, group conferring is impromptu. At times, I find myself working
with an individual student, then realize that the whole table could benefit from listen
ing in. In these instances, my small groups take place at the students tables or inde
pendent reading spots. I find it most comfortable to purchase a small foldable
camping stool to carry around with me so that I can settle down next to students at
their own seats around the classroom. Other teachers use a rolling stool or small
kindergarten-size chair that moves with ease.
Keeping Track
In a reading workshop, instruction is differentiated and individualized. Even in classes
with small numbers of students, it is impossible for teachers to remember every indi
vidual detail about each conference and small-group lesson. The better the teacher
takes notes, the more accurately she can follow up with whats been taught and the
better she can plan for future instruction.
211
212
is a little more challenging with this system, but if you keep the same names in the
same boxes, it becomes easy to flip from one sheet to the next.
A second note-taking option is to have one sheet for every time a new group is
started. Dates go along the top of the grid, and students names go along the left-hand
column. On this type of form, you will record the teaching point for the group at the
top of the page. Notes about the amount of support a student needed and ideas for
next steps for that student will go in the center boxes on the grid. See Figure 8.4 for
fourth-grade teacher Brooke Barons version of this note-taking form. Note that not all
of the boxes are filled; this is because some children were phased out of the group as
they became more independent and less in need of follow-up.
Figure 8.4 Ms. Barons Small-Group Note-Taking Form Shows Notes on the Individual Within a Group
A third option is to take notes on separate sheets of paper for each student (see
Figure 8.5). Many teachers with whom I work have a three-ring binder with a
divided section for each child in the class. All note taking during one-on-one confer
ences goes in that students separate section. When the teacher takes notes on small
groups, she writes GC for group conference next to the notes she takes, but still
has the information in the divided sections of the three-ring binder. Teachers who
use this form of note taking say they like being able to see one students progress
over time.
213
214
Figure 8.5 A Note-Taking Form for an Individual Student with One-on-One and Group Conferring
Notes Together
When children are grouped for a longer period of time, as is the case with part
ners or clubs, you might find it helpful to preprint sheets that have students names on
them and record notes about what you noticed during the conference, and what the
students in the partnership were taught. Figure 8.6 shows Tara Goldsmiths version of
this for her first-grade partnerships.
215
216
Scheduling Yourself
In this book I offer many options for types of small-group work to address different
needs. In Conferring with Readers, Gravity Goldberg and I (2007) offer multiple types
of individual conferences as well. This section gives advice for how to keep all of these
options in mind to create a balanced schedule that is equitable to all of the students in
your class.
217
218
communicate through a shared folder that houses all conference notes. We work
together to help the student with one common goal at a time, and we make sure
that across the week the child has a good balance of instructional time and prac
tice time.
Figure 8.7 is one sample of how you might organize your time (not taking
into account pull-out or push-in schedules). To make such a schedule, I sat with
all of my individual and group conference notes and class-at-a-glance grids cre
ated from past notes and/or from assessments of the students in my class. I
thought about how children fit together. I kept track on a separate class list of
names when I put a child into a group to ensure that I was not overwhelming any
Figure 8.7 Sample Schedule for Organizing a Week of Group and Individual Conferring
one student with many too many conferences, or that I wasnt forgetting to put
someone into a group at all. Notice that I also have time set aside each day that is
not scheduled or planned to allow myself to be responsive and pull impromptu
groups, do some kid-watching, conduct a few more individual conferences, or
revisit a group as needed.
219
220
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Index
Accuracy, 31
Active involvement, in minilessons, 201, 202
Adequate progress, 17578
Agency, 6
Allington, Richard (What Really Matters for
Struggling Readers), 2, 70, 176
American Library Association, 81, 82
Art of Teaching Reading, The (Calkins), 6, 147,
199, 201
Assessment, 1566
assessment only conferences, conducting,
18889
assigning and assessing in place of reading
instruction, 2
comprehension, assessing (see
Comprehension, assessing)
conversation, assessing, 6165
engagement, assessing (see Engagement,
assessing)
fluency (see Fluency, assessing)
groups, forming, 1517
preplanned versus impromptu groups,
6566
principles of, 1719
print work strategies, assessing (see Print
work strategies, assessing)
student performance, trends in, 18687
Assigning and assessing in place of reading
instruction, 2
Automaticity, 31
Balanced literacy
defined, 8
as teaching toward independence, 810
to, with, and by of, 910, 11
Bomer, Katherine (For a Better World), 61
Bomer, Randy (For a Better World), 61
227
228
Index
benefits of, 56
comprehension, individual conferences for
assessing, 5860
assessing, 34, 36
group conferences, 1314
individual and group conferences, balancing,
21719
Index
Engagement, 6795
knowledge, 14445
linking from, 78
goals)
reading identity, developing a (see Reading
identity, developing a)
methods, 20, 21
Expression
defined, 31
Flow, 71
Fluency
clubs)
shared reading to develop (see Shared
reading)
warm-up and transfer groups (see Warm-up
and transfer groups)
glossary of terms, 31
3637
shared reading, 33
Fluent reading, 31
distractibility, 8182
linking from, 85
practicing strategies, 84
8384
Formal assessments, 19
Formative assessments, 18
Fountas, Irene, 23
fluency scale, 32
229
230
Index
(Kuhn), 154
Independence
Independent reading
17677
Independent work
Inferring
teaching, 113
Informal assessments, 19
IQ testing, 19
11617, 118
Linking
Minilessons
comprehension with, 58
Modeling
students trying out what was modeled, 7678
teachers reflections, 7576
Mosaic of Thought (Keene and Zimmermann),
43
fluency scale, 32
Not to Read), 70
New York
procedures, 216
Index
201
clubs, 13135
Parsing, 31
Pearson, P. David, 4
example, 16971
value of, 16768
Phrasing, 31
fluency scale, 32
of, 5, 1314
Prediction, 14849
Print work strategies, assessing, 3843
one-on-one conferences, 4243
Prior knowledge
in comprehension, 43, 45
enhance, 14145
engagement, 14445
Prosody, 31
description of, 4
description of, 4
stop-and-jots, 45, 46
description of, 4
defined, 19
Quantitative assessments
defined, 19
Readers
instruction, 5, 68
Reading
fluent, 31
valuing, 5, 12
clubs, 13135
Reading clubs, 2046
Reading Comprehension Instruction in Five
Basal Reader Series
(Durkin), 2
Reading goals
87
231
232
Index
7678
Reading instruction, assigning and assessing in
place of, 2
Reading levels
libraries, 174
comprehension, 5355, 56
defined, 2034
minilessons, 2012
procedures, 200201
Retelling
in comprehension, 44
teaching, 113
Solving, The), 10
5, 1314
Running records
Scaffolding
defined, 10
defining, 15556
engagement, 16062
structure, 15758
clubs
Small-group instruction
benefits of, 56
12425
Index
as conferring, 78
systems)
objectives, 3
following, 5, 1314
productive context for learning, creating,
20710
schedules (see Schedules)
shared reading in, 15657
strategies, explicitly teaching, 5, 1112
tenets of, 514
time spent, volume, and variety of reading,
valuing, 5, 12
Standardized testing, 19
Stop-and-jots, 45, 46
Strategies
defined, 1112
fix-up, in comprehension, 44
practicing, 84
strategy, 84
components, 99109
defined, 67
1078
Synthesizing
teaching, 113
Talk now, 61
(TCRWP), 4, 6
17677
Teaching
component of strategy lessons, 99, 1027
in minilessons, 2012
during reading partnerships or book club
talk, 14650
7071
Telling mode, 3
engagement, 19192
linking, 192
233
234
Index
Visualizing
teaching, 113
Vygotsky, Lev, 4
16367
defined, 164
engagement, 166
example, 16467
Whole-class conversations
Solving, The), 10
43
174, 187