I took away a ton of great ideas from the textbook, Classrooms That Work by Allington and Cunningham, as I was reading about assessment. I loved how the textbook provided exact copies of charts and checklists that can be used for assessment purposes. Finding appropriate ways to assess students can be a very difficult task for new teachers, but I feel that the textbook provided very useful tips. One assessment that really stood out to me was the writing assessment. The article says to have students write about a prompt in the first week of school, middle of the year and end of the year. Then, the students analyze their progress as writers and gain confidence from seeing the progress they have made. This reminded me a lot of the Reading and Me assessment in one of the earlier chapters of the book. I also liked the idea of assessing students' attitudes and interests towards reading frequently during the year in order to provide them with the best possible individual assistance.
How do you think we as teachers can make sure to continuously assess our students on an individual level rather than only assessing them once at the beginning of the year because there is not enough time in a school day?
Here is a cute idea for assessing a student's reading material
http://acrucialweek.blogspot.com/2011/08/assessment-linky-party.html
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Real Life Reading Inquiry
Real Life Reading
Inquiry
When reading the article “Letting
Go of Letter of the Week”, I became very interested in the different strategy
they used to teach reading. I did not believe that students could use
informational print from their environment that they already “know how to read”
in order to read other words. I conducted a study with a six-year-old boy to
see whether or not he could actually read the environmental print and therefore
could use chunking to read other words, or if he simply recognized the print
only when it was seen in its usual context (i.e. M on the McDonald’s sign and
the red and yellow colors included). I studied his ability to read movie
titles, his name, restaurant names, and cereals.
I had confirmed my hypothesis that
children could not read new words based on familiar chunks from words they know
after my very first test. The article gave the example that because students
could “read” the word Burger King when seeing the logo, they could use that
knowledge to know “-ing” when they see it at the end of a different word. I
will not provide a last name for sense of confidentiality but I must provide
the first name of the little boy I worked with in order to describe my first
test. The boy’s name was Tanner. Based on the article of “Letting Go of Letter
of the Week” I should be able to teach Tanner how to read the word “tan” by
using his experience and knowledge of his own name. Tanner can read and write
his name, but when asked to read the word “tan” he broke down and could not
read it. On one hand I was honestly surprised that he could read his 6-letter
name but not read a 3-letter word that starts with the exact same chunk of
letters. On the other hand, I was not surprised because I never believed the
teaching strategy discussed in the article could work, at least not for all
students.
The way I tested Tanner for all the
words I used in my study was by first showing him environmental print and
asking him to read the words. He could “read” the environmental print words
with 100% accuracy. Immediately following an environmental print word, I wrote
down the exact same word in black ink on a plain piece of paper and asked him
to read the word. For example, I would show him a box of Lucky Charms cereal
and ask him to read the words on the box, then I would write the word Lucky
Charms on a piece of paper and ask him to read the word. Not to my surprise, he
could read all the environmental print but could not read one single word I had
written on the paper. I used McDonald’s and Chick-Fil-A (his favorite
restaurant) for the two restaurants to read. I held up the case for The Little
Mermaid because that is his favorite movie and asked him to read the words on
the case. He told me it said The Little Mermaid but then he could not read the
words when I wrote them on paper. I went over several different words with
Tanner, including the word Cars (hoping to relate to the movie) for a simpler
word.
I was really fascinated during this
study and the information I obtained is very useful to know when teaching
someday. In the article the teacher argues that all her students can read after
they all recite the words of environmental print accurately. However, I know
now that children cannot actually read the words in environmental print. I
loved the concept of using familiar words from the environment to teach
students how to read, but I just don’t understand how I could make it work in
my classroom someday.
*Most of my research was based on the information in the
article “Letting Go of Letter of the Week” by Bell and Jarvis. A second source
that I used information from to conduct my study was “Reading Is All Around Us:
Using Environmental Print to Teach Beginning Literacy Skills” by Dede Dodds.
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