I start class this way, and end the morning reading time with a quick "turn and 
share" with a neighbor--What are you reading?  What happened that surprised you 
today as you read?  What connections are you making with the author's message 
in your book?  Can you and your neighbor find similarities or differences in 
your books by talking about character traits,  motivations, changes?  I have an 
anchor chart for "turn and talk" morning chats to get them jumpstarted...After 
awhile, they no longer refer to this scaffold.

Also, when appropriate, I may put a specific question on the board relating to 
a lesson the day before...For ex., if I taught a mini-lesson on how authors 
reveal characters, I may direct the morning "turn and talk" to chat about how 
they are getting to know the characters in their books.

Sometimes, but not everyday, I may then ask them to respond to this direct 
question on an index card, and share out with the class if they'd like.  I can 
use this data to inform me on who is applying strategies, etc. to their 
independent reading, and who I may want to invite for a small group lesson for 
additional scaffolding or practice or modeling.

Have a blessed day!

Melinda Hawkins
5th Grade ELA/SS
McCulloch Intermediate School
Highland Park ISD
(214) 780-2325
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


_______________________________________________
The Literacy Workshop ListServ http://www.literacyworkshop.org

To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to 
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/lit_literacyworkshop.org.

Reply via email to