Tena wrote:
Do you require book logs and book reports on independent reading? Do
you require genre focus on independent reading. Pros? Cons?

Pam writes:
No & Yes. No to book logs (this year) as my reading teacher requires 
it. Frankly, I was glad to drop that battle. I do require a book 
project (in lieu of an old-fashioned report) and in an attempt to keep 
things differentiated with choice and interesting. Probably closer to 
what I remember doing that the kids think is a grind (or at least the 
majority do) is a reading journal letter. My excellent readers & 
writers don't seem to mind it too much. My struggling readers dread it. 
It requires quite a bit of sifting for meaning and making of personal 
connections with a text. I also continue to require it as I have 
consistently had students who report at the end of the year that they 
feel they learned more from RJL's than anything else we did. I've also 
had students return and tell me how useful that knowledge was in high 
school. So, I continue to insist.

I admit that I'm already questioning whether it's a battle I'll want to 
face next year or not. I'll be on a new team due to a reorganization at 
my school and there will not be any self-contained ESE. Everyone, 
irregardless of their disability and reading/writing levels will be out 
in the mainstream. To say that I'm nervous just doesn't cover it. I get 
how to accomodate those who can only write a paragraph and not a page & 
half letter. What do I do for the student who in an emergent reader and 
can't write a complete sentence without help WHILE I'm trying to teach 
the 6th grader who is bored out of his/her skull as they are reading at 
a high school level? My district doesn't allow for our students to be 
tracked or separated by ability. This means that unless I go subversive 
(can only happen if my team agrees anyway), I will have that range of 
gifted to non-reader with behavior extremes all at the same time. 
Anyone got any suggestions who have lived through this "blending" of 
abilities without another adult in the room?


 :o) Pam/6th gr./FL
An education isn't how much you have committed to memory, or even how 
much you know. It's being able to differentiate between what you do 
know and what you don't.
Anatole France (1844 - 1924)



-----Original Message-----
From: TLP <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Lit Site <[email protected]>; MT <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sun, 24 Feb 2008 9:16 pm
Subject: [LIT] Book reports back in style?



Do you require book logs and book reports on independent reading? Do
you require genre focus on independent reading. Pros? Cons?

After eliminating the book report, suggesting, but not requiring
genres, ( especially for my struggling readers who are whipping
through Alex Rider, The Bluford and Maximum Ride series) and having
book talks replace the book report, my kids are clamoring for a good
old book report project. I know they read (cause they do it with me!)
but when will I learn that no one way is the best way! --Thus the
Face-Book report ( far from old fashioned but still reporting the
basics from a book..just in a unique way)
Tena

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