I started on day one, but slowly.  Our openings and shared work took longer
early on, and the time spent actually doing the work of workshop
(reading!!!) that followed the mini lessons began slowly.  The initial mini
lessons with a new group (I looped, this was generally not needed at the top
of a loop) centered around what readers do in reading workshop, one element
introduced, modeled and added to a list in terms of accountability each day.
At first, I asked for ten minutes of real reading and we gradually (or not
so gradually) upped the expectations until the kids could remain focused and
on task for about 40 minutes.  From day one, my conference table groups (a
separate thing from guided reading) met daily.  All that meant was that I
met with a divergent, mixed-ability group for twenty minutes.  During that
time I conducted conferences.  My first series of conferences always
centered on readerly life. I interviewed kids and spent time talking with
them about their passions (sharks, insects, a certain series, etc.) and
spent time showing them where in the classroom they could find fuel for
these passions.  Sometimes these interviews cost me money--the first year I
had shark lovers I was so blessed to be able to run to my administrator and
beg for money there and then to purchase a large amount of ocean and shark
related nonfiction.  I had two reluctant readers that year that had been the
subject of much concern previously and having identified that passion, knew
how to turn them on to reading.

Early mini-lessons:

How to treat a book (tenderly, with reverence, as a treasure--yes, I modeled
it, by sharing a book I own called Aunt Jo's Scrapbag--a very early title by
Louisa May Alcott, a collection of pretty poor short stories that she
herself wrote in her earliest days as a writer)
How to monitor for engagement  (how to pay attention to self when being
distracted, what some potential distracters might be and how to deal with
them ‹like not sitting next to your very best friend and chatting)
How to select a book for independent reading
How to select a reading spot for independent reading
How to read nonfiction (giving them the option of learning through visuals
and not requiring them to read every word in the more difficult nonfiction
pieces)
How to use a whisper voice or read inside your head
How to stay in one place during reading workshop
How NOT to interrupt my conference table (and later the guided reading
groups)
How to signal a bathroom emergency (and what one is!! In our classroom, they
were Œpee-in-your-pants emrgencies¹) How to use our book logs (which
entailed knowing title, author and illustrator as a start)
The importance of varied reading (leading eventually to tracking genres, and
yes, beginning in first grade)

Anyway, that sort of thing...

Lori

On 8/25/07 8:52 PM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> HI
> 
> I know this might be a little of topic but I teach first grade and this will
> only be my second year doing readers workshop and i'm not sure how to start.
> I know how imprtant it is to model and teach routines right away and i know
> for September I'm doing schema and making connections but i really don't know
> what to do the first few days of school.   Do most of you start readers
> workshop day one?   Do you have the kids do independent reading right from the
> beginning?   Do you teach the strategies right away?   Please give me an idea
> of 
> some of your first mini-lessons.   We do DRA testing the first few weeks of
> school so I will know where they are by week three or so.   I would appreciate
> any 
> help.
> 
> Thanks
> Cami
> 
> 
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-- 
Lori Jackson
District Literacy Coach & Mentor
Todd County School District
Box 87
Mission SD  57555
 
http:www.tcsdk12.org
ph. 605.856.2211


Literacies for All Summer Institute
July 17-20. 2008
Tucson, Arizona


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