Sandi writes:
Either something has gone wrong with the message....OR...something has gone 
wrong with the teaching OR both.

Since I began focusing on each strategy and then build on each one, my kids 
LOVE to read.  I even got a note today saying thank you for teaching their 
child to read because they can't keep her out of the library!  I hear from 
students years later how much they love to read.  

Sandi,
Do you think our difference of opinion could have something to do with the 
grade levels that we teach?  I think when children are learning to read you 
must need to start somewhere and teaching each individual strategy seems like a 
logical starting point.  However, when you have done that for 3 years (k-2) I 
don't imagine it is exciting or challenging any more for many children.  My 
parents thank me for running book clubs and getting off of strategy 
instruction.  Once the child is comprehending what he/she reads at grade level 
or above, I believe they have probably internalized picturing, connecting, 
wondering, etc.  Inferencing may still cause them some difficulty and certainly 
struggling readers will continue to need strategy instruction but when we are 
continually asking for proof of students' understanding of each strategy in 
isolation, I think we are in danger of having children lose their focus on the 
book as a whole.  Maybe I am reading too much into it but twice recently during 
a book discussion my students had "posted" for instances of author's craft and 
had made fabulous connections but when I asked them about the meaning behind 
the book they looked at me like I had two heads.  Once I began the talk they 
were able to join me, but it took some prompting.  I would rather my kids read 
for meaning and were also able to discuss the individual strategies.  This may 
all be due to my administrators insistence that we all teach the strategies 
daily.  She doesn't understand book talk and has said, and I quote, "whoever 
said it was your job to make children enjoy reading."  Perhaps therein lies the 
problem. 
 
Leslie S.
 
 
 

 

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