Why can't you reread a portion of the book for your minilesson, just to  
drive the teaching point home?
 
 
In a message dated 10/3/2008 8:43:52 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


In a  message dated 10/1/2008 10:06:08 PM Eastern Daylight Time,   
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

While I  agree  with this in principle (reading the book at a separate time),
the   lessons I've done out of Reading W/ Meaning have the teacher reading   
the
book and stopping to model and think aloud, using the focus  strategy.  How
would I do that if I had read the book earlier? For  example, if I had  read a
book previously that I plan to teach  inferencing with, wouldn't I  still need
the book to show the children  how I interact with the text? That  is  my
dilemma!





I have found that when I need to read  the book for the first time as an  
important part of the mini-lesson,  (as in the lessons we are doing right now 
on  
what readers do when  they read NEW text) I am able to spread the text out 
over  
several  days, only using the part I need to model for the mini lesson.  I   
may use a different or next part of the same text the next day.  I do  this  
even 
with picture books.  I also try to look ahead to our  writing workshop  text 
models to see where I can use those during  read aloud or how they might fit  
in 
with RW. That way, my teaching  time is not taken up with reading the  text, 
but with USING the text  to model my teaching point.   I think it  is very  
beneficial for the students to see us and hear us read the same text   
repeatedly. 
It is a model for how readers might reread text for  deeper  understanding, 
for 
enjoyment of their favorite parts,  and  also for  improved fluency.  It 
makes 
it OK for the  students to be able to reread the  books in their book bins 
for  
various purposes.  Afterall, that is what they  are seeing that  we as 
readers 
do!  My students really get the idea of how  those  repeated readings of JR 
texts help them to become more fluent with  the  text over time and that 
their JR 
level gradually  increases.  They are  seeing that a book that used to be a  
little out of their reach moves into their  JR level.  At the  beginning of 
our 
lessons on how reader's often go back to  the same  text for various reasons, 
our 
anchor lesson was about musicians and  how  a beginning musician might be 
able 
to play "Mary Had a Little  Lamb" sort of  "choppy" , but with practice the 
musician becomes  "fluent" with that song and  moves up to a song that is a 
little more  difficult, but is a new Just Right song  for him.  We go back to 
 that 
anchor lesson over and over.  It really  struck a  chord  (haha) with the 
children when I brought in my son's  guitar  that day and, expecting me to 
really wow 
them, they  determined that I needed to  practice a bit more:) 
Cynthia  Hart
2nd grade
Lex. KY



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