Amen !

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Beverlee Paul
Sent: Friday, January 30, 2009 8:00 AM
To: Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Reading Mastery, etcetera

Just one more thought:  I'm sure there's lots about direct instruction
that
"balanced literacy" teachers don't know, and I'm sure there's lots about
balanced literacy that "direct instruction" teachers don't know, but
even
with Amy's deep understanding of DI and what it CAN BE (and hopefully,
should be), I find it inescapable that DI operates from a transmission
model
of educational psychology and BL operates from a constructivist
perspective.  That's an enormous difference.  Now...do I see some
self-proclaimed BL teachers teaching in a transmission mode?  You bet.
Probably Amy sees plenty of DI teachers who find a way to make DI more
constructivist.

And as far as passion?  If you peel back classroom environment,
management
systems, materials used, assessments given, facilities designed, etc.,
etc.
... what is left is our personal theory of how people learn.  That's the
very core of us.  That's what education/pedagogy is.  It's the essence.

If we can't feel passionate about that, we need to find a new job.  No
matter what perspective we come from.

On Fri, Jan 30, 2009 at 12:37 AM, Amy McGovern <
[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Sandy,
> You raise a very common question and concern.  I have been studying
the
> elements of balanced literacy earnestly for 4 years now.  I personally
see
> them in Reading Mastery.  But I understand why many teachers don't.
One has
> to pan back and look deeper then most non Direct Instruction teachers
have
> time or desire to do.   Many teachers are not aware that there are
actually
> 6 levels to Reading Mastery.  Levels 1 and 2 are the "learning to
read"
> stages.  Without a doubt, they focus on breaking the code.  But, from
the
> very first little sentence that is read, the kids are asked to connect
to
> the text and the picture.  Every story is read for accuracy, fluency
AND
> comprehension.  What is reading if we are not thinking about what we
are
> reading?  The comprehension questions, like everything else, are
scripted.
>  They cover the full variety-from literal, to inferential to
predictive and
> connecting to the story personally.  In my experience, primary age
kids love
> the stories.  In fairness, I have had some teachers say that the
stories are
> silly or that they themselves don't like them.  But, with rare
exception,
> all of these teachers acknowledge that the kids like the stories.
That's
> what matters.  Although there is a script, teachers still must know
how to
> teach.  If the children are having trouble answering the comprehension
> questions--the teacher needs to know what to do.  Recently, SRA added
a Read
> Aloud component to Reading Mastery.  It is optional.  One of my
teachers is
> using it and finds that it complements what the classroom teachers do
with
> Guided Reading very well.
>
> Kids, like adults, love what they are good at.  In the hands of a
skilled
> Direct Instruction teacher, Reading Mastery does a very good job of
teaching
> kids to be good readers.  I taught at a school that used Reading
Mastery as
> it's core program.  I have since consulted in buildings that use it as
their
> core.  I am currently working in a district that uses DI as an
intervention
> only.  If Reading Mastery is the core program, then the goal is to
> accomplish the early reading levels I and II by the end of first
grade.
>  That means that 2nd graders would, ideally, be starting Reading
Mastery
> level 3.
>
> Levels 3 and 4 are the "reading to learn" levels.  The job of early
> reading, breaking the code, foundational comprehension skills--all
that has
> been done.  Now kids are ready to spend 90 minutes on a lesson that
teaches
> vocabulary, more advanced word attack skills, science and social
studies
> facts and a story.  Plus there is independent work and partner
reading.
> Students also have the opportunity to complete projects that support
and
> extend what they've been reading.  There is also an optional
literature
> anthology.  If the district bought the program with all its
ancillaries, the
> teacher has access to curriculum connections, writing options,
language arts
> activities...really more then most teachers have time to do to be
honest.
>  But it's all there.  FYI:  Children read the stories out loud.  The
teacher
> asks questions throughout the story.  Again, the questions match those
we
> see in a balanced lit approach.  Visualizing, exploring character
traits,
> making inferences, summarizing, predicting...all of these are a part
of
> nearly every story lesson.  Could a teacher skilled in Guided Reading,
for
> example, add even more?  Absolutely.  Would he/she have to?  Not
> necessarily.  It depends on the needs of the students in front of you.
>
>
> Levels 5 and 6 teach classic literature.  The original version of The
> Wizard of Oz and The Odyssey, are two examples.  It's not easy
reading, in a
> good way.  Kids need to think.  Only a very small portion of this text
is
> read aloud.  Students have to respond to questions orally and in
writing.
> The questions cover the full spectrum of what you'd see in a balanced
> literacy lesson. Everything from main idea, inferencing, deductions,
work on
> analogies, similes, metaphors, paragraph writing in response to the
problem
> in the story, analyzing characters, thinking beyond the text... the
list is
> long and this is not complete.  All of these things are in the
program,
> taught and practiced explicitly.  Having said that, students have to
be
> applying the kind of metacognitive skills you are referring to in
order to
> succeed.  Teachers at this level need to be highly skilled reading
teachers,
> who've had program/ level specific in-services as well as coaching.
>
> Finally, it's important to note that modeling is a huge part of the
Direct
> Instruction philosophy.  The Pearson and Gallagher's "gradual release
of
> responsibility" that Harvey and Goudvis write about in Strategies that
Work,
> this is really the core philosophy of all Direct Instruction.  Model a
lot,
> lead the kids as long as they need, then in DI lingo "test" to see if
they
> have it.  If they don't have it, model and lead more.  It's really the
core
> to all good teaching.
>
> Sorry this is so long!  Hard to believe I've offered only a brief
summary
> of the levels.  Hope it helps to shed a bit of light.  I'll say again,
that
> our goals are the same, though the path may look different. Thanks for
the
> question.
>
> Amy McGovernEducational Consultant> From: [email protected]> To:
> [email protected]> Date: Thu, 29 Jan 2009 22:18:17 -0600>
> Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Reading Mastery, etcetera> > Amy,> > I am
concerned
> with it not being a balanced literacy program. Sure it> teaches many
> students to decode simple text and offers them success as word>
callers.
> What does it offer in means of comprehension or development of>
> metacognitive thinking or fostering a love of reading? My school
district>
> offers the use of this program to our special education department. I
could>
> not imagine using Reading Mastery school-wide for every child.> >
Sandy > >
> -----Original Message-----> From: [email protected]>
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Amy
McGovern>
> Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 8:25 PM> To:
[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Reading Mastery, etcetera> > > Although I am
probably
> only courting more negative comments from a some of> you,> I'll risk
it to
> say that the stories in Reading Mastery 1 are extremely> short. In no
way do
> they compare to the length of the average trade book.> The first story
that
> is actually in a story book is only 21 words long (at> lesson 91 of
160). It
> is literally one half page of text in a book that> measures about 4X8
inches
> and it has only one picture. > And despite your thoughts that hiding
this
> one picture is some sort of> punishment...the kids giggle and see this
as a
> game. The picture gives away> the story. If you look at the picture
ahead of
> time, then the climax of the> very short story has been ruined. Most
stories
> in RM1 are one to two pages> of text and one picture. As I said in my
> original post, I was only> scratching the surface of what makes a
lesson in
> RM1 work. > > I am on this site to learn and I greatly appreciate the
wisdom
> and> intelligence of many of the teachers who participate on this
site. >
> There are many ways to teach children to read. If you don't like
Direct>
> Instruction and Reading Mastery, that's ok. But know that it works
for>
> many, many kids. Just because you don't understand the rationale,
don't>
> agree with it or just plain don't like it...That doesn't mean that it
isn't>
> good or effective or enriching instruction. It would be nice to see a>
> greater willingness (on this recent thread) to look at Direct
Instruction>
> with more of an open mind, to question the rationale as a way to seek>
> understanding, rather then negatively judge it for whatever reason. >
>
> Respectfully,Amy McGovernEducational Consultant> Date: Thu, 29 Jan
2009>
> 18:40:56 -0700> From: [email protected]> To:>
> [email protected]> Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Reading Mastery,>
> etcetera> > Renee,> Hiding the pictures wasn't the only thing that
made me>
> cringe.> Elisa> > Elisa Waingort> Grade 2 Spanish Bilingual>
Dalhousie>
> Elementary> Calgary, Canada> > The best and most beautiful things in
the>
> world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt within the
heart. >>
> -Helen Keller> > Visit my blog, A Teacher's Ruminations, and post a>
> message.> http://waingortgrade2spanishbilingual.blogspot.com/> > The
idea
> of> hiding the pictures makes me cringe. :(> > Renee> > >
> _________________________________________________________________>
Windows
> LiveT HotmailR.more than just e-mail. >
>
http://windowslive.com/howitworks?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_t2_hm_justgotbetter_
howi>
> tworks_012009> _______________________________________________> Mosaic
> mailing list> [email protected]> To unsubscribe or modify
your
> membership please go to>
>
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org.
>
> > Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.> > >
> _______________________________________________> Mosaic mailing list>
> [email protected]> To unsubscribe or modify your membership
> please go to>
>
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org.
>
> > Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Windows Live(tm): E-mail. Chat. Share. Get more ways to connect.
>
http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_t2_allup_explore_012009
>  _______________________________________________
> Mosaic mailing list
> [email protected]
> To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to
>
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org.
>
> Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.
>
>
_______________________________________________
Mosaic mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org.

Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.


_______________________________________________
Mosaic mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org.

Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.

Reply via email to