Hello, 

I have been following this discussion with interest.  I am an Australian living 
in the Netherlands.  I have been a Literacy Coordinator for about ten years.  
At the moment I am studying again, and sometimes work in a literacy consulting 
role with a local international school.  

I am used to teaching inquiry based learning, rather than the thematic 
approach, but the concept of integration into literacy is the same.  In my 
experience you can successfully use materials that stem from your inquiry (or 
theme) in literacy, providing the focus is a literacy based focus.  For 
example, if a group of students need to increase their reading fluency, this 
must be your focus.  Texts at the right level that link into the inquiry or 
theme can be used to support this.  Integration does help to provide authentic 
reading and writing tasks.  If we exclusively use materials from our inquiry or 
theme, however,  we can actually miss chunks of important reading, writing, 
speaking and listening instruction.  I strongly believe that we should first 
begin with the literacy learning focus for the students we teach (based on the 
assessment, teaching and learning cycle) then look to see if we can link our 
inquiry or theme to this (not the other way around).  If we do this, meaning 
can be added to both literacy and to the inquiry (or theme).  

 

Robyn Kouw

  
 
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Sun, 26 Apr 2009 22:18:09 -0500
> Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Thematic Units or Reading Across the Curriculum
> 
> 
> Hi,
> 
> 
> 
> Change is a difficult thing for everyone. It may be that the teachers you are 
> working with are not 100% sure of how to teach the strategies you are 
> discussing. They may also not see why they are important. The more rationale 
> you can offer them, the better. I coach teachers regularly and one technique 
> that works very well is to phrase things in terms of what the students need 
> vs. what the teachers should do. "The students are having trouble remembering 
> the vocabulary for this unit, here are some strategies that will help the 
> kids connect to the text better and remember the vocabulary..." The focus 
> remains on the students- always.
> 
> 
> 
> If the teachers say they are already integrating reading and writing in other 
> subject areas- then consider sharing explicit examples of strategies you feel 
> they need to add to what they are doing. Is it possible for you to model a 
> science or social studies lesson for them where you explicitly demonstrate 
> the kinds of strategy instruction you are referring too? Seeing you in action 
> may make your conversations about Mosaic more meaningful. You could also 
> video tape yourself with your own students if it is not possible to visit 
> other classrooms. 
> 
> 
> 
> Amy McGovern
> 
> 
> 
> > Date: Sun, 26 Apr 2009 15:02:11 -0500
> > To: [email protected]
> > From: [email protected]
> > Subject: [MOSAIC] Thematic Units or Reading Across the Curriculum
> > 
> > Hello friends. I am leading a Mosaic book study with teachers at my school.
> > Many, if not all, of the teachers say they "integrate reading and writing
> > and teach it across the curriculum". I believe this is code for not
> > specifically teaching reading and writing, but rather assigning reading and
> > writing assignments/activities, and calling that their instruction of
> > reading/writing. What they are actually teaching is social studies or
> > science, with throwing in reading and writing assignments with no
> > instruction on how to read or write strategically. 
> > 
> > Personally, I believe in the workshop framework for both reading and
> > writing, and believe in directly teaching reading and writing strategies
> > through mini-lessons. They believe, wholeheartedly, that their thematic,
> > integrated approach to teaching is working and best practice. I believe
> > differently. 
> > 
> > How do I combat this response of "integrated" instruction?
> > Am I missing a crucial piece? Perhaps I am wrong here and many of you also
> > use thematic units and content areas to teach strategies. How do other
> > teachers of workshop model classrooms handle the balance between reading and
> > social studies?
> > 
> > Many thanks!
> > 
> > Andrea Jenkins
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > _______________________________________________
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> > 
> > Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.
> > 
> 
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