Sandra,
I also cannot believe you have 24 students on intervention (is that RTI)??!!!  
I should be RTI'ing half of my class, but I could only handle 4, so I feel 
really guilty now............. How do you do it?

--- On Fri, 5/27/11, Sandra Stringham <sos...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:


From: Sandra Stringham <sos...@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: [MOSAIC] Synthesis in 1st grade
To: mosaic@literacyworkshop.org
Date: Friday, May 27, 2011, 10:15 PM


Its been a very long year and yet today I felt hope for my little ones.  I 
teach 
a class of 33 at risk 1st grade students at a Title I school.  I can't even 
begin to describe the behavior and social issues I have faced this year that 
interfered with learning and still interfere!  Some I have never faced 
before.....a long, long year...but today...

I've been teaching about synthesis.  We began with retelling as a step before, 
then we moved into summarizing and now this week, by using a think aloud, the 
kids observed last week that synthesis is changing your thinking as you read.  
This week, using the book Jin Woo by Eve Bunting, with think aloud and 
conversations, the students decided that synthesis was changing your thinking 
as 
you read and using your synthesis.  I asked the students to draw a picture of 
what synthesis meant to them.  Here are a few highlights:

One student (and this was a student that had severe behavior issues and I was 
happy if she held a book in her hand, right side up, earlier in the year) 
said:  
I think synthesis is changing our ideas and what we know in our schema.  I told 
her I hadn't thought of that before...but she is right...sometimes we have the 
wrong idea in our schema, and as we read, we have to change that as well.  I 
told her how smart her thinking was!!!  Her smile could light the room!!!

Another student--one who used to sing and hum through readers workshop- 
compared 
synthesis to adding details to your writing.  As you read, you are adding to 
your schema-the details that make the story bigger-so your thinking gets 
bigger.  And when you use your schema-you get smarter!

A 3rd student said when you synthesize...your schema gets bigger, too.

Another student (1 of the 24 I had on intervention plans) drew a picture of a 
person growing from a baby to an adult...just stick figures, but you could 
clearly see the progression.  She said synthesis is like growing up.  You 
change 
as you grow and learn and as you synthesize, your thinking gets bigger and 
bigger.

Finally, one student compared synthesis to planting a seed.  Your first 
thinking 
is like planting the seed.  Then just like the seed begins to grow, so does you 
2nd thinking (her words)....then your 3rd thinking (her words) she compared it 
to the flower that the seed grew into.  She drew a picture of the seed...the 
seedling....the full plant...and labeled it with the synthesis stages.

So.....with 1 more week to go....today made it all worthwhile.  Through it all, 
I guess I was reaching them.

I just wanted to share because we had some behavior issues in the afternoon 
that 
really brought me down...and I wanted to end my day...remembering the great 
things they can do.  Why we persevere-it makes it all worthwhile!

Sandi
Elgin, IL

And I'm going to sign my name for the first time as:

National Board Certified Teacher-Literacy; 2010

(Hey...I never get to do that---so humor me!)
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