Yes...I am on the list serve.  It's wonderful!  And, joined the facebook 
group.  


I love the number sense book...great suggestions.  Number sense is soooo 
important and in first grade I think even more so....catch them early before 
the 
misconceptions begin or get toooo ingrained.  


One activity I really like is just the daily counting routine.  I always did 
have kids count each day, but not in the manner described in the book.  The 
kids 
sit in a circle and I have them count clockwise (they know what that means now 
as well!)  I have them count by 1's, 2's, 5's, and 10's starting at different 
points.  They have to pay attention to what the person next to them says so 
they 
can keep up the count.  You really can see who's got it and who doesn't.  


Friday I had them start counting at 850 by 1's and we went past 900, stopping 
only because of time.  You could see who understood place value as well.  We 
even counted by 2's going to 200.  I like it when we start at an odd number and 
count by 2's...again...you know who's got skip counting and more!

This summer I'll be going on the book in more detail. (It just came out in the 
last few months)  I want to plan out how to do more of the routines within by 
math workshop block.  Looking forward to it!!!!!

Sandi



________________________________
From: "Waingort Jimenez, Elisa" <[email protected]>
To: Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, May 29, 2011 9:12:21 AM
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] reading strategies/skills ques

Great suggestions, Sandi!  Thank you!
Are you on the Guided Math listserv?  Also, can you tell a little bit about the 
Number Sense Routines book?
Thanks,
Elisa

Elisa Waingort
Grade 2 Spanish Bilingual Teacher
Spanish Learning Leader
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

The society which scorns excellence in plumbing as a humble activity and 
tolerates shoddiness in philosophy because it is an exalted activity will have 
neither good plumbing nor good philosophy: neither its pipes nor its theories 
will hold water.
-Former US Cabinet member John W. Gardner

Visit my blog, A Teacher's Ruminations, and post a message.
http://waingortgrade2spanishbilingual.blogspot.com/



Evelia----

I don't worry too much about definitions, but here is my philosophy and 
belief:  

Reading comprehension strategies (using metacognition, schema, visualizing, 
asking questions, determining importance, synthesis) have to be taught right 
from the beginning and they go hand in hand with the decoding strategies (look 
at the picture, think about what is happening, try a word, look at the 1st 
letter, etc). I teach fix up strategies throughout. Just reading the words 
without comprehension is not reading.  I also think you have to build the love 
of reading right from the start.  And to quote a 1st grade student:  "they go 
hand in hand. You can't have one without another!)

I teach first, but when I have tutored the word callers in the upper grades, it 
is HARD to teach them to think.  They can read the words, but not a clue about 
what is really going on in the book---nor do they really love reading.  

I frame my curriculum pacing so that I start with metacognition (I know-it's 
not 

a strategy, but I believe kids need to be taught to think), then move 
into  schema.  I spend a few weeks on metacogntion as I work with them to build 
stamina as a reader.  I use the daily 3 (read to self, read to others, listen 
to 

reading).  I'm also teaching them to decode words.  My little guys read for an 
hour a day (readers' workshop). I teach them to be voracious readers.  If they 
have 1 minute-read a book!  When kids have to wait inside because of the 
weather 

before school-I love seeing them read a book as they wait to come in.)

I would recommend you check out these books:
Comprehension:  Reading With Meaning by Debbie Miller
Comprehension from the Ground Up by Sharon Taberski
The Next Step in Guided Reading by Jan Richardson (and check out her website)
Growing Readers by Kathy Collins
Fluency by Jerry Johns

I also tie my writing and math workshops together with the strategies.  I would 
recommend:
Number Sense Routines by Jessical Shumway
Math Work Stations by Debbie Diller
Laney Sammons Guided Math 
Laney Sammons Math Stretches
Crafting Non Fiction by Linda Hoyt
Units of Study by Lucy Calkinsu

And to be perfectly honest-in my case at least-any book, list serve, website, 
teachers website/blog, I can get my hands on because every child is different 
and you never know what they might do and where to find an answer of what to 
do!!!!!

I hope this helped you some.

Sandi
Elgin
N.B.C.T. 2010-Literacy (I like using this now!)
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