Excellent!  thanks, Sherry!  I love that idea!

Terry

On Tue, Oct 4, 2011 at 8:48 PM, Sherry Elmore <[email protected]>wrote:

> In addition to writing literacy letters, written responses, and reviews, my
> students have learned to love doing their own book talks for the class.
>  They sign up on a sheet when they are ready to "talk" and I require each
> student do at least one talk a quarter. Periodic mini lessons focus on book
> talk techniques and we designed a rubric together for scoring their talks.
> We conclude book talks with a question/answer time.  I have been so
> impressed to see my students take ownership of the classroom.  I take the
> role of another learner in the classroom.  This is a great extension to the
> literacy component but also supports the speaking strand or LA.  Students
> listening to the book talks keep notebooks open and record titles on their
> Future Reading Lists when they hear something that interests them.
>
> Sherry
>
> ________________________________________
> From: 
> [email protected][mosaic-bounces+scourie=
> [email protected]] on behalf of Sue and Paul Therrien
> [[email protected]]
> Sent: Tuesday, October 04, 2011 7:37 PM
> To: Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group
> Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Reading Requirement
>
> Sally, I really like your approach. I am part way there telling them to
> read 20 minutes or more a night and having no parent initials. Some do it,
> some pretend. But I am going to have them set their goals like you do. Plus,
> I like the letter dialog, if I can find the time! Thanks for sharing.
> Sue
>
> --- On Tue, 10/4/11, Sally Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> From: Sally Thomas <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Reading Requirement
> To: "mosaic listserve" <[email protected]>
> Date: Tuesday, October 4, 2011, 3:44 PM
>
>
> My students set their own goals.  We had great discussions about whether or
> not they wanted to use # pages, # books.  We had great discussions about
> the
> value of rereading if one wanted to.  And on and on.   I have evidence of
> them raising and lowering their goals for different reasons (e.g.
> Afterschool commitments etc. for awhile).  Of course at first it took them
> some getting used to.  Did I really mean it?  I shared the "research" about
> the importance of extensive reading but that it needed to be engaged
> reading.  There was literally no way that I could ever really measure that
> -
> it meant that they had to want to read.  Thus their own choices, their own
> goals.   So this was their own goal for a reason.  I did "push" sometimes,
> like in about the third month asking them to graph categories of books (
> categories elicited in a class brainstorm) and they had to plot their own.
> In addition to amount, they had to try a text from one new category that
> month.
>
> Part of the secret is creating a reading culture where it is an activity
> that most (and eventually alll) kids treasure.  Another part is using our
> teacher knowledge to help kids find the books they will love.  They also
> learn to help each other find those books.
>
> Kids took this super seriously.  Think if you are building in this kind of
> thinking (I also did reading dialogue letters once a week - authentic talk
> in writing about a book in the form of real letters back and forth) that
> the
> worry about assessment and the worry about not really reading just
> disappears.  At least that was my experience.  I LOVED this time and the
> letters and the talk.
>
> Sally
>
>
> On 10/4/11 11:06 AM, "Terry" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hello All,
> > Would you share your thoughts about requiring a certain number of books
> to
> > be read per quarter?
>
>
>
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-- 
*Stress (substitue "worry") is a form of atheism; it infers that you do not
believe God is in control.*
*
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