Beverlee,
 
I completely agree with you when you say, "Which brings me to my favorite pet 
peeve - when a teacher breaks apart a well-functioning group and assigns roles, 
etc. to teach cooperative learning!!"
 
And, I know I'm walking on thin ice with this comment, but...I also cannot 
bring myself to assign literature circle roles anymore.  (I'm not necessarily 
saying that roles are a bad thing, they just don't fit with my current schema 
for strategy-based book talks.)  I start literature circles within the first 
few weeks of school.  They sort of flow from the read aloud and shared reading 
experiences in the classroom.  The discussion stems from whatever strategy is 
being modeled, practiced, and shared whole-group.  Then, it is approximated by 
students in small-groups.  With scaffolding and modeling by myself and peers 
(along with reading conferences), students start building fluency with the 
strategy and it begins appearing naturally in their responses to text that is 
read independently.  As we add to our repertoire of strategies, the discussions 
become more and more complex.  
 
When I make decisions about instruction, I try to keep the 3 R's in mind 
(rigor, relevance, and respect.)  I also try to think about myself as a reader. 
 In my book clubs, I would not enjoy being told ahead of time what kind of 
thinking/response I had to create when I read.  For me, this is not necessarily 
relevant and is not respectful of my right as a reader to have a genuine 
response to text and share it in a way that makes sense to me.  I have found 
that kids are much the same!  All kinds of sharing is "allowed" during 
literature circle, but if I try to give groups a springboard question based on 
our current focus strategy.  (For example:  "In your literature circle today, 
please begin your conversation by sharing any mental images that helped you 
discover something about the story, the world, or yourself as a reader.)  
 
I welcome comments/discussion regarding the value of assigned roles - I have 
done this every other year that I've taught.  This is the first year that I've 
"broken the mold" and went free-style with my kids.  We have all loved it!  
 
Warmly,
Amy

 
Amy Swan
3rd Grade Teacher
Cedar Creek Elementary
(913)780-7360 
CHECK OUT OUR CLASS WEBPAGE!! http://teachers.olathe.k12.ks.us/~aswancc/ 

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