Linda, 
This sounds like a literacy "center" I had in my Kindergarten toward  the end 
of this year called, "Book Talk".  Each child chose a book from  anywhere in 
the room.  Then they got together with a partner.  They  looked at/talked 
about one child's book, then the other.  They had  WONDERFUL conversations, 
much 
deeper than they did about their leveled  readers.  They loved this and I loved 
just listening to them.
Jane in SC  :-)    K/1 multi-age next year  
 
In a message dated 6/21/2008 5:28:32 PM Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

I read,  with much interest, your comments on Ch. 6 and the dilemna we often 
face as  reading specialists when it comes to our kids holding leveled texts 
in their  hands.  And, while I agree with everything you shared, I have a 
possible  option that takes leveled books out of kids hands for a short time 
and  
replaces them with what I call "Look" books.

I tried this for the first  time this year with my strugging kindergarten and 
first grade groups.   Every Monday was our shopping day when the kids would 
look for books at their  independent and/or instructional levels to take home 
to read.  This  practice went on for several months until one day I decided to 
see what would  happen if these same children were given an opportunity to 
select any book in  my room with the understanding that they would 'read' it as 
well.  The  'read' assignment became the focus of my mini-lessons to teach them 
how to  'read' illustrations, photographs, graphs, etc. - anything that was 
NOT text -  in such detail that they could have a conversation around that  
information.  Even if the end result was not exactly the message that was  sent 
through the text, I hoped that the interest in selecting the text in the  first 
place would spawn inferences and natural comprehension based on their  desire 
that connected them to the text in the first place.  We call them  "Look" 
books because we do not decode them - we look at them.  Of  course, when they 
find a word they do know, they're even more excited to share  it with me.

The end result after weeks and weeks of modeling and  discussion as a group 
was young, struggling readers (after 'looking' at the  chosen text first) 
sitting with a partner and discussing what is going on in  each of their 'look' 
books.  What originally was supposed to be a 10-15  minute process of choosing 
books to take home for the week, turned into a full  half hour of shopping with 
more interest and asking for time to then share  their special 'look' book 
with a friend.

There was never less interest  in shopping and checking out 'just-right' 
books.  This was always the  first part on our shopping day.  But, the interest 
generated with the  anticipation of finding a text that might have been 
considered 'off limits'  was a real boost for these struggling readers.  

My concern lies  in the classrooms that place so much value on leveled texts 
at the exclusion  of what attracts all of us to texts in the first place - an 
intrinsic desire  amd interest to find out what lies behind the cover based on 
a connecton we  make with that text.  And while I totally believe that 
children need many  opportunities every day to read texts they can decode and 
understand to move  them to higher levels, a few 'look' books can keep that 
interest 
 going.

Linda 


 



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