Shared Reading

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Transcript Shared Reading

Welcome
1
Objectives
• Watch “Shared Reading” video and reflect
with groups
• Define “Shared Reading”
• Discuss the benefits of Shared Reading
• Discuss helpful materials and resources
• Discuss possible lesson ideas
• Block Party : Pre-reading text based activity
• Each person receives a quote. Think about
what the quote means to you and Readers
Workshop.
• Mingle and share your quotes in pairs. Mingle
and share with others.
• Whole group share of ideas and questions
Shared Reading
“Shared Reading is a form of reading aloud to
children with a dual focus. In addition to
reading a good book for enjoyment and
understanding, the teacher and children can
read for teaching and learning literacy
concepts and strategies.”
- Parks (2002)
What Does it Look Like--Shared Reading
• In Shared Reading the text is enlarged using a big book, chart,
or projected text so the text is visible to the students at all
times.
• Provides an opportunity for the teacher to demonstrate
phrased, fluent reading and to draw attention to critical
concepts about print
• The text is selected to meet the needs of the students,
enabling them to actively participate in the reading of the text.
Reading about Shared Reading
•Text Savvy Excerpt-everyone
•Shared Reading in the Intermediate
Grades(Group 1)
•Shared Reading to Build Vocabulary
and Comprehension Group 2
•Chalk Talk
How Shared
Reading Differs
from Read Aloud
Shared reading complements
and extends interactive read
aloud, but there is one critical
difference--especially for the
youngest learners.
In shared reading, students can
see the text. This allows the
teacher to clearly and explicitly
show what proficient readers do
to meet the challenges of text.
Why Shared Reading…
•
We know from Vygotsky, that
children can do more and learn more
with the support of a “more expert
other” than they can do and learn by
themselves.
•
During shared reading, learners observe
an “expert” doing what s/he genuinely
does (to make meaning) in the most
authentic way (in the act of reading)
and are encouraged to engage in the
task.
Benefits of Shared Reading
1.
2.
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4.
Allows students to enjoy materials that they may not be able to read on their own.
Ensures that all students feel successful by providing support to the entire group.
Students act as though they are reading.
Helps novice readers learn about the relationship between oral language and
printed language.
5. Assists students in learning where to look and/or focus their attention.
6. Supports students as they gain awareness of symbols and print conventions, while
constructing meaning from text read.
7. Assists students in making connections between background knowledge and new
information.
8. Focuses on and helps develop concepts about print and phonemic connections.
9. Helps in teaching frequently used vocabulary.
10. Encourages prediction in reading.
11. Helps students develop a sense of story and increases comprehension.
http://www.prel.org/toolkit/pdf/teach/Shared%20Reading.pdf
General design for a Shared Reading
lesson
• Generally begins with rereading of something
familiar
• Then a new text is introduced or another
reading is revisited for in-depth rereading and
discussion
• Finally there is an explicit mini-lesson either
preplanned based on previous in-depth
reading or as a result of that day’s lesson
What did you…
Watch the Video
How does Shared Reading fit in?
I Do, You Watch – Demonstration
The fluent reading on the first entry into the text
Think aloud by the teacher
I Do, You Help - Shared Demonstration
Students participate in the reading, practicing the
strategy with the teacher
Response by students – post its, etc.
I Do, You Do—Students apply what they learned or
work with partner
Elementary Grades
Shared Reading Video
• What techniques did the teacher use to encourage student
involvement during the reading process?
• What materials were useful during the lesson?
• How did the shared reading lesson exemplify “purposeful
instruction”?
• How did the teacher select the text that would be used
during the shared reading lesson
Subsequent Readings
“The repeated readings of the same story serve various
purposes. The first reading is for enjoyment; the
second may focus on building and extending
comprehension of the selection; a third might focus
attention on the interesting language and
vocabulary; a fourth might focus on decoding, using
the words in the selection as a starting point for
teaching word identification skills”
(Yaden, 1989).
Student Involvement During Shared
Reading
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“Turn and Talk”
Mouth the words
You read, I read
Cloze reading
Choral reading
Dramatization
Read to yourself then read along
Shared
Reading Upper Elementary Grades
• Video
• Shared Reading and Annotation
Shared Reading Lesson Overview
Summer of the Shark Text
Summer of the Shark Lesson Plan
Immigrant Kids
Immigrant Kids Planner
Oak and Rose
Oak and Rose Planner
Follow along with the lesson plan
• “What We Eat”
Lesson Ideas
Word Decoding
Concepts of Print
• Letter-sound relationships
• Blends
• Onsets/Rhymes
• Following a word through
• High frequency words
• Spelling/Sound patterns
• Word sorts
• Prefixes/Suffixes
• Context clues
• Inflected endings
Etc…
• Title, author, illustrator
• Text features (index, glossary,
table of contents, etc.)
• Headings/Subheadings
• Captions
• Spacing
• Pictures
• One-to-one correspondence
• Directionality
• Punctuation
• Letters, words, sentences
Etc…
Shared Reading Resources
• Student Textbooks
• Content reading
• Trade books
• Magazines (article copied)
• Newspaper article
• Time For Kids
• Big books
• Poetry
Resources
• Toolkit
Lesson Ideas
Comprehension
• Main idea
• Comparing/Contrasting
• Theme
• Cause and effect
• Summarizing
• Sequencing
• Conflict
• Point of View
• Drawing conclusions
• Inferring
Etc…
Reading Strategies
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Rereading
Confirming
Searching for information
Self-monitoring
Making meaning
Reading with expression, fluency, and
phrasing
Cross-checking
Making connections/Schema
Questioning
Visualizing
Inferring
Determining Importance
Synthesizing
Etc…
Lesson Ideas
Author’s Craft
Genre
• Vocabulary
• Figurative language
• Sentence structure
• Dialogue
• Point of View
• Text structures
Etc…
• Fables
• Tall tales
• Folktales
• Fiction
• Nonfiction
• Fantasy
• Poetry
Etc…
Lesson Ideas
Your Turn
Author’s Craft
Genre
• Vocabulary
• Figurative language
• Sentence structure
• Dialogue
• Point of View
• Text structures
Etc…
• Fables
• Tall tales
• Folktales
• Fiction
• Nonfiction
• Fantasy
• Poetry
Etc…
Why We Love Teachers Video
In This Moment song
The toughest job
Exit slip
Shared reading is like
____because______.