Transcript Slide 1

Literature Circles
Shelley Blackburn
UNT Teaching Fellow
[email protected]
What are literature
circles?
• Students choose their own reading materials
• Small groups are formed
• Groups meet on a regular, predictable schedule to
discuss their reading
• Groups use written or drawn notes to guide their
reading and discussion; roles are formed
• Discussion topics come from students, guided by
teachers
• The teacher serves as a facilitator
• Assessment is by teacher observation and student
self-evaluation
Why use literature
circles?
• Focus on the same text
• Focus on different texts of a particular
author
• Focus on the way authors use a particular
strategy in a variety of texts
• Focus on different texts of the same
theme
• Focus on different texts from the same
genre
What does the research
say?
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“Teachers who implement lc’s in their classroom are recreating for their
students the kind of close, playful interaction that scaffolds learning so
productively elsewhere in life” Harvey Daniels, Literature Circles, 2002
“Lc’s show how heterogeneous, diverse student groups-including
mainstreamed special education kids-can work together effectively”
Harvey Daniels, Literature Circles, 2002
“Lc’s provides he opportunity for mentoring children in the project of
composing a literate life, for teaching children to choose just-right books
and to monitor for sense, to carry books between home and school, to not
have a lonely reading life, to read a second book by an author in a different
way because they’ve read the first, to have and to develop ideas from
books” Lucy Calkins, The Art of Teaching Reading, 2000.
“The power of working together to make meaning cannot be
underestimated for challenged readers, whether their challenges are
related to language, learning or motivation” Noe, Education World.
6 Ingredients for a mature,
interdependent productive group
(Schmuck and Schmuck 2000)
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Clear expectations
Mutually developed norms
Shared leadership and responsibility
Open channels of communication
Diverse friendship patterns
Conflict resolution patterns
Reading Skills
• Reading and discussing books
• Connecting with books
• Taking responsibility as readers and constructing meaning
together
• Debating and challenging one another
• Making drawings and notes that reflect readers’ ideas
• Asking open-ended questions
• Reading aloud of favorite passages
• Proving points and setting differences by using specific
passages
• Thinking critically
How do I get started?
Choosing books for
literature circles
Teacher Selection
Student Selection
Qualities of a good book
Teach students to make good book choices
Finding books
Provide choice
Meeting a range of student needs
Introduce books through book talks
How much to read
Build in time to preview the choices
Making time for reading
Students select first, second and third
choices
Obtaining multiple copies
Guidelines for interaction –
Shared Inquiry
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One speaker at a time
Explain your thinking
Let other people talk
Stay on the subject
Take your turn at listening
Share your ideas
Show respect for others’ ideas
Form groups and assign
roles
• Depending on age or your class, you can
form the groups ahead of time or they can
form their own groups. (draw names,
popsicle sticks)
• Depending on age or your class, you can
assign roles or have them choose.
• Regardless – BE PREPARED!
Set a predictable
schedule
• Plan ahead
• Make time for it in your lesson plans
• Give students a calendar when they
will be in their Lc’s
Questioning strategies
• The most appropriate kinds of questions are
interpretive, engaging and thought provoking.
They rely on high-level thinking based on Blooms
and are open-ended.
• In general, good interpretive questions:
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Have more than one answer
Uses appropriate vocabulary for students
Focuses on the text
Requires students to take a stand
Are specific to the particular text
Writing Strategies
• Help students understand the purpose for
writing- Thinking aloud on paper.
• Help students find a focus for their writingBrainstorm ideas, model your own processes
• Offer some tools for written response- Diary,
cause/effect, letters to characters, sketching, open-ended
questions
• Teach for in-depth response- model, discuss and
practice
• Assess and evaluate written response- ongoing
feedback and refinement
Making Discussions Work
• Select a discussion format-
decide how you will meet
based on students personalities, goals, experience and needs.
• Teach students how to discuss –
and practice the social skills needed.
model, discuss
• Help students prepare for discussionshandouts, how to actively listen, constructive criticism
• Debrief after discussions to refine skills –
What is working well What do we need to improve?
Share what you have
read and written
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Whole group discussion
Pair share
Table teams
Author’s chair
Extension activities
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ABC book
Collage
Literary Weaving
Story Hat
Accordion Book
Commemorative Stamp
Jackdaw
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Main Idea Belt
Story Quilt
CD Cover
Game Board
Map
Character bookmark
Setting Pamphlet
Assessment
• As teachers evaluate a discussion group,
they should monitor that students are not
only progressing in reading and writing
strategies but also in discussion etiquette.
• Recording the group interaction is
important and can be monitored by
anecdotal notes and record keeping.
References
• Daniels, Harvey. (2002). Literature Circles:Voice
and Choice in Book Clubs and Reading Groups.
Portland, Maine: Stenhouse Publishers.
• Hill, Bonnie Campbell, Johnson, Nancy J. and
Schlick, Katherine L. (2000). Literature Circles
Resource Guide. Norwood, MA: ChristopherGordon Publishers
• Noe, Katherine L. Schlick and Johnson, Nancy J.
(1999). Getting Started with Literature Circles.
Norwood, MA: Christopher-Gordon Publishers.
Online References
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Literature Circles
http://www.literaturecircles.com/
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Literature Circle Booklist
http://www.stenhouse.com/0333.htm
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Literature Circle Resource Center
http://fac-staff.seattleu.edu/kschlnoe/LitCircles/
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Literary Lessons
http://home.att.net/%7Eteaching/litcircles.htm
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Discussion Groups and Literature Circles
http://www.mcps.k12.md.us/curriculum/english/elg_lit_circles.htm
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Literature Circles
http://users.bentonrea.com/~krimsten/literature_circles.htm
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Literature Circles Build Excitement for Books!
http://www.education-world.com/a_curr/curr259.shtml
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Literature Circles
http://www.stemnet.nf.ca/CITE/lang_lit_circles.htm
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Literature Circles
http://www.allamericareads.org/lessonplan/strategies/during/litcirc1.htm
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Writing in the Round
http://www.studyguide.org/lit%20circle%20handout.htm
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Literature Circles
http://home.att.net/~teaching/litcircles.htm