"A reader
lives a thousand lives before he dies...
The man who never
reads lives only one."

- George R.R. Martin

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Reading Conversations


Note: All quotes and page numbers correlate to Nancie Atwell’s Second Edition of In the Middle: New Understandings About Writing, Reading and Learning.

I wanted to take today to reflect on reading letter writing that Nancie Atwell uses and suggests. This procedure makes a lot for sense to me as a 7th grade English teacher. This year I have had to teach letter writing and responding to reading. However, they have been isolated and as a result have not stuck with my kids. I am 300 pages into the book now, and will go back and reflect on some other important sections of the book, but wanted to make sure I took the time and reflected on how to create reading response journals and how I plan to use them next year.

I will be using Nancie’s model for her introductory letter for her student’s journals. She types out a letter that introduces the reading journal and the requirements and weekly expectations for the journal. This letter is attached to the inside of each student’s journal. She admits “Although I know it will take kids a while to get the hang of the system, its rules and regulations are in place from the beginning; so are my expectations” (297).

Upon receipt of their journals, students are to “number the pages because this data…[is reported] to their parents at the end of each grading period, along with the number of books and the range of genres represented”(297).
I also plan on using the same expectations as Nancie Atwell:
“Students write and answer letters both during the workshop and for homework. This means that at any given time in reading workshop some students will be reading, some will be writing letters in their own journals, some will be answering letters in others’ journals, and some will be retrieving or delivering notebooks. All of this happens silently. The twenty-four hour rule about writing back ensure that letters answered outside of the class are back in time for the next days’ workshop, and that students don’t loose track of each other’s journals” (297).

When I started teaching our department was using SSR logs in which student explained three details of the text they were reading and either made a prediction, or connection, or asked a question. However, the only accountability with this was that students got a grade for their work. I think the Journals would help students be more motivated as they are writing to their friends and the requirement is not to be writing every night about what they read.

Nancie also has a suggested weekly homework schedule in which students read for a half an hour each night. Ultimately their logs and their end of the quarter reading list they develop track their overall reading.
I will reflect more on Evaluation of the reading and Writing Workshop later. Until next time.

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