Welcome to the Mount Annan Christian College Junior School Teacher Blog.

This blog has been developed by our staff to deliver an alternative approach to Professional Learning. We will be exploring a variety of new and innovative approaches to education. Our major focus will be on examining the changing paradigms in education. We hope to share our ideas with each other whilst challenging our current beliefs and practices. We welcome comments from Educators around the globe and look forward to sharing new thoughts and ideas.

Friday, October 12, 2012

CHAPTER 6 - Whole-class instruction


This chapter gives an insight into how the sisters implement whole class strategy lessons which typically in a primary classroom occur three times each day. These include one strategy from Comprehension, one from Accuracy and one from either Fluency or Expanded Vocabulary.

Gail and Joan realised through their vast teaching experience that they needed to move towards mini- lessons in literacy workshops because they fit so well  with what brain researchers say about the limited attention spans of students in whole class settings. Short bursts of instruction with practice in different texts produces a more effective and successful program for students. In the process of teaching a new strategy, reference is given to reteaching, reinforcing and helping students see new possibilities for how the strategies might help them as readers.

“The structure of the Daily Five allows us to purposefully and effectively focus on the needs of our readers. The CAFE Menu helps us intentionally teach strategies that will help students achieve their goals.” (pg 88)

The first four strategies the sisters consistently introduce to the whole class during the first day of school (as mentioned in Chapter 3 and in my opinion seems a lot to tackle on day 1 of the school year) are
  1. Check for Understanding
  2. Back Up and Reread
  3. Tune In to Interesting Words
  4. Cross Checking
Following these lessons, new strategies are introduced based on assessment, age, revisiting and reteaching.

Sequence of the strategies:

The sisters have listed the strategies on the CAFÉ menu in roughly the order they are introduced. Strategies near the bottom of the Comprehension column are usually not used with primary students. (not sure of what the UK class as primary students) It is perfectly appropriate to follow the sequence, alternating between columns to provide a good balance. As teachers gain experience, they generally will gain a sense of what needs to be retaught, how the strategies work together and what techniques work best with their own students.

“We are always trying to find that balance between following the leads of our students and making sure we move through the prescribed curriculum so that we’ve tackled every skill.” (pg 90)

Lesson Elements for Whole-Class Lessons:

An explicit example is given in this chapter for the teaching of the Accuracy strategy Flip the Sound. This models how the following steps/ elements are systematically used when teaching any strategy.
  1. We identify what is to be taught, and share the “secret to success” with the strategy.
  2. We teach the strategy.
  3. Students practice with partners.
  4. We select a student to write and illustrate the CAFÉ Menu strategy card (the first time it is taught).
  5. We review the strategy.
  6. We encourage practice during independent reading times.
  7. We post the strategy after independent practice (the first time it is taught).
  8. We continually connect new strategies to strategies already on the CAFÉ Menu board.

Some other sample lessons are given in this chapter as examples of whole-class instruction which teach the strategies of
  1. Comprehension- Infer and support with evidence using a very fun inferring game
  2. Comprehension- Summarise text including the sequence of main events
  3. Expand Vocabulary- Tune in to Interesting Words
  4. Fluency- Read appropriate-level texts that are a good fit.
This last lesson is an absolutely brilliant lesson where children are taught about good-fit books using the analogy of shoes. Just as our shoes must fit a purpose to be successful so must the books we read fit our purpose and interest.

What did you make of this chapter?

Do you have examples of your own lessons you could share with us?

Gilllian

7 comments:

mrs todd said...

Hi Ladies
This chapter is such a practical way of teaching the strategies to the whole class. The challenge I find is keeping them short. The ready reference forms for each of the stratgies are great. They are explained clearly and have a clear goal to be reached. I find I try and fit the strategies in with writing as well so that they are integrated together, which they do very well.
The lessons are very practical- the one I have loved teaching is the lesson on retelling a story. They use a visual cue of a knotted rope. Each knot represents each part of the story. It helps students summarise the story because of the number of knots. It helps create a physical connection to the story. This lesson worked so well.
Look forward to reading how other people are going with teaching the reading strategies.

Kate

Mrs Gorrie said...

Great summary Gillian, thanks for sharing... I agree those four strategies seem a lot to go through on day one of the year... I believe the UK have these stages in their national curriculum:
~ Pre-school is called Foundation
~ Key Stage 1 Ages 5-7 Years 1 and 2
~ Key Stage 2 Ages 7-11 Years 3, 4, 5 and 6
~ Key Stage 3 Ages 11-14 Years 7, 8 and 9

Mrs. Shabaya said...

Gillian, you seem to have made short work of a very long chapter. Thanks!
It may appear that what is taught on the first day is plenty but bear in mind that the school day in the States is longer than our own. As such, it seems they can do the job of settling students down on the first day and have time left over for all those strategies. Having said that though, my experience was that doing at least three of those strategies on Day 1 gave the students a strong sense of purpose and they got into it right away. They hit the ground running so to speak rather than just easing in over a week or so.

The shoe lesson - a great PowerPoint was shared earlier in the year. If you did not receive it, it can be found and emailed to you. The kids would enjoy it. My students did the actual shoe lesson in their library time and I used the PowerPoint for revision.

One of the lessons the students seem to enjoy is the Reading to Someone using a feedback form. Deb shared this one with us and it may be useful in Kindy too (?) As the students read to one another, they can indicate how fluently the reader is. The reader keeps the form and knows what to work on next time. We have copies as well if you would like to see them.

Unknown said...

I am interested in using the rope and knots to help Prep with retelling a story. Great idea! I have recently been to a PreLit inservice (precursor to MiniLit and MultiLit) which I found very much lined up with much of the 'sisters' philosophy and approach to structuring literacy teaching, especially CAFE. This program also includes 3 structured, explicit teaching segments for reading strategiesm however, for Prep, it is 3 lessons over a week, rather than each day.
Very encouraging to see other well researched and professional literacy material linging up with Daily 5 and CAFE.

Anonymous said...

I love that 'the sisters' understand that whole group instruction needs to occur in short bursts of instruction with practice. I'm finding with kindergarten their attention span is limited.
I also like that the 'sisters' encourage teacher not to just teach a strategy once but reteach.
In kindergarten we have been working on retelling stories.

Mrs Downes said...

Thanks Gillian for your post on Chapter 6. Like Kate, I also find it hard to keep the lessons short. I also love the clear goals we teach the students through using CAFE. There's no guess work.

I loved the shoe lesson. The students loved it! It really gets the point of a 'good fit' home to the students. Could I possibly have a look at the powerpoint Veronica? I didn't use it.

Love the knots idea! I think I'll use it too.

I have loved using visual reminders with the students and I think this helps them remember the skills we are teaching.

Unknown said...

Thanks Gillian for sharing this chapter. From what I recall from earlier on in the year, the show lesson worked well. There is alot to get through on the first day, however the students thrived on the fast pace of the lessons and the variety they allowed. Keeping to a routine so my students knew what was coming worked best in the beginning.