Archive for January, 2010

iPad in the Classroom

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010
SAN FRANCISCO - JANUARY 27:  Apple Inc. CEO St...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

So unless you live under a rock, you will know that Apple launched its much trumpeted new tablet product, the iPad.  Almost immediately Twitter, Facebook and the blogsphere lit up with discussions about how this will change the face of education and publishing.    So as not to appear behind the curve, I will add my $.02 about the product, but more importantly discuss how I believe it will (or will not) impact the classroom.  I will resume our “Ready to Read” series on a day not so fraught with technological breakthroughs.

Ready to Read II: Making Connections

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Over the past few blogs, we have been examining what makes a reader passionate and have been compiling lists of the books we love and adore.   Part of what makes us passionate about reading is our ability to connect to what we read.  In fact, in their work, Strategies That Work: Teaching Comprehension to Enhance Understanding, Stephanie Harvey and Anne Goudvis address this very topic.  They explain that our context, what we have experienced, know, feel and understand plays a powerful role on how and what we learn.   Across the board we find that those that are strong readers will both consciously and unconsciously relate what they are reading to their personal context and will use it to help them comprehend what they are reading.   This experience of making connections with the text helps to enrich the quality and depth of comprehension.  Likewise, most reading teachers know that struggling readers will plow through their reading assignments without stopping to make the critical connections to their own background and therefore they lose out on comprehension.   As teachers, we must examine how we can teach students to connect to the text.   A more in depth examination of schema theory can be found at this website.

Ready to Read Part I: A list for the reluctant reader

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

At the beginning of this blog series, I talked about what I believe makes a reader passionate about books.  In a follow-up, I challenged YOU to come up with the books that made you feel passionate about reading when you were a child.  Thank you to all that participated in the discussion.  Here is the list:

Betsy-Tacy Series, Maud Hart Lovelace

Harry Potter Series, J.K. Rowlings

The Bridge to Terabithia, Katherine Paterson

Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L’Engle

Running Out of Time, Margaret Peterson Haddix

The Trixie Belden Series by Kathryn Kenny.

Ready to Read Part I: A follow up

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

John Scieszka, brilliant children’s author and first National Ambassador for Young People and Literature, has spent his tenure trying to reach the reluctant reader.  He states in his blog on the Huffington Post:

  • Let each child choose what she or he wants to read. I’ll never forget my own son’s reaction reading Little House on the Prairie (a favorite of many readers): “Are they really going to spend this whole chapter making a door?”
  • Expand the definition of “reading” to include non-fiction, humor, graphic novels, magazines, action adventure, and, yes, even websites. It’s the pleasure of reading that counts; the focus will naturally broaden. A boy won’t read shark books forever.

Ready to Read Part I: What makes a child love to read?

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010
Cover of "Betsy-Tacy"
Cover of Betsy-Tacy

Happy 2010!  January is always a time for resolutions and my five-year-old has made hers… “to learn to read really well and to work without distractions.” In honor of her very admirable goals (she is only five after all), I am going to dedicate the next few blogs to the topic of reading.  I suspect that many of the students that you have out there have a strong internal desire to be good at reading.  As an Educational Consultant here in San Diego, much of the work that I do is to support education that will foster excellent reading strategies and skills.

Curriculum Design

At Edstrom Educational Consulting, we create high-quality and cutting-edge assessment products ranging from high-stakes standardized tests to cutting-edge classroom assessment solutions. Our custom assessment products will align to any standards and specifications your business requires.

Assessment Design

Whether for printed texts, eTextbooks or classroom-ready supplemental materials, Edstrom Educational Consulting creates innovative curriculum units that meet state standards and school objectives while focusing on essential questions and enduring understandings.

Instructional Seminars

Edstrom Educational Consulting offers a wide array of instructional seminars to the San Diego education community and beyond. Our seminars provide teachers with cutting-edge curriculum models and units based on the latest educational research for immediate use in the classroom.