Have you read The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie?
You haven’t?
Run, don’t walk, to your nearest bookstore or surf your way over to your favorite e-retailer.
Have you read The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie?
You haven’t?
Run, don’t walk, to your nearest bookstore or surf your way over to your favorite e-retailer.
I have been thinking a lot about snowflakes lately, which is strange because I live in California and it is spring. However, my kindergartner is completely fascinated by snowflakes, mostly because each one is unique, like no other in the universe. And not to sound trite, but so are students. Unique. Like no other in the universe. Recently I spoke at a career panel and was asked by a sixth grade girl, “Why do you like teaching?” I stopped and thought about why I liked being a teacher. What did teaching mean to me? As I looked out over the sea of young women sitting there, I knew my answer. I like the puzzle of teaching to the unique. I thrive on figuring out how to make EVERY child learn what is just right for them. I gauge my success as a teacher upon how effectively I succeed at this. I believe that it is this constant need to advocate for every learner that makes this profession so very interesting. Let’s face it–it requires flexibility, creativity and plain old mental Olympics to achieve this in the classroom.
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.
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.