Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Reading Practice Intensive - Day 5

 

Day 5 - Planning a Reading Programme

Due to our cluster Teacher Only Day this Friday, today we joined the Tuesday cohort for our Day 5 session meaning that we don't miss our professional learning at the end of the week.  The Tuesday cohort were a lovely group of teachers and we were made to feel very welcome by facilitators Naomi, Kiri and Sharon.  Thank you team!

Like we do each session, we began by looking at how we have gone with our homework tasks.  Unfortunately since our Day 4 session I have had a week off work sick and then once back have taught for a total of 4 days due to release for other commitments.  I have had a coaching conversation and I have been using some AI generated texts for my less able readers related to our hub Inquiry theme, and this has been going really well.

What did I learn that increased my understanding of the kaupapa and pedagogy of the Manaiakalani Reading Programme?

In Dorothy's absence we had a session with Fiona Grant today around sites - one of my favourite things!  I wondered how long I have been using Google Sites - after a quick investigation I found our site from 2016, and man, we have come a long way since then!  I think these students will be 16-17 years old now - goodness me!


It was good to be reminded that our site should reflect the Manaiakalani Programme priority goals:
  • Engagement
  • Personalised Learning
  • Accelerated achievement
  • Empowerment

I am confident that our hub learning site does tick all of these boxes.  I am proud that our Year 4 learners all have our learning site bookmarked and they picked up really early on in the year how to navigate their way around.  Recently when I was away sick for a week I was thrilled to watch a Year 4 group of readers showing their self management skills and getting stuck into their learning without me there.  If we can achieve this with more of our learners this frees the teacher up to actually get on with the act of teaching.

I am a little disappointed that our current cohort of students don't access any of their learning from home and I couldn't confidently even say that any of our parents have even looked at our learning site.  This is quite different from our Covid lockdown learners from 2020, and this is something I want to promote more throughout our hub.

What did I learn that could improve my capability and confidence in teaching reading?

Today has made me think more about a few tweaks we could make within our hub, for example, having the same students for both Reading and Writing, and using mixed ability groups.  I really enjoyed the two sessions Naomi led today about "Read like a writer - Write like a reader."  I cannot wait to see what my students produce using the template that we used today using sensory imagery to create suspense.


We have recently looked at how many minutes a day we teach Reading and Writing so when we looked at timetabling it was good to compare with the suggested 90 minutes a day, 4-5 days a week for Literacy, and 45-50 minutes, 4-5 days a week for Reading.  Our hub coverage is Reading 86 minutes daily and Writing 69 minutes daily.  In Years 3-4 the ideal is three groups per teacher per day, 20 mins each group session - this is what we aim for, with one group working independently each day.  At Reading time teachers should be:
  • Teaching groups
  • Conferencing with students
  • Roving around the space
  • Tracking/monitoring learning (digitally via Google Classroom/Hapara, with Mahi Trackers or otherwise)
  • Observation notes while working with students (e.g. Guided Reading; formative)

Something to think about: Do I give my students enough choice for their Can Do activities? Am I making their learning less fun by taking this choice away?

What did I learn that could be used with my learners? 

I loved all the examples of Hand It in tracking spreadsheets, with percentage bars and emojis appearing when tasks are completed but I need to keep in mind if this would work bridging the gap between Year 3s on iPads and Year 4s on Chromebooks.  I hope to try one out with my Year 4 group.  I am also keen to work out how I can lock the spreadsheet so that each student can only edit their line on it, and also work out how to hide tabs from students.

I am excited to trial both ReadWorks and Literacy Planet in my Reading programme.  I already have my students use Epic but haven't yet set texts for them to read or used the quiz function this year.  


The session about Reading apps was thought provoking - are the apps engaging, do they cost money, is it too much screen time, and is the app fit for purpose? The "why" is more important than the "what" when it comes to Reading apps.  In a digital world it is also important that we don't forget about the non-digital activities: word work, paired reading/listening, wide reading, and writing/creating.

Very soon our Year 4s will begin blogging and I am excited to add this into my Reading programme for those learners.

What did I learn that could be shared within my wider community, with either colleagues, or whānau/aiga? 

  • New Reading Apps that I learnt about today
  • Inference Matrix from our Skill Builder session
  • Narrative Beginnings (and Endings) Mentor Texts posters that each break out group created

2 comments:

  1. Hi Angela, We loved having you join us today for Day 5. Thanks for being engage in the discussions and really reflecting on current practise and where you can see room to tweak it to make it even more effective. I'd suggest that you really embed the use of Epic in your space if you have already started here, make the most of all the features and set the students up really well, then move on to one of the other apps like read works. I really like your reflection on how choice (and perhaps collaboration) work in your class. How much of this do we do and is it effective for our learning goals and engagement of the students? I think the mentor text and the read / write links were a bit hit with everyone! Lots of classes are getting this lesson over the next 3 weeks lol Thanks again for your engagement with our breakout discussions and I hope you enjoy the implementation over the next 3 weeks.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Angela,
    As usual, good to read your reflections. I enjoyed reading your reflection regarding off screen follow up Create activities which can support the LOs and also your reflections on your progress with sites.
    Sarah and I had a discussion last week regarding the making of bookmarks with student's profile and a QR code to their blog to give to parents or grandparents at their conferences in Week 10, inviting them to comment on their blog.
    Maybe worth a try. Came from discussion after seeing Te Ara Tūhura's Digital penpal idea.

    ReplyDelete