teaching reading
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Weaving the Threads of Reading in K-12 Classrooms
You Are Currently Browsing Category teaching reading
Posted by KTankersley on 23rd December in teaching reading
I recently came upon this incredible video The Family Dinner Video from a website called Dine Without Whine – The Perfect Gift. The video is beautifully done and I hope you will enjoy the thoughts the author provides about how important it is to spend time with one another as a family. While my blog [...]
Posted by KTankersley on 26th November in teaching reading
We know that good readers are able to picture characters, scenes and events that happen in the books they read. You can help children build their guided imagery skills by asking children to clarify their vision of what was happening in a book. After reading the story without showing children the pictures, ask children to [...]
Posted by KTankersley on 2nd November in teaching reading
As more and more students have ready access to the internet, doing “old fashioned research” in the library with encyclopedias and reference books has become a thing of the past. In the July/August 2008 issue of Atlantic Monthly, author, Nicholas Carr alleges in his article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” that internet search engines have [...]
Posted by KTankersley on 2nd November in teaching reading
Research indicates that there are two instructional strategies that, when done well, can boost students’ reading abilities: Sustained silent reading and direct vocabulary instruction. Yet, says Robert Marzano, no schools or districts in the United States have created programs that combine the two. The strategies, observes Marzano, are silver bullets “just sitting out there.”
Posted by KTankersley on 18th October in teaching reading
In Robert Marzano’s book, Building Background Knowledge for Academic Achievement: Research on what works in schools. (ASCD, 2004), Marzano outlines six steps for maximum vocabulary instruction. They are: 1. Provide a description, explanation or example of the new term. 2. Ask students to restate this in their own words. 3. Ask students to draw a [...]