This week has been another great experience in learning how
to use Reading Response notebooks more effectively. I have been doing some more research about
how other teachers use these notebooks—a little bit of Pinterest and other Internet
research, which yielded some great results!
I saw that many other teachers provide their learners with note-taking
sheets and anchor charts that students can tape into their journals to help
them access reading strategies more easily.
This inspired me to write up a small list of expository text features to
hand to students for their notebooks, which is the reading unit we’re currently
on.
I also created a checklist/rubric that I’m going to have my
students fill out every few weeks about their reading response journals—I want
to give them some tools to be reflective about their writing. I made it a checklist modeled after the Lucy
Calkins checklists for writing, which we have already introduced in class and
become familiar with. I am hoping to
give my students these checklists by the end of the week and see how they are
grading themselves.
Here's the checklist:
Reading
Response Self-Reflection
Look over your Reading Response notebook, and circle which
answer BEST describes MOST of the entries.
Be honest with yourself!
I always attempt to include deeper thinking in my entry.
Yes! Starting To Not Yet
I make connections, draw inferences, and ask questions about
the text in almost all of my entries
Yes! Starting To Not Yet
I frequently wonder about what will happen next
in the story or to the characters
Yes! Starting To Not Yet
I provide evidence from the book to help support my thinking
Yes! Starting To Not Yet
I do more than just summarize the story
I write at least 6-8 sentences every time I write an entry
Yes! Starting To Not Yet
I have handled the grading problem in a different way than I
thought I would. I want each student to
get feedback on at least one entry a week, but I have several students who
would like to have more feedback than this.
I have taken to asking students to put their notebooks on the back table
of the classroom if they want to have them be graded, and then also having
students put them back there each Friday if they have not been graded yet for
the week. This makes it so that I have a
smaller number of notebooks to grade each night, as only about 5-8 students want
to be graded each day, and most students so far seem to want to be graded.
I’m also noticing that many students are starting to write quite
a bit more—many are writing about a page in their journals each day. My goal for the next week is to help my
students begin to include reflection and reaction more frequently and
consistently in their journals, since that is the most important thing I am
looking for. Hopefully the checklist
will help make my expectations more clear for students and they can begin to
respond more thoughtfully.
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