My next experiment is to figure out a way to promote individual
reading within the classroom. How can I use my mentor teacher’s class library
to promote individual? For this week, we read in the Bomer text about how to
enhance student’s reading outside of school’s required text. And that has
always been the ultimate question among English teachers. At my placement, the
school has, in the past, started a reading incentive program to encourage students
to read outside of school. In past years, they have not promoted it that well.
This year is different; they have changed the name to “The Millionaires Club”
and their slogan is “Who wants to be a millionaire?!” To become a millionaire,
students must read 25 books during the year and that adds up to approximately
reading 1,000,000 words. At the beginning of the year, they brought in a radio
d.j. from the radio station 93.9 and last week the owners of Jimmie’s Diner came
and donated $5,000 to give away as prizes. So they are emphasizing independent
reading more this year.
In my
Mentor teacher’s classroom, she has two full bookcases of books for her
students to use during bell work and to check out and take with them. Some students
take advantage of the reading time every day and are reading lots of books, but
others dread having to read for a set number of minutes each day. But how are
we supposed to expose them to reading for fun if we do not give them time where
we can almost “force” them to attempt to read? According to Bomer, “…those who
have access to books they would like to read are the ones who read a lot, and
they are the ones who do well on tests and other measures of reading success.
Moreover, when teachers devote class time to reading, students are more likely
to read outside class as well because they get interested in their book” (Bomer
2011 pp. 81). But the question is how do we get the others who do not enjoy
reading interested in reading when they are given the chance to read?
According
to Bomer, the goal is to have students read and either while they read or after
they read, go back and analyze what they read. That is how they are to get
knowledge out of what they read. And a great way of individually analyzing what
a student is independently reading is, “during this reading time, the teacher
confers…reading conferences are powerful opportunities to expand the thinking
that students are able to do…” (Bomer, 2011, pp. 82). I can see how I can
integrate these reading conferences into the daily routine at my placement. My
goal would be to choose two or three students a day to conference with. I would
choose students who I know have been consistently reading the same book and
would be able to answer my questions. And then the goal for the future would be
to build up the importance of these conferences to encourage other students to
read the same book each day.
I really
want to try this in my placement. If the students are really enjoying a book
enough to continue and finish reading it, I personally think they would love to
talk about it with someone who would be interested in hearing what they say.
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