Here’s all the news that’s fit to print from today’s session:
Learning Intentions
- Show you great LA websites – NCTE.org & readwritethink.org & Rubistar
- Experience Six Thinking Hats approach to content analysis
- Critically consider the pedagogy of Whole Class Novel studies
- Engage in a book discussion group
- Understand the criteria creation process for a DE Journal
- Describe a variety of comprehension strategies to use during LCs to help Ss understand literature features
After taking some time to show you several great websites – all available in a previous post – that could assist you in your pre-prac planning (NCTE, readwritethink, Rubistar, & Reading Power) we did the following…
Daily Write
I asked you to consider a decision your character has to make in today’s daily write. We used this piece as a stimulus for conversation in our LC discussion groups later in class.
Whole Class Novel Study
Here’s the process we followed in the processing of Chapter 6: The Whole Class Novel from Student Diversity:
- Meet as a hat group and, using your notes as a tool, consider the topic of WCNS from the perspective of your hat.
- Come up with a slogan that suits your hat’s type of thinking
- Now, consider WCNS through that lens
- Jot your thoughts on the poster paper
- Include a hat of your colour on the poster
- Present your findings in this order – white, red, black, yellow, & green
- We’ll do blue at the end to process the activity
Blue Hat Thinking
- What did you think about the process of Six Hats Thinking?
Reading for Class on Thursday, 1 March 2012
Please read Chapter 7: Literature Circles and Chapter 9: An Integrated Unit in Student Diversity and process the text by creating a TOP 10 LIST – The Top 10 Tips for Teaching Lit Circles.
To get you in a TOP 10 mood, we watched this classic list from Letterman, the Top 10 George Bush Moments:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9w73dVVPRk0[/youtube]
Literature Circles…Revisited
We engaged in:
- another book discussion group – this time with the character-based question from the daily write – as a stimulus for conversation
- criteria building for double-entry response journals (based on the model outlined on page 25 of Brownlie’s Grand Conversations, Thoughtful Responses.
- viewing a webcast by Brownlie on the use of comprehension strategies during lit circles time. That webcast – along with one on formative assessment – can be found here. You can find a list of all BC Min of Ed webcasts on the Index Page. There’s some really good stuff there, if you’re interested…and have the time.
Here’s the handout to support today’s instruction. It includes a day-by-day breakdown of how to work with Lit Circles in your classroom:
That’s all for today.
– Lawrence