Your Name:RaeLynne
Ferden
Inquiry Two, Part A:
Discuss Your Target Area and ‘Core
Practice’ for Guided Lead Teaching
NOTE: YOU MAY INSERT YOUR ANSWERS TO
THE QUESTIONS POSED BELOW IN A DIFFERENT COLOR FONT. Please name your file with your last name and
email as an attachment to your instructor (example: SmithPartATargetArea.docx)
Talk
with your MT about your idea, and use the information you gained from Inquiry
One to respond to the following guiding questions listed below. Email
your responses to your instructor before our Week 4 class (September 26) AND
post them on your book club blog:
1.
Describe your target area for guided
lead teaching. I will be teaching Unit 2, Week 3 in Reading Street, “Animal Babies in
Grasslands.” In this unit, the target skills and strategies I will be teaching
are:
·
Phonemic Awareness (Initial and Final /p/) CCSS
Foundational Skills 2.e. Add or substitute individual sounds (phonemes) in
simple, one-syllable words to make new words. CCSS Foundational Skills 3.a.
Demonstrate basic knowledge of one-to-one letter sound correspondence by
producing the primary or many of the most frequent sounds for each consonant.
·
Phonics (/p/ spelled Pp) CCSS Foundational Skills 2.d.
Isolate and pronounce the initial, medial vowel, and final sounds (phonemes) in
three-phoneme (CVC) words.
·
Comprehension (Main idea) CCSS Foundational Skills Text 2.
With prompting and support, identify the main topic and retell key details of a
text.
·
Listening and Speaking (Discussions-Who Am I? Who Are You?)
CCSS Speaking/Listening 1.b. Continue a conversation through multiple
exchanges. CCSS Speaking/Listening 3. Ask and answer questions in order to seek
help, get information, or clarify something that is not understood
·
Writing (Genre: Notes) CCSS Writing 2. Use a combination of
drawing, dictating, and writing to compose informative/explanatory texts in
which they name what they are writing about and supply some information about
the topic. CCSS Writing 8. With guidance and support from adults, recall
information from experiences or gather information from provided sources to
answer a question.
·
Conventions (Adjectives for Colors/Shapes) CCSS Language
5.c. Identify real-life connections between words and their use.
2.
Approximately how much time per day is
allotted for your instruction in this area? Reading Street and Literacy Centers
are from 10am-11:20 every day. However from 10:30-11am, we will perform reading
instructions. We also combine our reading and math centers so I may be able to
incorporate a few literacy centers from 12:20-1pm.
3.
Which Common Core State Standard(s)
will you work toward? See number one for specific CCSS standards.
4.
How will teaching in this target area
provide opportunities for students to
learn important content and/or skills that relate to their lives? In what ways does this learning include learning literacy, learning about literacy, and/or learning
through literacy? In this unit plan, students will learn about literacy as well as learn
literacy by using letter sound cues to recognize a few one-syllable words
when presented completely out of context as well begin to associate letters of
sounds in initial/final consonants and understand the alphabetic principle
(that sounds in words are expressed by letters in the alphabet). It is
essential that students continue to develop these skills in order to become
readers and writers since they will do this every day of their lives. Students
will learn through literacy by responding
to individualized and multiple texts by finding evidence, discussing,
illustrating, and/or writing to reflect, make meaning, and make connections to
their past experiences in their lives with baby animals, engage in substantive
conversations, remaining focused on subject matter, with interchanges beginning
to build on prior responses in literature discussions, paired conversations or
other interactions, contribute to a class research project by adding relevant
information to a class book including gathering information from
teacher-selected resources and using the writing process to develop the
project, and explore and use language to communicate with a variety of
audiences and for different purposes including problem-solving, explaining
looking for solutions, constructing relationships, and expressing courtesies.
5.
What types of classroom talk take place
within this target area? To what extent is the talk teacher-led, student-led,
or focused on higher-level thinking? What norms for interaction would you like
to build within your classroom as you teach in this target area (e.g., see
ideas in Chapter 6 of Strategies that
Work, the Berne & Clark 2008 article, or draw from some of the readings
done in TE 402 on classroom talk)? In my unit plan, there will be a lot of different
types of talks taking place:
·
In Kindergarten, we do a lot of teacher modeling. We model
behaviors, skills and strategies that we expect to see from our students. These
types of modeling establish a purpose and provide students with a mental model
for how to complete tasks. When using teaching modeling, I will use questioning
to check students comprehension. However, I also want to activate my student’s
background knowledge throughout my unit. Additionally, as the teacher, it is
important for me to model the academic language I want my students to use. I
can do this during think alouds, shared reading and during whole-class
discussions.
·
There will also be guided instruction to find out what
students already know and what they still need to know. Both the students and I
will be talking during this. Students are asking and answering questions,
talking with peers and with themselves to clarify their understandings, reflect
on their learning, etc.
·
I will also be using collaborative tasks as classroom talk
where students talk to each other and work together (like during writing
workshop when students are in their buzz groups). When this is taking place, I
will be monitoring the various groups and providing any support that they may
need.
·
Students will also be doing independent tasks where they
may be developing their ideas or understanding in their own head.
I
will try to get students to use a higher-level of thinking by not just asking
my students questions to check for comprehension. Instead of just asking
questions for understanding, I want students to engage in a dialogue in order
to really develop their thinking and learn.
Some
norms for interaction that I would like to build is not straying away from the
target area which can be hard with Kindergarteners who want to share a lot of
personal stories, noticing and exploring
thinking and reading, writing, and talking about the content areas.
6.
Which ‘core practice’ do you want to
work on developing/improving as you teach in this target area (refer to
document “Resources for Developing Core Practices”)? How will focusing on this
core practice contribute to your own
professional learning?
The
core practice that I will probably be working most on is acquisition, use and
assessment of foundational skills since it focuses on a lot of what Reading
Street is based on. I think this will really help develop my own professional
development because I am teaching more than just a literacy lesson plan for TE
402 for 2nd graders. Instead, I now have to focus on how to teach
explicitly and use authentic activities, focus on print concepts as well as
phonological awareness, phonics and word recognition, word identification,
fluency and assessing foundational skills to inform instruction to
Kindergarteners-a completely new word to them. Therefore I really have to
develop my skills in this area for them.
7.
What resources within the community,
neighborhood, school district, school or classroom do you have to work with in
this target area?
·
Reading Street and its resources
·
2 other Kindergarten teacher
·
1 other Kindergarten intern at my school
·
Interns at other schools who use Reading Street
·
TE 802 resources including the teacher
·
Library
·
Mentor Teacher
·
Mentor Teacher’s books
·
Smart Board
8.
What additional resources do you need
to obtain?
·
I still need to go through some of my teachers personal
books that she usually uses for this unit and evaluate them to see which ones I
want to use.
·
I need to find out what activities I want to include in my
literacy centers.
·
I need to begin collaborating with my peers, colleagues, my
mentor teacher, and other teachers at Marble.
9.
How will you pre-assess your students
in your target area?
·
I am thinking of doing a child study of several students in
the classroom to find out what they already know about some of the things that
will be in my unit such as the initial/final /p/.
10. What else will you need to find out about all students in
your class to help you develop lesson plans for your Guided Lead Teaching?
·
I need to ask my
mentor teacher what students will need differentiated instruction (I already
have a pretty good idea but that may change as the year progresses).
·
What way(s) they learn
best?
11. What else do you need/want to learn about the ‘core
practice’ to support your planning and teaching?
·
I really need to
review the readings that go along with my core practice so I get a better idea
of what I should be doing.
12. What concerns, if any, do you have about planning and
teaching your unit?
·
My only concern is meeting both my Reading Street standards
and my MSU standards. I think the best way to balance this will be by
supplementing some of Reading Street’s materials and incorporating more MSU’s
style of activities in my literacy centers.
RaeLynne, I think that you will be able to do more with literacy beyond reading street, especially during literacy centers like you said. This will be a great time to implement some of your own unique ideas. I also liked how you included making connections to their pasts, this is extremely important, especially at the kindergarten level. Do you think you will encourage text-to-text connections more throughout the school year? I really enjoy it when students remember books that we've read.
ReplyDeleteWhen modeling for students, do you think you will include thinking aloud for students to notice what we look for and question as we read a text. Although some students may know to activate their background knowledge in connection with the text, because some students may not, so I think it's important to include this aspect in your lesson. Lastly, will you be choosing your own books during literacy centers/read aloud time? What types of books will you be looking for? What connections/themes/concepts do you want to gain from them?
You have wonderful ideas, and I can't wait to hear more about your ideas for your unit plan.