Friday, May 10, 2024

Manaiakalani Reading Practice Intensive - Guided Reading - Day 4

Guided reading is the mainstay of reading instruction in my classroom. However, I was checking every child's reading every time I saw them in guided reading. Doh! I have looked at my guided reading (GR) instruction from university and it wasn't very complete at all. So for the past five years I have been struggling to keep up with the groups and every reader every week. No wonder I have found it to be not my favourite part of the day. Probably not for the tamariki either.


The biggest epiphany is that I don't need to do this! I do have tamariki on the colour wheel which I will continue to work on intensively, however, I can now release the older and better readers and only do observations maybe fortnightly. Sigh. A lot of work over the years for probably little benefit for my tamariki and way too much work for myself. I think I might sit in the corner and cry later today. 

I will be taking a closer look at the more formal note taking ideas from the rōpu and trying various options to see if it works for me or if I need to make changes. Currently I do anecdotal notes which end up all over the place unless I do a probe or other formal assessment. 

Looking at the introduction of the texts for GR, I have probably been a bit loose in my preamble with regards to prior knowledge, and the examples of the more targeted questions and the choice of words was excellent. 

Fluency is something we are working on currently. We have been recording ourselves, but I will now use the fluency rubric to get my tamariki to self assess and then discuss it with them. It will make them look more carefully at the way they are reading DURING their reading, rather than waiting for me to assess afterwards.

This is the first time I have been explicitly taught how to do comprehensive guided reading. This is my 6th year of teaching. I have found bits and pieces here and there about it, and have watched others, but this PLD session has been great on the practicalities of teaching reading and I will be changing up the way I do things as a result. 

I found the Fountas and Pinnell Guided reading framework a good way of structuring my sessions, although I will be introducing the learning intention at the start of the session as well as touching on it during the lesson. I find the more you express the LI, the more likely the tamariki seem to be to understand what and why they are learning something. 

Fountas and Pinnell 2017

Overall I found the session gave me a practical sense of what I should be doing, as well as the theory behind the practice. I am doing most of it, but perhaps not as well as I should be, and other parts I am doing relentlessly unnecessarily. Yay for ongoing learning! I hope my tamariki get as much out of my learning as possible and I'll enjoy changing things up a bit with guided reading and hopefully they will enjoy it more and therefore, enjoy reading more.

Now off to write some feedback for my University!



2 comments:

  1. Kia ora Vicki
    Have you written that letter to your university yet!?
    I am glad that you have taken away so much from today. I have listened to Day 4 three times now and I always take something new away from it. this week, I have been very pointed with providing my students with appropriate background knowledge and not just relying on their prior knowledge, which as we know, isn't always beneficial!
    I hope the last couple of weeks have gone well for you and I look forward to seeing you next week,
    Anna

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  2. Kia ora Vicki. Life long learner in situ! I think you deserve that as a bumper sticker - teaching for six years and yet you can see a different way and be adaptable (and humble enough!) to adopt it and change tack. Totally proud of you! Meryn

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