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Thousands of people share the daily teacher tip through Facebook, Twitter, and email. Four of our most popular tips of 2015 are featured below.
From Jennifer Serravallo's The Reading Strategies Book: Your Everything Guide to Developing Skilled Readers.
The best way to teach developing readers the concept of theme is through the analysis of the plot. How can we teach our students about themes that are rarely stated, and must be inferred?
Explain to your students that plot is what happens in the story, while theme represents the bigger ideas of the story. The plot carries the big ideas, and is comprised of events you can track.
Try these teaching prompts:
When students identify the big ideas about what’s happening in a story, they can figure out its central themes.
From Gretchen Morgan's Innovative Educators: An Action Plan for Teachers.
There are commonalities to the characteristics that make our classrooms places where children feel supportive in being courageous. To promote intellectual risk-taking, classroom environments need to be characterized like this:
Reflect on those things that define the culture in your classroom. As you reflect on your practice in this way, write down the things you want to do differently to contribute to a shift in the culture of the classroom, or the things that make your students courageous enough to participate.
From Comprehension and Collaboration, Revised Edition by Stephanie Harvey and Harvey "Smokey" Daniels.
The fact that re-reading really works is well recognized. But the trouble is, kids often see re-reading as a punishment when we command them to “read it again.” Especially if the material seemed “boring” (read: too hard) the first time through, another slog through usually doesn’t seem too appetizing.
Even worse, kids sometimes hear our re-reading commands as some kind of proof that they are a “bad reader” who didn’t get it the first time as (they fantasize) “good readers” do. What strategies can make re-reading interesting?
Try this:
If we want to show students the critical value of re-reading and have them practice it willingly, we need to take responsibility for making rereading seem like an adventure, not a penance. It’s on us to make re-reading feel interesting and worthwhile to kids.
From Wynne Harlen's Teaching Science for Understanding in Elementary and Middle Schools.
Questions that arise from curiosity and the desire to understand have a key part to play in learning science. It is important not to discourage any questions by implying that only some are worth answering.
Fortunately, responding to questions is a skill that can readily be developed. It requires thought about the kind of question being asked, about the likely motive for asking it and knowledge of how to turn a question into one which can be a useful starting point for investigation. (Not all questions fall into this category, of course, but many do. “Why is the sky blue?” can become “Is the sky always blue?” and an ensuing investigation.)
Questions will come up at various times, often times which are inconvenient for embarking on investigations. Although they can’t be taken up at that moment, the questions should be discussed enough to turn them into investigations (perhaps recording them on a wall list of “things to investigate”) and then picked up some time later.
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