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Literature Circles

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Literature Circles Book Study of Mini-Lessons for Literature Circles By Harvey Daniels & Nancy Steineke Renee Finley, MS Reading Specialist Alexis Swinehart, HS ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Literature Circles


1
Literature Circles
  • Book Study of
  • Mini-Lessons for Literature Circles
  • By Harvey Daniels Nancy Steineke
  • Renee Finley, MS Reading Specialist
  • Alexis Swinehart, HS Literacy Coach

2
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3
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4
Membership Grid
  • Discuss the following question with your group.
  • Take notes about your group members responses.
    (You do not need to record your response.)
  • What experience or knowledge do you have about
    literature circles?

5
Goals for the study group
  • Introduction Warm up
  • Share ideas and experiences with literature
    circles
  • Explore key features of literature circles
  • Read and discuss text
  • Discuss the thinking and social skills involved
    in effective literature circles
  • Discuss management techniques and assessment
    options
  • Questions/Concerns

6
Ground Rules
  • Maintain a positive attitude
  • Variation of Home Court Advantage on pg 43

7
Did you know ?
  • The first recorded literature circle was held by
    Anne Hutchinson in 1634 aboard a boat bound for
    the colonies.

8
Eleven Key Ingredients
  • Read the two assigned key ingredients.
  • Annotate the text for meaning.
  • Illustrate your responses on the Eleven Key
    Ingredients Jigsaw sheet.
  • Underline the most interesting, important, or
    provocative sentence.

9
Why Literature Circles ?
10
Why Literature Circles ?The Rationale Behind Them
  • Promote a love of literature and positive
    attitudes toward reading.
  • Reflect constructivist, child-centered model of
    literacy
  • Encourage extensive and intensive reading
  • Invite natural discussions that lead to student
    inquiry
  • Support diverse responses to text
  • Provide choice and encourage responsibility
  • Expose children to literature from multiple
    perspectives
  • Nurture reflection and self-evaluation
  • Source Literature Circles and Response, Hill,
    Johnson, Noe

11
Research on Literature Circles
  • Greater gains in reading comprehension (Klinger,
    Vaugn Schumm,1998)
  • Improved reading achievement in high poverty
    schools (Knapp,1995)
  • Enhanced students motivation to read (Guthrie
    Alvermann,1999)
  • Benefits for second language learners
    (MacGillivray,1995)
  • Increased student enjoyment of and engagement in
    reading (Fox Wilkinson,1997)
  • Increased multicultural awareness
    (Hansen-Krening, 1997)
  • Promoted other perspectives on social issues
    (Noll, 1994)

12
What Really Matters for Struggling Readers
  • Reading volume
  • High-success reading opportunities
  • Engaging in literate conversation (what do you
    think? NOT what happened?)
  • Useful, explicit strategy instruction
  • (mini-lesson)
  • -Richard Allington

13
Whats New with Literature Circles?
  • De-emphasis on role sheets. Instead capturing
    kids responses using post-it notes, text
    annotation, bookmarks, journals.
  • More use of drawn or graphic responses to text.
  • More explicit teaching of social skills.
  • Not just novels. More use of short text-
    stories, poems, articles, charts, graphs,
    cartoons.
  • More nonfiction text, from articles through adult
    trade books.

14
Whats New continued ...
  • Reaching out across the curriculum book clubs
    in science, social studies, etc.
  • Sparking or supplementing out-loud discussion
    with written conversations.
  • Multi-text literature circles (jigsawed text
    sets, theme sets multigenre inquiries
  • New forms of assessment. Fewer reports and book
    talks. More performances (readers theater,
    tableaux, found poetry, song lyrics, etc.)
  • Source Harvey Daniels, 2008, Heinemann workshop

15
3-2-1 Break Card
  • 3 hopes for literature circles
  • 2 obstacles that you might face with literature
    circles
  • 1 question you have about literature circles

16
Read Reflect
  • Read, The Custodian
  • Reading Purpose
  • Mark the text with any questions and/or
    reactions about the text

17
Thinking Skills Social Skills
18
Where to Start?
  • Create a Classroom Community
  • Ice Breakers
  • Membership Grid/Partner Grid
  • Advertise
  • Let the students know its coming
  • Book Talk

19
Where to Start?
  • Model Practice
  • Use short stories, articles, cartoons, whole
    class novel
  • Focus on
  • Good Discussion Skills
  • Questioning Skills
  • Social Skills
  • Establish Classroom Guidelines
  • General routine/procedure
  • Daily materials (journals/post-its/organizers/high
    lighters)

20
General Literature Circle Structure
  • 5-10 minutes Mini-lesson on thinking and social
    skills
  • 20-30 minutes Group meetings (and/or reading
    time)
  • 5-10 minutes Sharing/Debriefing

21
Do Not Assume
22
Gradual Release of Responsibility
  • Teacher modeling I Do
  • Guided Practice
  • Collaborative learning We do
  • Independent Practice
  • Application of the Strategy
    You do
  • Fisher Frey, 2007

23
Silent Literature Circle
  • Membership Grid
  • New Topic What is your stance on global
    warming?
  • Write Around

24
Processing
  • What were three things your group did today that
    helped with the discussion and enabled everyone
    to get along and enjoy each others company?
  • Processing Letter/Journal
  • Checklist
  • Compliment Letter

25
Goal Setting
  • What could we change and do better for the next
    meeting?
  • Compile class list of improvement areas, and then
    have groups quickly meet to create a improvement
    goal.

26
Goal Setting
  • When groups select improvement goal, they must
    identify 3 specific actions that all members can
    take to achieve the goal.
  • Example. Goal Included everyone equally
  • 1. Let the person who talks the least go first
  • 2. Address each other by name
  • 3. Take turns in the discussion rather than
    letting one person ask everything from his
    notes
  • Group improvement goals are authentic assessment

27
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28
Assessment Options
  • Observation
  • Anecdotal records
  • Checklists
  • Conferences/Interviews
  • Portfolios/Work Samples
  • Daily Stamps
  • Group Improvement Goal
  • Student self-evaluation

29
Obstacles?
30
Ideas to remember
  • The teachers main job is not to translate or
    interpret the books, but to facilitate the work
    of the group. (Daniels, p.42)
  • Book clubs are for independent pleasure reading,
    not skills lessons. (Daniels, p.80)
  • Books need to be at students independent reading
    level, or accommodations should be made for
    reading.

31
Ideas to remember
  • Investing time initially in teaching both the
    social and thinking skills is critical to
    success.
  • Teacher preparation and time demands dramatically
    decrease as children become proficient in
    literature circle groups.

32
Gradual Release of Responsibility
  • Teacher modeling I Do
  • Guided Practice
  • Collaborative learning We do
  • Independent Practice
  • Application of the Strategy
    You do
  • Fisher Frey, 2007

33
Trial Error
34
For Next Time
  • Briefly skim Chapter 2 -Getting Ready for Peer
    Lead Discussions

Chapter Reading Purpose Reading Purpose
Ch. 3 Practicing with Short Text Tools for Thoughtful Response Ch. 3 Practicing with Short Text Tools for Thoughtful Response Pick one tool/strategy to try with your class. Be ready to share experiences, examples, and questions.
Ch. 5 Refining Discussion Skills Creating Deeper Comprehension Ch. 5 Refining Discussion Skills Creating Deeper Comprehension Pick one tool/strategy to try with your class. Be ready to share experiences, examples, and questions.
Ch. 8 Assessment and Accountability Ch. 8 Assessment and Accountability Pick one tool/strategy to try with your class. Be ready to share experiences, examples, and questions.
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