M. Suggs- Module 1
Michelle Suggs
Module 1 Blog
February 9, 2022
Standard 1 discusses having the foundational knowledge needed to be a
successful reading teacher/specialist. This is the foundational standard
because all other standards build upon this one. It is essential that a
literacy specialist has a solid understanding of the theoretical, historical,
and evidence-based foundations of reading, writing, language, speaking, and
listening in order to be effective.
Lenses
on Reading by Diane H. Tracey and Lesley Mandel Morrow
introduces theories and models and the difference between the two in chapter 1.
One major concern for reading and ELA teachers is what to do when a child is
having reading difficulties even after traditional reading instruction and the
teacher’s best effort have been given. At that point, the teacher or reading
specialist has to rely on theories of education and reading to try and find a
solution for the student. According to the reading, a theory of education
refers to “a well-documented explanation for the phenomenon related to teaching
and/or learning. Theories are used to explain learning, motivation, memory,
achievement, and intelligence.” It was also noted that because there are
different issues associated with reading difficulty, there are different
theories that might be able to explain the problem(s).
According to the same reading, all teachers come to the classroom with a set of
theories, whether conscience or unconscious, and those theories are closely
related to the teachers’ behaviors and practices. These theories become part of
their belief system regarding the nature of children and how they learn. For
these reasons, teachers should have a variety of well-researched and effective
educational theories in order to help all students be successful in reading.
Teachers should also understand the reasons behind what they are doing in the
classroom. When teachers become aware of the full range of research-based
theories, their teaching skills can greatly expand; they can select those
interventions that best suit the particular teaching situation, which optimizes
the effectiveness of their instruction; and their understanding broadens
allowing them to coordinate and provide complementary instructional
interventions from a wide variety of theoretical orientations. The reading also
points out that although some people use the terms theory and model
interchangeably, a theory is understanding what may work for a student, and a
model consists of plans and procedures for the teacher to carry out the
understanding of the theory. Understanding the research is only half the
battle; the teacher then needs to apply this research to his or her teaching in
the classroom to effectively help struggling readers.
Why is literacy so important? When a child struggles in reading instruction,
that same child will struggle in all other areas of academics. Visible Learning for Literacy by Douglas
Fisher, Nancy Frey, and John Hattie states that visible learning for literacy
is important for the following reasons: 1. Literacy is an antidote for poverty.
2. It makes life better. 3. Literate people have more choices at work and in
life. 4. Literacy teaches people how to think successfully and build one idea
upon another. 5. Finally, literacy opens the door to other learning. As you can
see, literacy is the foundational building block for so many other areas.
Because of this importance, teachers should do their best to help struggling
readers. This has to be done by understanding a variety of strategies and
approaches based on solid and well-researched theories. There is no single or
simple answer. Different approaches work in different situations and for
different students. Chapter 1 states that great teachers know certain things
including that different approaches work more effectively at different times,
different approaches work for different students better than for other
students, different approaches work differently depending on where in the
learning process a student may be, and finally, great teachers intervene in
specific, meaningful, and calculated ways to increase learning.
Chapter 1 from
Creating Classrooms That Work by Patricia Cunningham and Richard Allington
discusses different research conducted on different teachers/classroom over
different grade levels and even different states for different periods of time
and finds the similarities between the most effective teachers/classrooms. Being
a middle school teacher for most of my career, the main characteristic that
stuck out to me was excellent classroom management. You cannot teach a class
you cannot control no matter how excellent you are as a teacher. I learned that
at my first teaching job, which was teaching English at a high school. I was so
excited! I walked in and began talking to my students, introducing myself and
my English course. The problem- many of them never stopped talking. I talked
louder, but they continued to talk. I learned quickly that before I introduced
myself or my course, I needed to “lay down the law” and set forth my
expectations for behavior. Getting control of my classroom made all the
different in being able to effectively teacher my students.
Several other characteristics stuck out to me from these studies. One was
giving students many opportunities to read and write throughout the day and
throughout different subjects. Many years ago, I taught 5th grade
ELA, and my last year, I was given a classroom full of students who did not
pass many of the sections of the CRCT in the 4th grade. I used
novels to teach across the curriculum. Reading and writing can be incorporated in
all academic subjects, and it paid off for my students that year. Many of my
students were successful on the CRCT for the first time in years. Struggling
readers struggle in all subjects- not just reading. Another characteristic was
that high but realistic expectations were given to each student. Many times,
students will live up to the expectations put on them, whether high, average,
or low. Another characteristic that I know to be effective in my own career is
high student engagement. If the students know that they can goof off the last 5
minutes of class, then that is what they will do. And many times, 5 minutes
becomes 10, and 10 minutes becomes 15; at this point, the students became to be
training that your class and your time is not important. Self-regulation and
self-thinking are also important to me as well. Most students can regurgitate
what a teacher says, but they have to be expected to think for themselves and
become their own “teacher” at times. The final characteristics that are highly
important to me include having a positive learning environment, which connects
back to classroom management, and incorporating a variety of teaching and
activities. I found that the more I learned about my students outside of my
classroom, the more they liked me. Forming relationships with students can be
as simple as asking a student about his or her soccer game the night before as
they are coming in or out of class or going to the chorus concert after school
or writing a student a card after the loss of a grandparent.
This reading states that in conclusion the following
eight conclusions were found in effective classrooms in which all the children
learn to read and write. 1) The most effective classrooms have balanced and
comprehensive instruction. Teachers should not spend too much time on one
component of reading, writing, and literacy. Teachers in these classrooms
provide all the important ingredients, not just one component. 2) Children in
the most effective classrooms do a lot of reading and writing. You must do and
practice in order to learn. 3) Science and Social Studies are taught and
integrated with reading and writing. Many reading skills can be taught through nonfiction
writing that is part of that grades curriculum. I think teachers often get
caught up in compartmentalizing their subjects that they forget that they are
all connected. 4) Teachers emphasize higher-level thinking skills. Base
knowledge is certainly necessary, but students must move beyond base
understanding. Teachers must ask questions that have more than one answer.
Teachers must ask questions that engage students in conversations and help them
problem solve, self-regulate, and monitor their own learning. 5) Skills and
strategies are explicitly taught through modeling and demonstration. Teachers
also remind students what they have been taught and give them multiple
opportunities to apply what they have been taught and how to use the
information independently. 6) Teachers use a variety of formats. Whole group,
small group, and individual learning all have their place in different
situations. The grouping or setting should change from day to day depending on
what the teacher is attempting to accomplish that day. 7) Effective teachers
use a variety of materials. No one single program will work best for all
students. 8) Classrooms are well managed and have high levels of engagement.
Classroom management is the key. No matter how amazing a teacher is, he or she
cannot effectively teach in chaos due to disruptions and behavior management
issues.
Going back to Visible Learning for
Literacy, every student deserves a great teacher, not by change, but by
design. Administrators often use this somewhat annoying statement- “Parents
send us the best they have; they don’t keep the good ones at home and send us
the mediocre or bad ones.” However, it is true. They send their students, many
times with no support at home, no support for the school at home, no
prerequisite skills, no supplies and materials, and the list goes on and on,
but we have to do the best we can with every student every day and not just our
favorites. All students deserve a quality education and a great teacher who
develops strong relationships, knows his or her content information and how to
teach it, and self-reflects his or her impact on the students. Students should
be given instruction not by chance but by design. Teaching takes research,
planning, and preparation.
Great insights from the readings for Module 1!
ReplyDeleteYou wrote “ 1. Literacy is an antidote for poverty. 2. It makes life better. 3. Literate people have more choices at work and in life. 4. Literacy teaches people how to think successfully and build one idea upon another. 5. Finally, literacy opens the door to other learning. ” I reiterate these points regularly when we discuss in my class reading and it’s importance. There are three entities responsible for the education of our students: the student; the parent(s); the teacher(s); and the community. We are only 25% of the equation. Therefore, my takeaway from the module is that I need to take the theories and the strategies I learn, apply them in the classroom, and continue to giving the kids all the opportunity to learn and improve their reading skills. These are the extrinsic rewards the students attain from reading. They have to bring intrinsic desires to want to read. Sometimes it feels like we’re pushing a rope, but we must be consistent and persevere to influence the students with real life experiences that we have had. Good paper. Mr Maples
ReplyDeleteThe longer I have taught, the more I have realized the value of relationships in the classroom. I have seen students make great gains that were expected to not make any at all because of our student-teacher relationship. The more the student trusts their teacher, the more their motivation to learn will be.
ReplyDeleteI applaud your comment that all students deserve a quality education and a great teacher. As a special education teacher, often times, many teachers focus on what these kiddos can’t do as opposed to what they can do. Even though these students have a disability, they deserve a quality education as everyone else.
Ms Suggs, you hooked me with your introduction of graphic organizers. Hence, my lack of support for providing notes that require filling in the blanks, Students have learned how to find the answers to the blanks without reading. As a counter to their workaround, I have introduced Cornell Note taking to my class. Students are required to read, summarize, and organize an effective methodology for notetaking. It has taken some work on my part, but the grumbles that I used to hear has turned into positive reinforcement when students make A's and B's on formative assessments. when asked, students state that the notes helped. Those that did not do well acknowledge that ineffective notetaking contributed to less than desirable results.
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