Thursday, April 30, 2009

Reader's Museum

This week my class finished writing Non Fiction Newspaper Articles. They researched a specific topic in leveled Non Fiction books, organized their research into "Boxes and Bullets", paragraphed their bullets, editted their work and then published their pieces. This project took about 3 weeks.

I first demostrated how to look for big ideas in non fiction books and how to stay focused when there are so many distractions on a page including bold faced words, captions, diagrams, vocabulary words, pictures and graphs. Next, I showed the class how to find supporting information for the big idea. Through use of boxes and bullets my students gathered a lot of information.

After creating the boxes and bullets, the class used their knowledge of outlining to create basic newspaper articles of multiple paragraphs on one central topic. These newspapers were beautiful. We used Microsoft Publisher and had a Fun Facts section, 1 large article, 1 smaller article of only 2 paragraphs, imported many photographs, created catchy titles and included issue numbers and text formatting.

When all our newspapers were finished I asked the students to lie their papers out on their desks with a comment sheet. I explained that we were going to walk around the classroom and read each others newspapers. After reading, each student then would wrote something kind and helpful including something they liked about the article. My students know they can not say "it was good" or "nice job". I always expect details and a quote or specific connection to the authors work. Here is the video from the Reader's Museum. It was a huge success with the reading teachers and teaching assistants participating also. I recommend this activity at the end of every Writer's Workshop project!

Bibliomania

Here's a site with free online literature.

http://www.bibliomania.com/

Chappaqua Central School District

Here is the district I teach in. Wonderful schools, great programs, strong parental support. Glad to call Chappaqua home!

http://www.chappaqua.k12.ny.us/ccsd/

Chappaqua's Curriculum Maps

Check out Chappaqua's Curriculum Maps

http://chappaqua.rubiconatlas.org/c/etc/login.php?PHPSESSID=8uhvhcm0e85is27pav9mi04s95

Chappaqua Literacy Booklet

What You Can Do To Help Your Child With Reading

http://wo.ccsd.ws/webpages/abonington/files/Parent%20Booklet-II-McKay%20Version.pdf

Chappaqua School Foundation

Founded in 1993, CSF is a community-supported tax-exempt foundation that funds innovative educational programs not covered by the Chappaqua school district budget.
http://www.chappaquaschoolfoundation.org/Home.asp

Classroom 2.0

Live web events connecting educators to discuss current topics in education.

http://live.classroom20.com/calendar.html

ESL and the Reading Workshop

Considerations for Using Reader’s Workshop
in the ESL-Inclusive Mainstream Classroom

Norma Havens
School of Education, Curriculum and Instruction
Elementary Education
College of William and Mary
Williamsburg, VA
nlhave@wm.edu

http://web.wm.edu/education/599/04projects/havens.pdf?svr=www

Drawing Stories

This site has lessons connecting Art and Writing Workshop.

http://www.readwritethink.org/lessons/lesson_view.asp?id=45

Greeley Sports

Horace Greeley High School has a very strong athletic department. Here is a quick link to their Booster Club.

http://www.greeleysportsboosters.org/

Harlem Wizards Basketball Game

Harlem Wizards Basketball Game
Miss Laird played to raise money for the Chappaqua School Foundation