shared reading prek ese teacher meeting december 10, 2014 winner
TRANSCRIPT
Shared ReadingPreK ESE Teacher Meeting
December 10, 2014
WINNER
Learning Goal Teachers will understand how to use expanded dialogic reading strategies to strengthen listening comprehension skills and build reading competency.
Evidence
4 I can teach parents about dialogic reading strategies they can use at home to build reading comprehension skills.
In an IEP meeting or parent training, explains dialogic reading.
3 I can use expanded dialogic reading strategies to strengthen listening comprehension skills and build reading competency.
Uses specific dialogic reading strategies purposefully on daily basis
2 I have some idea what dialogic reading is and I try to use some strategies but not consistently.
Reads aloud, asks questions, attempts to use dialogic reading strategies
1 I am not currently using dialogic reading strategies.
Asks questions during read aloud but not with a specific strategy in mind
Reading Comprehension
Word Recognition (Decoding)
• Process of transforming print into words
Listening Comprehension
• Process of interpreting words, sentences, discourses
Gough and Tunmer's (1986) model of the reading process, The Simple View
Listening Comprehension lays the foundation for Reading Comprehension
Instruction in Listening Comprehension Develops:
• Real world connections through activating prior knowledge
• Vocabulary and concept understanding• Familiarity with text structure• Inference making
Before we proceed…
Dialogic ReadingTechnique/method where the child becomes the storyteller over time. The role of the adult is to prompt the children with questions, expand the child’s responses, and praise/recognize the child’s efforts to retell the story and name objects and actions in the book.
Research shows us how we read to children is just as important as how frequently we read to them.
Dialogic Reading Method
• Research-based
• Benefits ALL children
• Easily implemented by teachers and parents
Research• improved their expressive language abilities and increased
their vocabularies and sentence length• were better able to identify sounds and letters • enhanced knowledge of print concepts (e.g. distinguishing
among words, pictures, and numbers) • demonstrated emergent writing skills (e.g. printing from left-
to-right, distinguishing between uppercase and lowercase letters, and writing their own names)
Dialogic reading has produced significant gains in language development and retained them over time.
Based on research by Grover J. Whitehurst, Ph.D. Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc.
Benefits ALL
• Typically developing
• Different SES levels
• English Language Learners
• ESE (language and developmental delays)
Easily Implemented
Dialogic reading is just children and adults having a conversation about a book and it can be implemented by anyone who understands the process• Paraprofessional• Intern• Volunteer• Reading buddy• Parent
CROWD Prompt
C stands for completion prompts
R refers to recall prompts
O means open-ended
W prompts include what, where, when, and why
D stands for distancing prompts
P rompt using CROWD promptCompletion, Recall, Open-ended, Wh- question, Distancing “What is that?”
E valuate the child’s response(“Yes, it is a balloon”)
E xpand the child’s response by restating and adding more information(“It’s a big red balloon, just like we saw at the grocery store”)
P raise/Validate the correct response(“You knew it was a balloon!”)
PEEP Technique
Prompting Hierarchy
3 Visual Choices & 1
Verbal Prompt
2 Visual Choices & 1
Verbal Prompt
1 Visual Choice, 1 Verbal Prompt, 1 Answer (Direct
Model)
1 Visual Choice, 1 Verbal Prompt,
1 Answer, 1 Physical Prompt
Kelly Whalon, CARD Summer Literacy Institute, 2014
Using Visual Prompts in Shared Reading
T h e M i t t e n
Materials Given: • List of questions • 3 visual response choices for
each question
Need to:• Laminate & cut pictures• Adhere pictures to book
(sticky tabs)
Prompting Hierarchy
Verbal Prompt: “What is the weather like?”
Prompting Hierarchy
Verbal Prompt: “What is the weather like?”
Prompting Hierarchy
Verbal Prompt: “What is the weather like? It is
snowy. Say, it is snowy.”
Prompting HierarchyVerbal Prompt:
“What is the weather like? It is snowy. Say, it is snowy.”
Physical Prompt:Guide child’s hand to the picture.
For More Information on Dialogic Reading…
VPK Toolkit on the FL DOE website
Reading Rockets website
Get Ready to Read! Website
Baltimore City Schools Assistive Technologyhttp://www.baltimorecityschools.org/PAge/1453
Dialogic Reading“No one can learn to play the piano just by listening to someone else play. Likewise, no one can learn to read just by listening to someone else read. Children learn most from books when they are actively involved.”
from “What is Dialogic Reading?” in Reading Rockets
Reminders• In VE classes, we are considering “at capacity” 12 AM and 12
PM (total 24 students). Schools cannot refuse a child placement based on age (i.e. trying to keep AM class for 3-year-olds/PM class for 4-year-olds)
• Also, PLEASE let us know if you are considered “at capacity” and a child moves. We are diligently trying to stay current with class count and need your help!
RemindersUpcoming meetings
• January 14 Building Classroom Connections
• February 11 PreK to K Transition/BDI-2 Review
• March 11 STEM
• April 8 STEM
• May 13 Bringing Everyone Together
for turning in your BDI-2’s!
SupportNewsletters• For teachers and parents
Wiki sites• http://ocpsprekeseshare.wikispaces.com/ • http://fdlrsregion3thematicvisuals.wikispaces.com/
Classroom visitsWe are only an e-mail away!
Contact us if you have any questions, comments, or concerns
Janice Penn Stephanie Thomas
[email protected] [email protected]
Component #
2100002