It is produced by Ruth Buchanan, a Teacher Librarian in Australia, and she says that "a blog is a great way to share the stuff my flypaper mind finds amid the internet jungle". It has won awards including the SLAV (School Library Association of Victoria) Bright Ideas award as the most nominated Australian school library blog 2009 - and the Zombie Chickens award - visit her blog to find out what that is about...
It is a great place to explore and browse, you are bound to find something interesting and inspiring - and if you want to really roam, check out the links to blogs that she follows... Here is the link http://skerricks.blogspot.com and I've added it to the list of blogs on the right.
The post that Bridget was highlighting was about a New York Times article about a teacher who lets students choose their own reading :
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/30/books/30reading.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1
"The approach Ms. McNeill uses, in which students choose their own books, discuss them individually with their teacher and one another, and keep detailed journals about their reading, is part of a movement to revolutionize the way literature is taught in America’s schools. While there is no clear consensus among English teachers, variations on the approach, known as reading workshop, are catching on. "
"One Size Does Not Fit All
My seventeen year-old-daughter is what we call here in Texas, “a long, tall drink of water." I, on the other hand, have a full-figured glass that has overflowed. When shopping, we laugh when we see clothes sporting tags that claim “one size fits all” remarking, “Not us!” Stretch this t-shirt over the ubiquitous practice in reading classrooms of teaching whole-class novels, and you can see that it doesn't fit most readers..."
and her latest post picks up on the NY Times article mentioned above - here is what she has to say on it "... the New York Times [has] announced that The Future of Reading is "reading workshop". Describing one teacher’s journey to implement reading workshop with her middle school students, the article explores the messy challenges and smalls triumphs of a classroom environment where children choose the books they read. It bewilders me that reading workshop, first introduced to practicing teachers in works like In the Middle by Nancie Atwell (written in 1987), is still seen as groundbreaking or newsworthy. I continually wonder how activities like reading one book as a class, dissecting classics, and presenting book reports become entrenched in reading classrooms for generations while ideas like allowing student choices, reading contemporary literature, and writing authentic reading responses fail to gain a foothold in many English classes..."My seventeen year-old-daughter is what we call here in Texas, “a long, tall drink of water." I, on the other hand, have a full-figured glass that has overflowed. When shopping, we laugh when we see clothes sporting tags that claim “one size fits all” remarking, “Not us!” Stretch this t-shirt over the ubiquitous practice in reading classrooms of teaching whole-class novels, and you can see that it doesn't fit most readers..."
I've bought a copy of Donalyn Miller's book published this year - The Book Whisperer: Awakening the Inner Reader in Every Child (9780470372272). In it she describes how she is so successful at getting her students reading - simply put, it is by being a powerful reading role model herself, knowing the literature, providing easy, plentiful access to a range of books, expecting every child to be a reader, and responding in a lively way to the students' reading responses...
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