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Instructor | 12 |
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Taberski, Sharon | 3 |
Calkins, Lucy | 2 |
Calkins, Lucy McCormick | 1 |
Cullinan, Bee | 1 |
Freeman, Judy | 1 |
Lowe, Jeff | 1 |
Robb, Laura | 1 |
Segel, Elizabeth | 1 |
Wilhelm, Jeffrey D. | 1 |
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Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 6 |
Guides - Non-Classroom | 5 |
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Teachers | 12 |
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Wilhelm, Jeffrey D. – Instructor, 1999
Describes how to use drama to help students live through and see what they are reading, thus enjoying reading more. The workshop offers strategies for reading and writing dramatic texts. A reading and writing workshop poster on a Midsummer Night's Dream is included. A reproducible sheet allows students to use their imaginations to create dramatic…
Descriptors: Drama, Dramatics, Elementary Secondary Education, Reading Motivation
Robb, Laura – Instructor, 1996
Presents primary and intermediate level activities that use predictions to help students think deeply about books. The primary activity uses a prediction chart to encourage thinking and enthusiasm about reading. The intermediate activity uses prediction book reports to change writing about books from merely retelling, to higher-level thinking. A…
Descriptors: Charts, Elementary Education, Prediction, Reading Motivation
Lowe, Jeff – Instructor, 1998
Describes how teachers can set up high-quality classroom libraries that motivate students to read. Suggestions include assessing student needs; acquiring reading materials (through book clubs and donations from students and families); and being actively innovative so the library remains fresh and dynamic (e.g., by adding shelves, offering a wide…
Descriptors: Childrens Libraries, Childrens Literature, Elementary School Teachers, Library Development
Taberski, Sharon – Instructor, 1997
Three assessment strategies to help elementary teachers gather information about their students' reading (and thus direct their teaching) include keeping running records of students' oral reading, requesting retellings of stories to determine students' comprehension, and talking seriously about reading with students to determine their overall…
Descriptors: Oral Reading, Primary Education, Reading Comprehension, Reading Motivation
Calkins, Lucy – Instructor, 1996
To motivate students to read, it is important for teachers to teach the reader, not the reading. This article presents three strategies for accomplishing this: studying the child, not the book; focusing on students' reading lives and knowing them as readers; and thinking of students as readers. (SM)
Descriptors: Conferences, Elementary Education, Independent Reading, Reading Motivation
Calkins, Lucy – Instructor, 2000
The most important activity for building the knowledge required for eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children at home and in the classroom. At school, reading aloud is important for starting the day, presenting reading and writing mini-lessons, supporting social studies and science curricula, supporting whole-class book studies, and…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Reading Aloud to Others, Reading Instruction
Freeman, Judy – Instructor, 1998
Presents an annotated listing of books about all kinds of heroes for elementary school students. Stories include the young King Arthur; an assertive, baseball-playing heroine who becomes a princess; an older brother dealing with his younger brother; a Christmas story; civil rights icon Rosa Parks; and the cow who jumped over the moon. (SM)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers
Taberski, Sharon – Instructor, 1997
Presents ideas for creating a purposeful classroom environment that will help students become strategic readers. Suggestions include using the conference table to learn about students as readers, organizing books to help children make wise choices, and creating a meeting area that invites discussion. (SM)
Descriptors: Class Organization, Classroom Design, Classroom Environment, Learning Strategies
Taberski, Sharon – Instructor, 1998
Shared reading lets elementary teachers show children what reading is about. Teachers read the text aloud and encourage students to read along. All levels of readers can participate. Teachers can do letter or sound searches to help children understand how to use what they know about letters and spelling patterns in order to read unfamiliar words.…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers, Reading Instruction
Calkins, Lucy McCormick – Instructor, 1997
Describes New York City teachers' emphasis on independent reading, with the rest of their reading curriculum growing out of needs identified during that time. They begin with mini-lessons, then create social supports for reading, make independent reading central and collaborative, reinforce what works, make time for solitary reading, and learn…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Elementary Education, Independent Reading, Reading Attitudes
Cullinan, Bee – Instructor, 1998
This poetry activity helps K-3 teachers increase students' enthusiasm for reading by highlighting personal interests. Students read a baseball poem, discuss the wording, examine how it conveys action, and look for key words. The next day, they read the poem again and write about favorite activities of their own. The baseball poem is attached. (SM)
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers
Segel, Elizabeth – Instructor, 2000
School-community partnership programs can help teachers reach children in the crucial years from birth to 4, thereby preventing reading difficulties and raising future test scores. Many organizations help families in starting their children on the road to lifetime reading by distributing free books and pamphlets on reading aloud to children. (SM)
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Literacy Education, Parent Participation, Partnerships in Education