Schmoker Chapter 5: Social Studies with Reading and Writing at the
Core.
Schmoker begins the chapter by telling us that social studies is the most
important subject relating to literacy with the exception of language
arts. Schmoker also asserts social studies education is fundamental to
the continuation of our society at the local, state, and national level.
After stating the role of literacy in social studies, Schmoker dismantles the recent
practices of social studies education, specifically skits and posters, by
stating that teachers are concentrating more on entertaining students than
teach them. Schmoker puts emphasis behind this message by stating,
"we must break free from fads and embrace... courses that cultivate
students' abilities to participate in the literacy that our society
demands." He offers the process for implementing his
statement.
- Essential topics and standards to be taught (we do that)
-Selected textbook pages NOT whole chapters (we need to do that if we don't, I
know some of us do)
-35+ supplementary or primary source documents, magazines to be discussed 1
time per week (ouch, that copy limit burns up quickly, but ipads/chrome books
should really help with this)
- Essential questions for each unit (we do that)
-End-of-unit paper or essay assignments (this is where our students literacy
gap kills us)
-Routine use of all the above in a cycle of close reading, discussion of text,
and writing about text
Schmoker spends the next several pages discussing how to implement the
aforementioned cycle around the social studies standards and describe his ideal
lesson activities for social studies. These activities are all related to
literacy and Schmoker refers to them as Task, Text, & Talk. For the
TASK students have an assignment related to the current unit of study, they
then read primary sources (TEXT) to supplement their assignment, you may also
use sources from current media that relate to your unit to increase student
interest/understanding. Finally, students TALK/discuss in small groups
what they have learned. After several lessons designed this way, students
demonstrate their understanding of the unit by writing an end-of-unit paper.
Schmoker states that these types of lessons will increase student participation
because the students become experts on the topics being discussed which allows
them to participate in large class discussion or debates.
The final part of Chapter 5 is Schmoker taking us through the process of guided
instruction and checks for understanding. He follows the TTT format and
his lessons are in gradual release format (pg. 150-151). He also provides
relevant questions for student reading (pg. 153).
I think any core subject teacher could read chapter 5 and apply their content
to Schmoker's lesson designs. The key is to not give too much textbook to
students and supplement with relevant outside sources that provoke student
thinking and inquiry.
About this blog
This blog is the platform that the Doug Reeves Team at JB Young Intermediate conducts book studies in order to both consume and produce information that can improve teaching practices. Last summer, 2011, we read Focus by Mike Schmoker and Enhancing RTI by Douglas Fisher and Nancy Frey. During our winter break, 2011/12, we read Productive Group Work by Sandi Everlove, Douglas Fisher, and Nancy Frey. This summer, 2012, we are reading and blogging in regards to Mindset - The New Psychology of Success - How We Can Learn to Fulfill Our Potential by Carol S. Dweck, Ph.D.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
From Dave:
Ch 3
Schmoker highlights the
growing public knowledge that teachers are the number one thing driving student
success. He stresses the importance that we not over- complicate the
elements of effective teaching. 1. Clear learning objectives . I
think we do a good job of posting these in our classrooms. I wonder if we
can reference it more and make sure our students are aware so it isn’t just
something we do because we have to, but it becomes an important teaching tool
. 2. Teacher modeling and demonstrating. This hits our “I Do’s” in
gradual release. On our Wednesday in-services this would be the part I would
struggle with the most when I’d present using the gradual release, but with
repeated practice it gets easier. I’d probably categorize it like our newer
teachers would. 3. Guided Practice 4. Checks for
understanding and formative assessment. I think we have good buy in
overall as it relates to the gradual release, but strengthening the components
of the gradual release and monitoring where we are weak and strong in the
process will be keys this coming year. Schmoker stresses the importance
of repeating the cycle of guided practice and formative assessment
multiple times throughout the lesson. Our new hires probably need
this stressed to them more. I think they see the gradual release as
more of a check list, blinders on, marching straight through. On the other
hand, I recall a lesson late in the year I observed Stroupe teaching,
where he was deftly using formative assessments to determine what
the students had learned, and backing up in the gradual release to
reteach. It is what we want our new hires working towards. Schmoker
references Marzano, Burns, and Fischer and Frey to hammer home the
specific parts of effective lessons as listed above.
The chapter also discusses the
five minute limit when delivering lessons. Schmoker reminds us that when
we talk over 5 minutes without allowing for processing and interaction, we lose
kids. By allowing them to review notes, summarize learning, pairing up
and contrasting notes or connections, we become more effective as
teachers. It’s a simple limit, but often we disregard it. The rest
of the chapter discusses multiple ways of formatively assessing, the importance
of establishing a purpose for reading, and establishing connection to prior
learning as we introduce new lessons. Moving forward, I think the chapter
is a reminder to me that we have many young teachers, and we can’t assume that
because the leadership team has a strong understanding of lesson design, that
others do as well. The urgent need for working on other initiatives is
and will be there, but focusing on our lesson design remains a top
priority.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
From Casey:
Focus. Chapter 2
What we teach.... A guaranteed and viable curriculum for all students. Curriculum may be the single largest factor within a school that determines how many students learn within a school. The author emphasizes that it is our job to ensure that ALL students are equally ready to pursue a college degree if they so choose. We must provide all students with authentic literacy opportunities, ideally beginning in preschool. We must develop students content knowledge while providing them with multiple opportunities to develop critical thinking skills. In addition it is very important to foster verbal competence, which is often overlooked. We need to agree on basic standards given to all students and we need to deliver said standards with fidelity and purpose. Casey
Focus. Chapter 2
What we teach.... A guaranteed and viable curriculum for all students. Curriculum may be the single largest factor within a school that determines how many students learn within a school. The author emphasizes that it is our job to ensure that ALL students are equally ready to pursue a college degree if they so choose. We must provide all students with authentic literacy opportunities, ideally beginning in preschool. We must develop students content knowledge while providing them with multiple opportunities to develop critical thinking skills. In addition it is very important to foster verbal competence, which is often overlooked. We need to agree on basic standards given to all students and we need to deliver said standards with fidelity and purpose. Casey
Monday, June 17, 2013
Chapter 4: English Language Arts Made Simple
Ok - I know chapters 2 and 3 are not posted yet - but I wanted to get my chapter posted on time so we don't get too behind schedule. This was a very big chapter with a lot of great thoughts - but I'm going to really try and narrow it down. :)
Schmoker reminds us in this chapter that students need to "...spend hundreds of hours actually reading, writing and speaking for intellectual purposes" (pg 94). Students should be exposed to literature and nonfiction text. I think incorporating nonfiction text is not only an important reminder for reading teachers - but for social studies, math and science as well. I thought the section of the chapter that discusses bringing in a weekly article could easily fit in to any content area's curriculum while increasing student literacy. No matter what the subject area - students should be reading varied text, then discussing and writing about that text using textual evidence. This should be happening often.
Schmoker also writes about his frustration seeing students working below their skill level in reading. I think it's wonderful that all students at JB are challenged at their skill level. The students who still need very basic phonics instruction get that - but all are working where they need to be working. I also like how he called classroom time "sacred". That is very true - and a message I think some of our new staff may need to hear. We simply don't have time for free time.
There is also an argument to simplify reading standards down to Schmoker's big 4: argument, drawing inferences and conclusions, resolving conflicting views and documents, and problem solving. I don't think Schmoker is really advocating getting "rid" of any Common Core standards here. I think if any student can do the big 4 with a piece of text - they are showing mastery of the Common Core standards already.
Schmoker also advocates for a very rigorous writing curriculum. Students should be writing at least one paper per month. I think our overall data team focus in intermediate was getting there this year. However, although the length may vary, Schmoker advocates that primary students should be writing formally just as often.
Finally - Schmoker reminds us of his lesson plan design for reading: teach vocabulary, establish a purpose for reading, model, read, discuss the text, and write about the text. It seems as though gradual release fits right in here!
Schmoker reminds us in this chapter that students need to "...spend hundreds of hours actually reading, writing and speaking for intellectual purposes" (pg 94). Students should be exposed to literature and nonfiction text. I think incorporating nonfiction text is not only an important reminder for reading teachers - but for social studies, math and science as well. I thought the section of the chapter that discusses bringing in a weekly article could easily fit in to any content area's curriculum while increasing student literacy. No matter what the subject area - students should be reading varied text, then discussing and writing about that text using textual evidence. This should be happening often.
Schmoker also writes about his frustration seeing students working below their skill level in reading. I think it's wonderful that all students at JB are challenged at their skill level. The students who still need very basic phonics instruction get that - but all are working where they need to be working. I also like how he called classroom time "sacred". That is very true - and a message I think some of our new staff may need to hear. We simply don't have time for free time.
There is also an argument to simplify reading standards down to Schmoker's big 4: argument, drawing inferences and conclusions, resolving conflicting views and documents, and problem solving. I don't think Schmoker is really advocating getting "rid" of any Common Core standards here. I think if any student can do the big 4 with a piece of text - they are showing mastery of the Common Core standards already.
Schmoker also advocates for a very rigorous writing curriculum. Students should be writing at least one paper per month. I think our overall data team focus in intermediate was getting there this year. However, although the length may vary, Schmoker advocates that primary students should be writing formally just as often.
Finally - Schmoker reminds us of his lesson plan design for reading: teach vocabulary, establish a purpose for reading, model, read, discuss the text, and write about the text. It seems as though gradual release fits right in here!
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