#Road2Reading Challenge: What I am Reading

Recently, I have made piles of books I want to read. Each pile is a different category of books. I have a pile of nonfiction titles, a pile of books for Women's History Month, a pile of Middle Grade novels, a pile of miscellaneous picture books, and a pile of early readers and early chapter books. Now I wish I had more time to just read. However, this week, I was able to get to the following titles....

For second and third grader readers...

Big Foot and Little Foot by Ellen Potter; Illustrated by Felicita Sala (Amulet Books, April 10, 2018) - I never pass up on a book by Ellen Potter. I was excited to receive an advance copy of her latest book about a friendship between a boy and a sasquatch. I am now looking forward to the second book in this new early chapter book series. 

Gordon: Bark to the Future by Ashley Spires (Kids Can Press, May 1, 2018) - Fans of Binky and the P.U.R.S.T books will be excited by this latest title by Spire. Gordon must go back in time to help save his humans but when he realizes that his actions may have changed the present, he needs to figure out a way to make everything right again. Love this series.

For 3rd graders and older....

BOB by Wendy Mass and Rebecca Stead (Feiwel and Friends, May 1, 2018) - When this advanced reader copy showed up in my mail, I immediately knew I had to read it. How can you pass on a book by either Wendy Mass or Rebecca Stead? And to have a book written by both these amazing writers, well let's just say it made it to the top of the pile. It is also one of those books where you find yourself saying, just one more chapter.  To find out more about how Mass and Stead collaborated on BOB , check out this article from Publisher's Weekly here

Mark your calendar for these upcoming releases.

All journeys have a starting place.
This is a weekly place to find books and tools
that you may use with readers at the start of their reading journey.
Join in the conversation at #road2reading.

Do you work with readers who are starting their journey on the road to reading?  Join Michele Knott from Mrs. Knott's Book Nook and myself every Thursday as we explore books and ideas to help readers have a successful start to independent picture book and chapter book reading. If you blog or have a Goodreads page, please link up with us!

#Road2Reading Challenge: The Essentials #2 - Read Alouds

Last week, I found myself writing a reflection post about teaching children to read, and I am continuing with another post this week. It isn't an exaggeration to say that I find myself almost daily in conversations with colleagues and friends about teaching reading and why loving books and reading is just as important as teaching the mechanics of reading. There seems to be increasing times like this week where I found myself at a loss for words while in a conversation with a teacher and realizing that I didn't want to spend more time defending what I knew was right about helping children learn to read. I don't think that some fancy computerized program will magically create readers. I also don't believe that drill work will turn kids into readers. I do think that turning children into readers requires some intentional work, but the work is so very worth it. 

If you are interested in reading the first post, The Essentials, you can find it, here. For the next several weeks, I would like to explore more deeply the following areas:

  • Read Alouds
  • Classroom Libraries
  • Relationships
  • Observation
  • Conferring

Coming April 2018

When I started teaching preschool and kindergarten, many years ago, I made read alouds an essential part of my curriculum. Every week, I would have one key title that I read over and over again. Each time with a different focus. At that time, I could honestly say that I did not think about whether what I was doing was an interactive read aloud or a shared read aloud. I simply read aloud to my students with intent and purpose. It seemed important that I read the same book over and over again in slightly different ways. I encouraged students to act out the story, or retell the events, use hand motions to emphasize the refrain, or join in on the words or phrases that they knew. Often by the end of the week, children could even "read" the book aloud to their friends during free play or during circle time. 

Coming February 2018

In addition to one book as a focus text for the week, I also kept a small bookshelf located near our gathering place where I could display related titles to read aloud or use as a mentor texts over the course of the week or month or unit. To this day, there are still titles that I can almost recite by heart. As a result, students were exposed deeply to a small number of texts each month but also widely exposed to about 20-25 books in that same month. 

Coming February 2018

Over the years, as my understanding of how children acquired language and learned to read developed so did how I used picture books as part of the daily routine. Though I was selective about titles originally, I became much, much more intentional with the books that I selected as I developed a better grasp of what purpose and skill I wanted to teach. I understood more about the power of a picture book and how I could use it to build language skills or build community. Even though, it might take more time to find that just right picture book to read aloud, I knew the time spent finding the perfect read aloud would pay off. 

Finally, I want to share that for all of my planning and working to be intentional about the books I shared, I also found time to read aloud books just simply for no other reason than that they touched me in some way and I wanted to share them with my students. I say this because I want teachers to understand that there is a place for that really funny read aloud or the read aloud that might make you cry just a little even if it doesn't fit into a unit or works as a mentor text. The importance is that you read aloud with students and share your love and passion of books with them. 

Check out some past related posts on read alouds
Reading Aloud to Children: What I Have Learned
What Makes the Perfect Read Aloud
Tips for Reading Aloud Expository Nonfiction

All journeys have a starting place.
This is a weekly place to find books and tools
that you may use with readers at the start of their reading journey.
Join in the conversation at #road2reading.

Do you work with readers who are starting their journey on the road to reading?  Join Michele Knott from Mrs. Knott's Book Nook and myself every Thursday as we explore books and ideas to help readers have a successful start to independent picture book and chapter book reading. If you blog or have a Goodreads page, please link up with us!