At SA, we believe that if a child loves reading and reads exceptionally well, she can teach herself anything! There’s nothing more important to our scholars’ lifelong success and happiness than inspiring their passion for reading.
In this unit, you will fuel scholars’ passion for reading. You will inspire their love of words, characters, and knowledge. You will help them achieve that lost-in-a-book, engaged sort of reading that makes reading fun. You will give them the most priceless gift of all — time to read!
Model your passion for reading and books throughout the day. Enthusiastically recommend books to your scholars and show your passion every time you read aloud!
If you do your job well, scholars will love to read, and families will be committed to reading to and with their scholars!
Building a strong reading culture and partnership with parents is critical to scholars’ lifelong personal and academic success. It is imperative that ALL your scholars are reading at home and at school. Meet with the parents of any students who are not reading at home. If you cannot succeed in convincing the parents to ensure that their children are doing their homework, you need to manage up to leadership.
It is your responsibility to ensure that ALL of your scholars are reading 6 days a week at home!
Independent Reading: Every day, scholars must read voraciously, because kids get better at reading by reading.
Your goal during the first three weeks of school is to establish sacred, phenomenal Independent Reading time. Get scholars excited about getting lost in their books and the luxury of reading time!
Scholars will only become better readers if you fuel their passion AND you are fully invested in creating and maintaining excellence during this time.
Set clear expectations for how scholars keep their minds and bodies engaged during Independent Reading.
Independent Reading is one of the times kids will practice the 5 tactics of great readers—not because they have never used these tactics before, but because practicing them is essential to building good reading habits.
During Independent Reading, talk with kids about the books they are reading. Build relationships with your scholars through reading and create a community of book lovers.
Book Shopping in the Classroom Library: SA’s classroom libraries are unparalleled, full of world class literature hand-picked for scholars.
Kids won’t sustain reading in school or at home unless they have access to great books. Leverage your classroom library to help kids fall in love with books. Make sure scholars have books that they can’t wait to read, ready to take home in their book baggies.
Scholars must book shop at least once a week. Invite them to the library in small groups to explore the library and shop for books. Your job is to support scholars in selecting books that are just right for them by recommending books based on their interests.
Summer Soar: Get to know your kids as readers. Look at the end-of-year Grade 1 F&P results. Which kids came in at or above their end-of-year Grade 1 reading level? This likely signifies a strong at-home reading culture and a scholar who loves reading. Did any kids come back at a lower level than they were at the end of the year? If so, you MUST meet with parents now and discuss how to get them back on track.
Partner Share: Get kids talking about their books! Make it clear that scholars are listening to their partners well enough to say back what they heard and respond with a related comment or question. Listen in to partnerships to hold scholars accountable.
Give clear directions for scholars to position themselves next to their partners so they can see and hear one another and the texts they’re referencing.
Closely monitor partnerships as they talk, and once the whole group is back together, call on a scholar to share what his or her partner said. Scholars must know they are accountable for listening and responding to their partners!
Spend the first week on Lesson 1 so that all scholars get to book shop with you.
Lesson 1: Great readers pick books they can’t wait to read!
Spend two days on Lessons 2–4 to give scholars practice.
Lesson 2: Great readers get lost in their books.
Lesson 3: Great readers make mind movies when reading.
Lesson 4: Great readers think about the big idea in each book they read.
What Does Success Look Like?
Great readers pick books they can’t wait to read!
Success is when scholars are so excited to read their books that they can’t wait for reading time.
Lesson 1
Engage — 1 minute
Spend 1 minute building excitement around book shopping—wrap your book bins and library and have scholars open their new presents!
Direct Instruction (Model/Practice) — 5–7 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 15–20 minutes
Spend 2–3 minutes working individually with 3–5 scholars.
Partner Share — 3–5 minutes
Whole-Class Share — 5 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
Great readers get lost in their books.
Success is when scholars are able to sustain reading time, because they have books they love and want to read.
Lesson 2
Engage — 1 minute
Spend 1 minute building excitement around the luxury of reading time.
Direct Instruction (Model/Practice) — 5–7 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 15–20 minutes
Partner Share — 3–5 minutes
Whole-Class Share — 5 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
Great readers make mind movies when reading.
Success is when a scholar is able to create a picture in her mind of what is happening in the story as she reads.
Lesson 3
Engage — 1 minute
Spend 1 minute building excitement around the luxury of reading time and the fun of creating images in our minds that bring our stories to life.
Direct Instruction (Model/ Practice) — 5–7 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 15–20 minutes
Partner Share — 3–5 minutes
Whole-Class Share — 5 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
Great readers think about the big idea in each book they read. Success is when scholars are able to identify their books’ big ideas.
Lesson 4
Engage — 1 minute
Spend 1 minute building excitement around the luxury of reading time and the fun of creating images in our mind that help us understand the big ideas in the books we read.
Direct Instruction (Model/Practice) — 5–7 minutes
Independent Reading/Targeted Teaching Time — 15–20 minutes
Partner Share — 3–5 minutes
Whole-Class Share — 5 minutes
Congratulations! You’ve reached the end of Unit 1: Falling in Love With Reading!
As a result of teaching this unit, you, as the teacher, have:
Your scholars can:
Read for enjoyment and to find meaning.
Choose books from the classroom library that are just right for their abilities and interests. Enthusiastically read and talk about books that pique their interest both at home and at school.
Celebrate your scholars’ successes by acknowledging what they can now do as readers as a result of their work over the last several weeks. For example, scholars can inspire a passion for reading by engaging others in discussions about books they love.
Invite scholars to share how much fun they’ve had reading and talking about books.
Reflect on your successes and stretches, as well as those of your scholars. Have your scholars’ engagement and passion for reading grown exponentially? Did you identify kids who have experienced summer slide? Did you address this with parents and get the scholars back on track? Have your scholars grown as readers over the last month?
Scholars must read at home, as well as in school. Are 100% of your kids reading 6 days a week at home? Make sure at-home reading is happening, and meet with families who are falling short to recommit them to this team effort.
Are 100% of your kids reading fluently? Do they put words together into meaningful groups within a sentence? Does their reading match the feeling of the piece? Do they pay attention to punctuation when reading? Do they read at a pace that mirrors how we talk—not racing through words or reading at a labored rate? Do they use tools to figure out the meaning of what they are reading?
Are 100% of your scholars doing their literacy homework?
Going into the next unit, make specific reading goals for yourself. Set a percentage goal for how many children you will move in the next 15 days. Set a goal for children who are not reading at home. Who will you get to consistently read at home? Set a goal for helping scholars who slid over the summer to get back on track. Why did they regress? Do they read most or all words correctly? What is their struggle with decoding? Do they understand what they’re reading? Do they understand the big idea? How will you partner with parents to support their growth?
If you are having trouble meeting your goals, do not wait until you have NOT succeeded. Consult your colleagues. Consult your leaders. ASK FOR HELP so you can meet your goals!
resources
Access a wide array of articles, webinars, and more, designed to help you help children reach their potential.
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