1. Describe
your target area for guided lead teaching.
My target area for guided lead teaching will be Phonemic Awareness.
Phonemic Awareness must be taught so students become effective readers and
writers. Phonemic Awareness is identified as understanding that words or in
broader terms the English Language, is made up of individual letter
sounds. Understanding the smallest units
of sound is an essential skill for beginning readers to master. The instruction
within this target area will overall ensure that my kindergartners will be able
to decode and identify words.
2. Approximately how much time per day is allotted for
your instruction in this area?
The whole morning is devoted to Literacy. Literacy instructions begin promptly at 9:00
and runs till 11:15-11:30.
3. Which Common Core
State Standard(s) will
you work toward?
First half
of Guided Lead Teaching will include:Writing W.PR.00.03 Use semi-phonetic spelling when writing & incorporate pictures/drawings.
Second half of Guided Lead Teaching will include:
Reading R.IT.00.11 Identify and describe the basic form and purpose of information genre…
Writing (Reading Standard) R.NT.00.05 Respond to text…discussing, illustrating, and/or writing to reflect, make meaning, and make connections.
4. How
will teaching in this target area provide opportunities for students to
learn important content and/or skills that relate to their lives? In what ways does this learning include learning
literacy, learning about literacy, and/or learning through
literacy?
This target area (Phonemic Awareness) is an area within its larger context,
Phonological Awareness. Throughout this whole process students understand how
words and the English Language are made up of units of sounds through Rhyme,
Onset & Rime, and Phoneme Segmentation (Phonemic Awareness). In order to
connect oral language knowledge to written text, students must become aware of
the individual sounds that make up a word(s). Once these skills are developed
they will become fluent readers and writers which will overall help them
succeed in school and the community in which they live. They will recognize
literacy is apart of everyday life and can be seen in the many places they
travel to during the day.Learning Literacy: Developing the skills to decode and identify words, ensuring a child will be able to read and write.
Learning about Literacy: Students will learn strategies to read and understand the different types of text, as well as, begin to understand writing (drawings, squiggles, and word-like clusters) is a tool for communicating their ideas and/or knowledge.
Learning through Literacy: Students will make connections to their real-life context or community, as they start to use their developing skills of phonemic awareness. They will recognize words help convey different types of meaning in varies places in our world/their community.
5. What
types of classroom talk take place within this target area? To what extent is
the talk teacher-led, student-led, or focused on higher-level thinking? What
norms for interaction would you like to build within your classroom as you
teach in this target area (e.g., see ideas in Chapter 6 of Strategies that
Work, the Berne & Clark 2008 article, or draw from some of the readings
done in TE 402 on classroom talk)?
Classroom talk: Re voicing- letter
sounds or other expressions students use for their work, morning alphabet
practice (pairing a letter-sound-and picture), morning message (repeating after
teacher and sounding out fill in the blanks for weather and a personal “like”),
hearing songs & rhyming sounds. Restating-
voicing back a message a student is trying to convey and sounded it out
(worksheets & morning message). Prompting-
sounded out the beginning, middle, and end letters of a word (morning message,
read alouds, name writing, and worksheets).
Throughout varies activities and lessons that make up the day, classroom
talk is both teacher-led and student-led. Our classroom stresses the importance
of finding a effective balance. For example some activities such as the morning
alphabet sounds have been teacher-led, but will transition into a student-led talk
once the students have been exposed and practiced this daily routine. This type
of opportunity will empower them as students giving them not only practice but
confidence as a learner/leader. Higher-level thinking occurs mainly now through
worksheets. The higher level task is at the bottom once the student practices they
then can apply it to a more “thinking experience” to apply the learn letter to
a word.
Classroom Norms: Respectful behavior when listening to a speaker, Classroom
Management Strategies (fire-crackers, hand clap, transition songs or phrases), Voices
turned off when teacher is reading a story; sit like a pretzel during group
time. All the same norms will be reinstated to make sure the learning
environment is kept to its best.
6. Which
‘core practice’ do you want to work on developing/improving as you teach in
this target area (refer to document “Resources for Developing Core Practices”)?
How will focusing on this core practice contribute to your own professional
learning?
In terms of a ‘core practice’ I would like to focus on the Segmenting of
individual letter sounds in a word and incorporate it into Writers Workshop “mini
whole group conferences”. Within the 10 days I will have 2-3 students share
their writing sample that was completed that day. All students will sit on the
carpet while one student sits in a special writers chair to share their work.
Here they will tell the class about their drawing and read what they filled in
their “writing blank space”. (eg. “I like the color __[red]__.”) They will get
the opportunity to be the “teacher” as they use the phoneme segmentation song
to segment their word(s) and then have the class repeat it with them. Focusing
on this core practice will allow me to become a more effective teacher in the
long run, as I practice this strategy to better help my students develop
reading and writing skills. I will learn what ideas work and what I ideas I
will need to further fix for a future practice. I would ideally love to always
be in lower grade levels therefore, phonemic awareness and all its larger parts
will be a huge part of my lesson instruction in the future.
7. What
resources within the community, neighborhood, school district, school or
classroom do you have to work with in this target area?
Resources: Houghton & Mifflin Books (Theme: Colors), Music on C.D.’s,
Smart Board Games and Youtube videos, Southfield Public Library, other
classroom books.
8. What
additional resources do you need to obtain? Personal
books, printables, sources to benefit my instruction, there could be more as I
expand on this lesson.
9. How
will you pre-assess your students in your target area?
My Mentor Teacher and I have been pre-assessing student for MLPP and I will
also be obtaining results from DIBBLES. These assessments will again be
implemented in the November.
10. What
else will you need to find out about all students in your class to help you
develop lesson plans for your Guided Lead Teaching?
1. I want to find out about ALL the students interest so I can create
lessons and activities that vest in the students everyday interests. 2. Find out what letter sounds students are having the most trouble and what letter sounds students are most proficient with.
3. What type of assistance they would need for writing letters (dots, modeling, etc.)
11. What
else do you need/want to learn about the ‘core practice’ to support your
planning and teaching?
1. How much time should be spent on one student during Phoneme Segmenting
Writers Workshop.2. How can I extend the conference into developing more writing ideas or segmenting words (“I noticed a bus is in your picture as well, let’s segment the word /b/ /u/ /s/).
12. What concerns, if any, do you have about planning and
teaching your unit?
I hope that all the “KUDS” my teacher needs done
within this time, I can effective implement and incorporate into my lesson. I
would not want specific goals to be rushed. I feel I am starting to develop
more of an idea of where I want this unit to go and see it serving an even
greater purpose with the Writers Workshop core practice.