Reading Rooms - Carson Scholars Fund
Transcription
Reading Rooms - Carson Scholars Fund
The Carson Reading Room Gwynns Falls Elementary School Shawyn Jenkins PhD Reading Room Coordinator • [email protected]•May, 31, 2013 Dr. Jenkins • gfescarsonroom.weebly.com • Gwynns Falls Elementary School Carson Reading Room Gwynns Falls Elementary School 2013 I. COMPREHENSION & VOCABULARY To increase student comprehension, The Carson Reading Room created grade level book clubs. January -May 2013, The Carson Reading Room had 100 (k-5th) regular Book Club participants. In groups of 3-5 participants, these students read books, discussed the texts and used technology (IPAD and/or Smartboard) to research topics, locate author information, and watch related videos. Assessment Results Gwynns Falls Elementary School assesses student reading comprehension using the Baltimore City Benchmarks at the beginning, middle and end of each school year. Beginning of the year reading assessments indicate, 53 of the 100 students scored as “non-readers”, “far below”, or “below” their reading grade level, while 37 scored “proficient” or “above” grade level (10 students were not assessed). The Book Clubs began during the mid-year assessments and concluded during the end-of-year assessments. An analysis of the middle and end-of-year assessments reveals, 81 of the 100 students increased their reading comprehension scores, (18 students did not show growth and 2 students have not completed the assessments). Based upon the school-wide assessments, The Carson Reading Room appears to serve as one ‘ingredient’ within effective school-wide literacy instruction. Dr. Jenkins • gfescarsonroom.weebly.com • Gwynns Falls Elementary School Carson Reading Room Gwynns Falls Elementary School 2013 II. PARTICIPATION & BEHAVIOR In the past, The Carson Reading Room has been used primarily as a reward for well-behaved and/or high performing students. We felt that students with below grade level reading scores and behavior referrals would greatly benefit from the Book Club activities, quiet time, and leisure reading opportunities afforded to Reading Room Participants. Therefore, in January 2013, the Reading Room was regularly used by students who received reading intervention services and students with behavior referral histories. For several weeks the Carson Reading Room was used as the center of daily intervention instruction. The intervention included guided reading instruction, interactive word study, literacy games, websites and apps. Behavior Referrals Throughout the beginning and middle of the school year, 5 of the 100 Book Club participants, were referred to the main office based upon misbehavior. Collectively, these students received 20 referrals. From mid-year until the end of the school year; collectively, the behavior referrals dropped to less than 5. Based upon the referral data, The Carson Reading Room has positively contributed to students’ classroom behavior and the correlation between Reading Room use and student behavior should be further studied. Dr. Jenkins • gfescarsonroom.weebly.com • Gwynns Falls Elementary School Carson Reading Room Gwynns Falls Elementary School 2013 IV. TECHNOLOGY USE, CREATIVITY & COLLABORATION ”Wow, we get to use the IPADs, today!” It is impossible to over emphasize how much students enjoy using technology to read, play literacy games, research topics, and learn more about authors. The students describe IPADS as, “more fun and less boring” than a traditional book. Instead of pitting the two types of text (books vs IPADs) against each other, we emphasized the similarities and created ibooks as our final Reading Room project. For several weeks the students selected book topics, wrote text, recorded themselves, and incorporated photos and videos into their ibooks. Once completed, the books will be added to our IPAD libraries, linked to the Carson Reading Room blog, and uploaded to the ibooks library, for anyone in the world to read. The students expressed interest in both fiction and non-fiction texts and used the IPADs to continue learning about topics read. For instance, after reading a book club selection about lemon sharks, the students immediately searched online, found the Discovery Channel’s Shark Week archives to watch videos, researched facts about sharks, explored new vocabulary and asked more questions, which lead to more research. This process of reading a book, asking questions about the book, researching the book/topic/author online, asking more questions, and researching answers online, was typical for our Book Club activities. Therefore, we should find ways to connect Book Club topics and topics discussed in the regular classroom. Dr. Jenkins • gfescarsonroom.weebly.com • Gwynns Falls Elementary School Carson Reading Room Gwynns Falls Elementary School 2013 V. RECOMMENDATIONS Many students’ reading experiences comprise of: 1) finding the one correct answer, 2) following an instructor driven lesson plan, and 3) preparing for high stakes testing. These pressures discourage many students from discovering the joys of leisure reading. The Carson Reading Room provides a comfortable place for students to leisure read. Recommendations for Next Year Create an online library: The Carson Reading Room is well stocked with interesting subject matter; therefore, the IPAD, Kindle and Smartboard online libraries should be stocked in a similar manner. Extension activities and projects: The Carson Reading Room is an ideal place to reinforce classroom instruction by assisting students with research projects, extension activities and tutorials. Data collection & assessments: The assessments administered and data collected by the school and the Reading Room complement each other; therefore, an effort should be made to integrate and streamline the processes. Dr. Jenkins • gfescarsonroom.weebly.com • Gwynns Falls Elementary School