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Monday, April 2, 2012

Real Life Inquiry

Over spring break I was able to go into a classroom and observe something I've always wondered about, how teachers maintain their classes during read-alouds. It's something I have always struggled with because your attention has to be so many places and you strive to control the class with out further disrupting the lesson. The teacher I was observing, Ms. S, and her co-teacher, Ms. B, did a wonderful job of this. Before the class began reading they jumped once, got out their 'wiggles', and then sat down criss cross apple sauce, on their pockets. (Which I thought was particularly clever because it avoids the ever controversial word 'bottom' hah. ) Then Ms. S introduced the book to the class. They were reading Sense Suspense by Bruce McMillan, and to get the ready to read she explained that our senses relate to adjectives because we use them to describes how things touch, taste, feel, sound, and smell.

Once Ms. S began reading she also began to ask questions about the book, she would have the students identify the picture and ask them for what senses they think they would use with that object and how. This is were the classroom management became evident because she only called on those who were raising their hands and she would say the name of the person she was calling on. She also set rules about that before reading, saying that she would only talk to people who were on their pockets raising their hands. If another student shouted out after she had called on someone she would simply remind them that they "only have one Mike in [their] class" and then wait for Mike to answer instead. Ms. S focused mostly on the choices students were making, taking no more than a few seconds to tell them to make wise choices or remember that they are choosing to leave the carpet if they continue. She also would make whole class suggestions in a polite and involving way, " I would love it if we would raise our hands" instead of just telling them to raise their hands. At the end of the book when the class was beginning to get antsy while answering question she had them all stand up and do some brief exercises to settle them back down, while continuing asking questions about the book.

I like the idea of making student responsible for themselves, reminding them that they are making choices and all choices have consequences.
Are there any other specific suggestions about how to manage a class while reading?

2 comments:

  1. I agree! I think those are some great ways to manage a potentially volatile classroom situation. My favorite part was how they had the students jump and wiggle so they would be able to focus better once the reading began.

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  2. I love how the teacher gave the students some control and responsibility. I think it helps the children focus more on the reading and get excited about learning. It sounds like the teacher had a good control over the class.

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