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Showing posts with label Guided Reading Workshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guided Reading Workshop. Show all posts

Reading Centers with a Checklist

I've received a lot of questions on Instagram about how I run my reading center time in my classroom. I have played around with this precious 45 minutes of time for years. I want my students doing work that is engaging, purposeful, relevant and encourages them to become responsible for their work while giving choice.

This has all led me to my little center checklist. The checklist that I currently use looks like the one you see below. I don't like to tie myself to centers with names because what we do throughout the year changes and I want their centers to grow with students.


When I plan my centers each week, I do try to keep them somewhat consistent. I use the planning template seen below. It's easy, but keeps me focused.


Here is an example of what it looks like filled out digitally. Normally, I just write them down with pencil because I like to be quick and simple! :-)



Here is a break down of how the centers run in my classroom. We will begin with the rotation chart!


When students have the checklist card by their groups name, then they have the choice to pick an activity they would like to complete for the day. They are required to complete one checklist activity per day. They are allowed to do 2, if one doesn't take them too long. They get pretty good at managing their time (another important life skill to learn)!

I introduce the new activities on Monday. Wednesday, I have kids turn in their folders and I do a midweek check up to make sure everyone is getting their work completed. If not, then they get Mrs. Hursh on their tail for the rest of the week. It only takes about 1 week of me nagging a student for them to kick it in gear for the rest of the weeks. ;-)

Here are the centers set up from last week. I'll get to the grading part here soon!

This week students are unscrambling sentences. I don't want to make a million sets of these cards, so I just cut out one sentence, place it in a bucket and write a number at the top. When students visit this center, they grab one bucket, unscramble the sentence and then record the sentence on their activity sheet. When they complete that sentence, they put those cards back, put the bucket back, grab a new bucket and repeat until all sentences are done. The kids don't lose cards this way and they aren't overwhelmed by way too many sentences at one. It helps them focus on just one thing at a time.


 To prep the craft center, I place student supplies in the two bins you see below. If there are little pieces, I just put them in zip lock bags. I make an example craft for students for them to look at while they create their own.

When students complete an activity from their center checklist, they place it in their center folder which also doubles as their 'catch up' folder.


When students finish an activity, they put a check in the box next to the correct center number.
When we first began checklists, I would ask students to circle the one they wanted to complete for the day. This helped them have a focused plan and allowed them to set a goal for themselves. I still do this with some students who have a difficult time getting started. In my mind, this system is a great way for students to be responsible and learn accountability with their work.

On Friday, I collect their folders, take them home and grade them. I place checks by the completed activities on their checklist, staple their papers together and return them on Monday.

Now, we do our two stations every single day. Some students finish by Thursday! I make sure their work is quality work that shows effort and if it is, they're able to make choices during their checklist station. The choices are ones that are still literacy based.

When I introduced the choices to students, I made this anchor chart right along with it so it held meaning. They refer to it often! (The students also love to complete these activities at indoor recess *win, win*).
You can find the activities I use for choices here.

I do not have students turn this work into me. However, they do LOVE to share their sticker stories with the class so we do make time for that at the end of the day once we pack up to go home.

If you would like any of the resources you saw above, you can click on the links below.


If you have any questions about checklists just comment below!!

I have another post about my stations with a checklist that I did a few years ago. It's a little different than I do now, but may give you more ideas!
Just click HERE for that POST!

You may also like these blog posts as well:


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How to Structure Your Reading Block!



Hey guys! So, I have toyed around with a lot of different reading block structures in my little teaching career. I've taught with a basal and I've taught without. I have tried a lot of different systems in my classroom to find the one that works just right for me. I want to share some of those with you so you can find the best way to structure your reading block because lets face it... we can't fit it all in... even though we wish we could. I'm going to share ones I've tried and the one that I am going to try out this year! I hope this can be helpful to you!

So, let's get started!
There so many ideas on how to organize reading workshop in the classroom! I love this pocket idea!



We'll start with how I used a basal in my classroom. (Don't mind the old pictures) :-)

When I had a basal in my classroom, I didn't use it like it was supposed to be used. 
My reading block was structured just like a D5 block.
I also didn't have time for a writers workshop, nor did I know how to do writers workshop at that Time!

I started each reading lesson with a whole group lesson.
 I chose a read aloud and completed a mini lesson with the students.

I remember this week specifically, because it was a favorite.
This week we were learning about the Walrus.
For my first mini-lesson this week, I read the book, "Tooth Trouble."
After I read this book, we talked about the steps to brushing a walrus's teeth using the first, next, last signal words. Then, we came up with materials.
During their writing station on that day, the students were to start writing about how to brush a Walrus's teeth.
Day 2, mini-lesson we shared and wrote down materials needed.
Day 3, we read a non-fiction passage about Walrus's and identified the fact.
Day 4, we answered text based questions.

The basal was used in my guided reading lessons. Sometimes I created graphic organizers to go with the story and sometimes I pulled graphic organizers. With my at level group we basically used this story for most of the week. We worked with phonics skills, sight words and various comprehension skills. My low group, worked with just phonics on one day, then we moved into reading the story. We read it all week and then towards the end of the week we finally worked on the comprehension concept. My high group would read the story by themselves, come to me for their comprehension lesson. Sometimes, I gave them independent work to also complete with this story. Then, after my high group read the story, I was able to work with them at their own level.

 I did have each group read the story with me, at least one time because on Friday all of  the students were to take a comprehension test.


Each comprehension activity was also differentiated.
If you want to read more about how I did that, then click here.


My reading structure at this time was a lot like the Daily 5 structure, but with my own twist. 
The students spent 10-15 minutes at each rotation.
It just depended how long I met with the group at my table.

At this time, I did not use regular word work activities. I used literacy station activities that were more skill based because our day was so tight and we didn't have much time to practice each day.
You can see the literacy stations here.




Many of the different structures that I've tried are with the reading workshop approach. It was in third grade, but these structures can be done at any grade level. My new school follows the reading workshop approach, which is kind of what I did anyway. They have a BIG focus on independent reading and the kids LOVE to read! I love that, and I could have easily done a mini lesson, had kids independently read and then respond to their text. But... to me, that just wasn't enough! I wasn't willing to give up literacy stations, I love the extra practice they provide to the kids! 

So, needless to say, I tried out a few different structures last year-here we go! :)

1. My first structure that I tried went like this:

I followed more of a Daily 3 approach. After assessments, students were placed into their reading groups. Then, they began their reading stations. The students visited three stations each day. The longest station was, read to self- everyone went to read to self at the same time.

The rotations were as follows:
You can find the rotation cards here.
You can read this whole blog post here.


Group 1: Spelling Station, Read to Partner, Read to self
Group 2: Word Study, Task Cards, Read to self
Group 3: Read to partner, Word Study, Read to Self
Group 4: Listen to Reading, Spelling Station, Read to Self
Group 5: Task Cards, Listen to Reading, Read to Self

Then, the next day, I moved the cards down to the next group. For instance, the next day, group 2 would go to spelling and read to partner and group three would do word study and task cards. This ensured that the students were able to get to each station each week.

I met with students at guided reading during their stations. Yes, sometimes they missed a station. After the first two rotations, I stopped and completed a mini-lesson. Here is a little explanation:

There is an entire post on just a readers workshop - you can find that post here.

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2. Another reading block structure I tried was this one:

This idea came from my literacy coach. I expressed my concerns to her and she helped me organize my thoughts. I did love this structure, but the only thing missing were the stations...

Anyway, I lined up four pocket cards. Inside, there were note cards. On the top of each note card, I wrote the order in which our instruction was going for reader's workshop. I met with guided reading groups during cards 1 to 3. These cards were great because during respond to reading and the spelling notebook, students got to work at their own pace.


When I used the cards, my reading block looked like this: 
First, I did my mini-lesson:
This week our read aloud was Charlotte's Web.
We worked on plot using this activity.


After our mini-lesson, the students followed the cards. First they independently read for about 30 minutes. I met with 1-2 guided reading groups.
After independent reading, the students worked to respond to reading.
I had them do the same thing we did in our whole group lesson, just with their own book.
This student below is working on plot.


Not all lessons were able to work perfectly like this for respond to reading.
Some mini-lessons were gradual and took a few days.
During our Charlotte's Web study, we also focused on other comprehension concepts.


Sometimes, respond to reading was a writing assignment.
Sometimes, the kids worked on a graphic organizer.


Sometimes, it was just a reading response in their reading journal.
You've really just got to tweak the 'respond to reading' to make it go with what you are teaching.

Here is just a simple lesson. We did these pretty often!
For our read aloud, I had enough Stone Fox books. The students and I read Stone Fox together.
Our mini-lessons worked on predicting and confirming predictions. 
For each chapter we read, we first predicted what would happen. 
Then, after the chapter we confirmed our predictions. 
At the end of the book, we focused on how a character changed.


Then, after students did their independent reading, they chose a reading response and responded to the text.

Use cut and glue prompts during reading workshop! I love the ideas on this post on how to organize my reading workshop time!
Now we are onto pocket #3 - Spelling Notebook.
Each day students worked on their Daily Spelling Task in their spelling notebook.


When students finished this, they moved onto writers workshop. They just continued to work on what we worked on the previous day until it was time for our mini-lesson!



I have to admit, I wish I would have kept this reading structure. :-o
... Even though it didn't have the reading stations, I did find a way to fit them in during guided reading time. Just a thought for you if you are contemplating this one! :)

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3. The last reading structure I used was another station one! :-) I tell yah.... I just love them! I decided to go back to stations because, the rotations kept ME more accountable when meeting with guided reading groups. We all had a schedule to follow (mainly me). I needed to know who was coming when, and I didn't want the kids to miss anything.

Here is how this one went.

Still had our whole group mini-lessons:


Then, we broke out into stations.

These stations were different though. Like I said, I didn't want the kids to miss anything!
So, each week students got a reading choice board and they filled in their own station schedule. The only set times were the TT (Teacher Table) times. I had sticky notes by their groups names that had the days and number of rotation that they were coming to meet with me at the TT.

On the reading choice board I had a number by the station choice. That number told the students how many times they had to get to that station each week.

Read to self was 5x a week.
TT was assigned
Read with someone was 2x a week
Word Work was 3x a week (these were skill based literacy stations)
Spelling 2x a week (Spelling Notebook)


The students kept all work for the week in a folder. On Friday, students turned in their folder.
I still had students respond to reading. They only had to turn in one reading response, because we were doing a lot together as a whole group and in guided reading. 





This is the structure I stuck with for the rest of the year. It met students needs, it was easy to maintain and kept us ALL accountable!


This year, I am back in first grade. My reading block with look differently than all of the ones you've seen above. I am keeping it simple, and not doing too many complicated things!

I will be starting out each day with my whole group reading lesson. Each week we will have a read aloud, and we'll work on different comprehension concepts. I can't ever give these up! I love having my class learn together! 



Then, we will do our Reading Station Rotations.
I am going to have the following reading stations this year:

1. Read to Self
2. Skill Work
3. Word Work
4. Read to a Partner/Listen to Reading
5. Writing 

I am not sure if we can do all 5 each day. We may only do 3-4 each day unfortunately due to time constraints. 

For teacher table, each day I will just have my handy dandy Teacher Table Card. For each group I will just cover up one of their stations with my TT card and instead of going to that station - they'll come to me.

Here is a little visual of the reading rotation board I'll have.





What I plan to do, is cover up one rotation for everyone. So, this on this day, I took everyone's buddy reading time. The next day, I may meet with everyone during their writing stations, the next day, word work... etc.

I have certain plans for each station too:

Read to self - students will just independently read. I will not have them respond in first grade - third I probably would 1x a week.

Read to a partner/listen to reading: students will listen to a book together on CD on their assigned days. On the other days, they will simply read with a partner.

Word Work: Students will work with their spelling words and sight words using manipulatives like stamps, magnets, etc.

Skill Work: I plan to have a parent volunteer come in to read sight word passages with students and work on skill based literacy stations with the kids.

Writing: Students will continue to work on their writing workshop writing -or- choose a writing activity from choices provided.

The only thing I will ever need to prep is skill work! I wanted to make stations easier on myself this year! :-)

I hope this post was helpful! If you have any questions or additional ideas, comment below!! :)











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I Just LuhhhV My Job! & Where I've been!!

Have you ever just had one of those weeks (or a day) when you think.. "I love my job." I definitely had one of those weeks this week. Teaching can be a very tiring job but it really is just the best! It's a job (and I am sure you know) that makes you give everything you've got each day. It takes a lot of drive/motivation and all your patience to get through the day. Then, when the kids leave your pooped! That's me! That was me this week! But, each day when the kids left I was so happy. They left and I knew that day went smoothly... they all learned and they left giving me hugs and smiling. Today, I got my first, "I'm really going to miss you when I leave for second grade." comment. Uh, rips out my heart. I am finding that I really find myself attached to my kids each year (my whole 2 years of teaching) and I end up not really wanting the year to end. I know at the end of this year though I am going to feel so good about what I did for these kids.

This year I have had a particularly challenging group of students. I have a lot of different needs in my classroom and being a second year teacher I needed a lot of guidance which thankfully I received from some colleagues. But, this year I know that I gave it My ALL every single day and I am doing all that I can to make sure my kids are getting the best out of me!

Completely content...blessed to be able to live out my passion each day : )

I am beginning this MIA post with that because people I am SCRURRED!!! My fiance and I are moving next year and that means I have to find a new position. I have just been doing a lot of thinking about... what if I don't find a position... what on earth am I going to do to not only fill my time but satisfy my need to TEACH! Of course, TPT could keep me occupied but people... those ideas come straight from my kids and our discussions together! -- Okay, whew enough sweet talk!! :) Now, onto my week because friends; I have been MIA in this blog world.!
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Part 2: I promised a good 2 weeks ago I would be back with an update on my reading stations and how guided reading is going in my room. Like any teacher, I am evolving and finding new (not really) ways to make things work better in my classroom. My reading time is basically Daily 5 with different stations. (Read to Partner, I-pad, Raz-Kids, Writing, Literacy Station). The kids rotate every 12 minutes and I meet with at least 3 groups a day.

My last post was about how I was having the kids read the same book and differentiating the comprehension concept. That worked for a hot week and then I said, "Yah, scratch that." Why you say?!! BECAUSE... we got Raz-Kids! Now, I can differentiate students reading levels as I couldn't before because we did not have differentiated reading materials that were leveled and consistent. So, here are some photos and snip-its of what we have been doing during reading! :)

Right here is a sloppy copy of my guided reading plans. I always type them up in a document so their readable! But, the students are broken up into groups 1-5. Each group reads a different level story and depending on their readiness depends on the comprehension concept that we work on.

The past two weeks I have really been finding my groove in this whole guided reading thing. I do two lessons with my two struggling groups of phonics instruction and phonics readers. We work on spelling and fluency for a good two days. We also work on the concept being covered for the week or the previous week.

The rest of my groups go right into a story with me and a comprehension and language concept.
Here are some pictures below of them hard at work after we read our story and discussed it.
We do lots and lots of talking in guided reading! I <3 it!

These kiddos are reading their books on Raz-Kids and the other one took a quiz on the book we read this week in guided reading! (He got them all right) Whoop, Whoop!!

In the picture above we were working on identifying things that are real and make believe in a story. It was harder for them than I thought it would be. They really had to dig in deep and think of each part of the story.

This group worked on identifying a problem in the story and then coming up with possible solutions to the story! So fun!

This little cutie was working on expanding on her thoughts when retelling a story. A lot of my students struggle with retelling stories using their own words so that's something I have been hitting hard with those students who are having a tough time! I told them, "No more picture drawing about the stories... Now, it is time for sentences!!!" :)



This is how I am organizing my guided reading materials as of right now except I added numbers to the outside of them to correlate with the groups number. My room is teeny tiny so this is really all the space I have to store stuff. A whole two shelves.-HA! My next goal is to set up a guided reading bucket of manipulative materials that I have found my self using over and over again during my small group instruction. I just need to find space to put it. It's looking like the floor will have to do! Fine by me!!

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Now, stations! If you have been keeping up with my blog you know that stations are something I kind of had a tough time with this year. My students like I said earlier struggle a lot with all sorts of things. Organization and problem solving are tough for them so I really had to try to simply and make sure everything follows a routine to make this time of the day run extra smooth! Hey, it's okay right? We're always evolving!

I'm only setting out one 'required' literacy bin a day. So, when the kids visit that station that is their must do activity. If they finish it before the station time is up then they can re-do an old station, catch up on an old station they did not finish or complete a desert bin activity which is the picture you see below.

There are manipulative materials, a word search and a sight word activity in here.
This coming week I put a roll and read and a sight word memory game in there for the kids to do.
For some excitement I bought some JUMBO pencils from wally world! The kids LUHHHV them!!

I am figuring out my writing station too. People... my kids LOVE to write so I have to make sure to do a lot of it during the day! So, each week I put blank paper in one tray and then a sentence activity and at least two writing prompts at the writing station. The kids choose what they want to do but... they do have to finish the sentence activity. This week it is going to be a sentence scramble. They choose which day to do it but it has to be done before Friday. They're pretty good at it.
**Notice the writing above... I just wanted to share it**
-How to pull a tooth-
"First get a string and a remote control car. Then you tie a string to your tooth and make the car go. Then it is out Yaaaa Wawp."
*Can you say ADORABLE?! I giggled when I read this one!!*
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Okay, this last station will soon be having a post of it's own but for now here it is.
The kids have their I-pad station they visit each day. I figured out the whole QR code thing as in making them and how to get the kids to figure out how to use them too.

This week was the first week students had actual activities to do with their i-pads with a recording sheet! They totally rocked it out! They had to unscramble sight words and spelling words. They also put spelling and sight words in ABC order.


I have new ones out for next week from my March QR code literacy station packet! I can't wait for the kids to break into these ones!



 I WILL be back Sunday to share my visual plans and maybe some 100 day stuff! I have all kinds of stuff to catch you guys up on! 
Nighty Night!

Oh, almost forgot!! I have a funny. Look at what one of my kids brought in to share today...
I am one of those people that thinks farts are funny and the kids know it... Needless to say we just shared the cover because boy did this go in depth! Like from elephants to humans... to turtles!!

HA!! Now, you have a good night!! :)




















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