I found this chapter on Emphasizing Shared Reading
interesting. Even though my students
aren’t reading yet, I can see how this would be helpful with students who
are. It would have been helpful to use
back when I taught 5th grade resource ELA. Routman says “ Shared reading is ideal for showing how any text works—nonfiction,
picture books, short stories newspapers, plays, poetry, chants, novels,
textbooks, periodicals.” Students are
guided through every part of reading to help with fluency, figuring out words,
thinking, questioning, predicting, and rereading. She uses it in every grade level for most of
her reading demonstrations. I
particularly liked that shared reading encourages all student voices to be
heard, moves quickly helping keep students engaged, and builds confidence and
competence in struggling readers. I had
so many students who were embarrassed to read aloud and truly struggled to
understand what they were reading. As a
new teacher back then, I struggled to find the best ways to motivate and help
them to want to keep working on their reading skills. I love the way she helped guide her students
through the book Keepers by Jeri
Hanel Watts and Felicia Marshall; allowing them to read along with their eyes
or out loud with her as long as they are all looking at the screen with
projected transparency. Incorporating
talking with a partner about what certain things mean in the book and reading
small sections of a story together to continue the discussion could really help
the struggling readers to understand what they are reading more clearly. The shared reading process also gives the teacher
many ways to evaluate students. For
example, have the students discuss why the author wrote the piece, share a
favorite part of the story with a partner, draw or dramatize an important part
of favorite scene in the story, read the last page independently or with a
partner and have them discuss as a class how the story ends, or practice
reading alone or with a partner one page for fluency. If I ever have an older group of students
again I will definitely give this process a try.
Laurie, you raise some good questions. With your group of students (who are not typically independently decoding text while they are with you!), how does shared reading work? Can we engage younger students with special needs in shared reading in ways that might not have been listed in this chapter? Does choral reading or books with refrains count as shared reading? You have me thinking! :-)
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