Actively Engaged Middle School Readers
Link to PB workspace page below:
http://deancurriculumandinstruction.pbworks.com/w/page/38326122/Research-Presentation
1. How can reading teachers get middle school students more actively engaged in reading? Designed By: Laquitha Dean
2. In today’s society students are surrounded by technology. Middle school students are not actively engaged in reading. Is this based on the teaching curriculum, how reading is used and demonstrated in the classroom and at home or is it based on the amount of parental involvement.
3. The GoalThis presentation is created to find out what drives middle school students to not be actively engaged in reading, within the classroom and outside. This presentation will explore strategies and resources that students, parents and teachers can utilize in order to become actively engaged in reading. This is a problem because if students do not comprehend or are interested in what they have read, then the literacy levels will continually decrease as the students increase in grade level.
4. Strategies teachers can use for middle school students to become actively engaged in reading…
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6. Activities that involve and engage students are ones where they are manipulating the information physically and mentally. Students need to be moving around, working in groups, and discovering information for themselves. Stay away from chalkboard lectures
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8. Give students the opportunity to act out 5 plus 3 or 10 divided by 5.
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10. Keep your student organized. It's helpful to hang a weekly schedule on the fridge to keep track of upcoming tests and project due dates. "Make sure kids' binders are not falling apart or stuffed with loose papers Preserve reading rituals. Encourage your child to read to you, too. Maybe she'll want to quiz you from a movie trivia book or read you portions of an interview with her favorite star. It's also relaxing to save some time at the end of the day for everyone to gather in the family room and read silently Squeeze in book talk. Middle school students may pretend to resent your interest, but they secretly love knowing that you're taking the time to talk to them about their books." Role of Parental Involvement
11. This is a great website for parents and teachers to utililize. It helps them understand how to actively engaged their students in reading. For more teacher and parental involvement strategies the word below. Stage 30
12. K-W-L Chart The K-W-L Chart is great for teachers to use when getting middle school students actively engage in reading. It focuses on prior and future knowledge.
13. The PBS website is great for middle school reading teachers to use within the classroom. It showcases interactive videos, songs, and curriculum that are designed to actively engage middle school students in reading. The site allows teachers to demonstrate different strategies and use resources for effective lesson planning. Click on the link below to view the website. http://www.pbs.org/teachers/ PBS
14. The most common way that student engagement is measured is through information reported by the students themselves. Other methods include checklists and rating scales completed by teachers, observations, work sample analyses, and case studies. Teachers interested in assessing student engagement in the classroom should consider using separate measures to get at the cognitive, affective, and behavioral aspects of task engagement. If teachers do not know how to measure, they will not be able to get students actively engaged in reading. How is student engagement measured?
15. My results were that teachers and parents must become actively engaged in reading in order for students to become actively engaged. Technology such as I-Pods, I-Pads, computers, laptops have taken over the use of reading books, which allows the students to not have a desire in active engagement of reading. Students must be engaged with one another, they should have an interest in what they are reading so that they can comprehend what they have read. Teachers need to know their students literacy levels, in order to prepare and teacher effective curriculum. In Conclusion…
16. References Chapman, Elaine. (2003, September). Assessing Student Engagement Rates. Retrieved from ericdigests.org Grant, Peggy. (200,1 November). Professional Development for Teachers of Reading. Retrieved from www.learningpt.org Mc Donald, Emma. (2011, March). How to Involve and Engage Students. Retrieved from www.inspiring teachers.com PBS. (2011, March). Featured Classroom Resources. Retrieved from pbs.org Scholastic Parents. (2011, February). Partner with your child’s middle school teachers. Retrieved from scholastic.com