Teachers know books are the key.
Teachers are quick to incorporate Read Alouds, both fiction and non-fiction, into lessons for reading skills, math, science and social studies. Teachers provide students with books in guided reading small group sessions…and then they take it back. WHAT?
...STOP…WHAT?
Yep, they take it back. "What if they lose a book?" "What if they get mixed up with someone else's books?" It is unbelievable to me, but ONE exposure to a book cannot be considered valuable or “best practice.”
Here are 5 reasons they NEED the books at their disposal EVERY DAY.
Practice. If you want a child to be better at piano, you make them practice. If you want a child to be better at soccer, you make them practice. If you want to child to be better at dance, you make them practice. If you want a child to be better at reading, you make them practice. You would not give them a piece to play on the piano ONCE. You would not have them kick a soccer ball ONCE. WHY would you expect a student to become a successful reader with one glance at a book. Students need to have the books from small group at their disposal to develop comprehension, fluency and expression. They need practice every day...with new books every day! I provided each student with a gallon-sized Ziploc(R) bag. Each day they get give me the oldest book in their bag and they get a new book. There are always 5 books in their bags. They need LOTS and LOTS of exposure to text on their level! Practice makes permanent.
Word wall words or sight words CANNOT be learned in isolation. Well, they can be…but, why would you? When students are just beginning to connect letters to sounds and sounds to words every connection made clear makes an impact on their learning. Early readers, levels A – C, are sight word heavy. Typically a word or two is repeated in predictable text can not only provide further practice with fluency, students are practicing sight words on every page. As they become more and more familiar with these books the sight words become easily recognized and ingrained.








