Wow! I feel like my weekend went by fast. I had to help out with the 4th grade Writing Camp. This camp is to prepare the students (who still need help) to become successful on their TAKS Writing test; Texas' state standardized test. After the Writing Camp I stayed for another hour to work in my classroom. I just couldn't resist. Normally I don't go to school on the weekends.
Tutoring Monday is over with for this week. I'm surprised how fast the day went. I dragged into work in the morning not looking forward to my long Monday. Before I knew it, it was time for the kids I tutor to go home. I am beyond joyful that the five students I tutor enjoy staying after school. They say it is fun. I try to make math tutoring as fun as possible, but I still make sure I am teaching the skills they need.
Welcome to Teachers' Lounge Talk. Read up on my experiences as an elementary school teacher.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Resource to Teach Main Idea
• Grades 2-3
• 35 reproducible pages
• High interest non-fiction reading passages
• Targets main idea skill
• Mini-lessons
• Teacher tips
• Can be used at home and school
• Pre and post assessments and answer key
As a teacher I know the importance of teaching main idea to students. At the same time it can also be a difficult reading comprehension skill for students to fully master. It is our responsibility that students understand this skill because it is tested on state standardized tests. Also, understanding the main idea and details will help children better understand the story. Here is one resource that you can use in your classroom while enforcing main idea and supporting detail skills.
Grades 2-3
This book is targeted for 2-3 graders; however, it can be used in upper grades such as 4th and 5th if you have students whose reading level is low.
Assessments
Before you start teaching the main idea there is a pre-assessment that will help you see what your students understand about main idea. Towards the end of the book there is a post-assessment as well.
Teacher Friendly
This book published by Scholastic is very teacher friendly. It has a mini-lesson at the beginning of the book. First it shows you how to introduce the concept. Afterwards it explains how to model your thinking when introducing the concept. Next, the author, Linda Ward Beech helps define the skill on teaching main idea and details. Finally, the author gives the students an opportunity to practice the skill with main idea reading passages. Ms. Beech also provides a record-keeping sheet that you can use to track your students’ progress as each reading passage is completed.
Student Friendly
When teaching main idea you want materials that will keep your students’ interest. The main idea exercises use high interest non-fiction passages such as a short passage on Mount Rushmore. There’s also child-friendly clip art in the main idea reading passages instead of those boring black and white photographs that seem to be geared more towards adults.
Conclusion
Reading Passages That Build Comprehension: Main Idea & Details
Labels:
Main Idea Resource
Monday, January 10, 2011
Tutoring Begins
Now the tutoring has began so we can get the students ready for TAKS (Texas' standardized test). I began tutoring today after school for one hour and 45 minutes. I really don't look forward to tutoring each semester, but I went in today with a positive attitude instead of focusing on the four months that this will last. And you know what, that hour and 45 minutes went by quickly. The five students I was tutoring enjoyed themselves. We focused on numerical fluency and estimating. I believe we had fun because of my attitude and it projected on them. I'm glad day 1 of tutoring was a success!
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