Sunday, February 17, 2019

Interactive Read Alouds

Picture Books are my jam! If you teach elementary school they are probably yours too!

Read Aloud is My. Absolute. FAVORITE. time of the day! It is a time that is never skipped!! My students look forward to it and it is often their favorite time of the day too!

Reading aloud allows our class to create experiences together that we don't forget and often revisit throughout the year. It helps build empathy, creates community in our classroom, develops conversations, deepens our vocabulary, and changes how we see people and the world around us. 

How do I make books come alive during Read Aloud?

1. Scared Time- 
I really talk up read alouds! Like how this is a special time for us to pause, come together, hear a great book, and learn something new. Sometimes. I let them vote on our read aloud or preview our read aloud for the next day and leave them wanting to know more. We also choose our favorite read aloud by highlighting a Book of the Month!

2. Book, Head, Heart- 
If you haven't read Disruptive Thinking by Kylene Beers, you need to! It has changed the way I read and think about books. My favorite is the "heart" in her Book, Head, Heart questioning: "What did I learn about me?" "How does this help me be better?" I want my students to be changed and think about how they can apply the book's lesson to their life. We always turn and talk about those questions at the end. The conversations that happen through those questions are INCREDIBLE!

3. Theme wall and baskets- 
I believe I got this idea from Scholastic when I first started teaching, and it is one of those things that makes a huge difference so I continue to use it every year. On one of my walls I have several common theme cards and for each book read aloud together we discuss the theme. I then put up the book cover of the book under the theme we feel was strongest. I also have baskets up front in my classroom where we place the book. These books are available to students all year long. I love the visual of how many books we have read together, and it is great to make connections across texts, genres, and characters. 
Click here for the theme cards!

4. My Maps on Google
This is a new idea I recently learned about at EdCampCyFair. Tommy Spall shared how he uses My Maps, and we started brainstorming other ways we could possibly use My Maps in our classroom. Being a reading teacher, my first thought went to Read Alouds. We can find and mark the book's setting, birthplace of the subject we are reading, or a specific place we are learning about. I love that you can add a picture of the book's cover, the person, or a landmark. We have also been adding descriptions and notes we want to remember. Students have loved being able to zoom in, walk around, and discover what the place we are visiting has to offer! I can't wait to see all the places we have traveled together by the end of the year!

5. Tweet Authors-
Last but not least, we tweet authors! Students love connecting with real authors and sharing what they loved about they books or how their book impacted them. They are beyond excited when an author tweets us back! It takes no time at all and makes the books and authors seem more authentic! 


Those are a few ways I try to make books come alive and foster of love of reading in my classroom! I would love to hear what you do in YOUR classroom or on your campus to create lifelong readers!
Happy Reading!!




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