3 Methods to get kids to WANT to read and write

3 Methods to get kids to WANT to read and write

The Washington Post blog, Answer Sheet, ran an article about developing self-driven learning in students from a new book by veteran educator Larry Ferlazzo.  Daniel Pink describes in his book, Drive, that the development of intrinsic motivation needs autonomy, mastery, and purpose.

Autonomy means “acting with choice” (p. 90). In the area of reading and writing, it could mean having options of books to read, topics to write about, and partners to work with in class.

Mastery of skills that require higher-order thinking is defined by Pink as “the desire to get better and better at something that matters” (p.111), and it is promoted through engagement (coming from the French root word meaning “attract the attention of”), not compliance. Students need to see what reading and writing well can do for them now and in the future.

Purpose is Pink’s final element for developing intrinsic motivation—the desire for some “greater objective . . . a cause greater than themselves” (p. 133). The one-sentence project, where students are asked to come up with a sentence about how they want their life described and remembered years from now, speaks to this point, and we can explore with students how reading and writing well might help them achieve their sentence.

Ferlazzo then lists ways to create these elements for reading and writing within students.

1)  Free Voluntary Reading or Sustained Silent Reading

In order for students to motivate themselves to read, multiple studies have shown that they need access to high-interest reading material, ideally in a well-stocked classroom library.  In addition to access, students need choice in what they will read. By providing access and choice, students gain a sense of power, and once students feel empowered they are more motivated to read.

We are always most motivated to learn about things that interest us.  What is your student into?  Animals? Rockets? Non-fiction? Fiction?  Encourage your children to pick out the books they are interested in reading — even if it seems too hard for their reading level.  You can look over it and discuss difficult vocabulary or topics with them.

Give your child time to read on their own and get lost in a book.  I know I can read for hours when interested – even if it’s for work and not for pleasure.  I believe this desire was fed when I was a pre-teen reading all The Babysitter’s Club books for hours which no one would likely say have classical literature value.  The love of reading though was developed and has stayed with me into adulthood.

 2) Read a Book to a Younger Child

Having students read a book to a younger child can achieve two results—helping students develop a sense of purpose (discussed earlier in this chapter) connected to reading and strengthening prosody—rhythm, intonation, and fluency.

3) Writing Frames

Sometimes when students are faced with a blank page, they freeze. Giving students structures for writing can be motivational. However, when taken too far, or when taught as the only way to write, writing formulas can be detrimental to students’ growth as writers. When used correctly, formulas and strategies can help students to find their voices and motivate them to write..  Research has shown that one of the key elements necessary for intrinsic motivation is a sense of self-efficacy, or competence. Our students will be more likely to want to write if they feel confident in their ability to do so competently.

There are a variety of acronyms for structured paragraph writing to help students: ABC, PQC, PEA, SSE, PEE. We have found ABC and PQC to be effective in helping students to start their writings. Using the ABC format, students Answer the question; Back it up with a quote or other evidence; make a Connection to an experience or another text. If the teacher is working on quote integration or using quotations from text as evidence, then PQC is a good start: Make a Point, Quote from the text supporting your point., Make a Comment or a Connection to your personal experience, another text, or some other knowledge.

You can develop their writing at home with the books they have picked out to read for pleasure.  Skim through the book to find a dilemma or decision that relates to the topic.  Ask students what their response would be and why.  Remind them the ‘why’ should include evidence from the book – maybe a quote or paraphrasing of facts and a connection to something in their own lives or another book they’ve read or even a movie they have seen.

Don’t require these to be very long at first.  Build up to longer paragraphs and reports as they continue to do it.  With our Gideon reading curriculum, our first creative writing prompt is a cartoon picture.  The students are asked to write one sentence describing the picture.  Just one!  In the next level, we ask them to write two.  Later, they are given three vocabulary words and asked to write a three sentence story using those words.  Structure plus a slow build-up goes a long way to developing creative writing.

 

Write 1 sentence.
Write 2 sentences.

Read the rest of this article for additional methods or get his book.

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Early number sense plays a role in later math skills

Early number sense plays a role in later math skills

On Joanne Jacob’s blog, she highlighted a recent AP article discussing the correlation between early number sense and math ability several years later.  The University of Missouri study found that 7th graders who struggled were the same ones who struggled in 1st grade.

“The gap they started with, they don’t close it,” says Dr. David Geary, a cognitive psychologist who leads the study that is tracking children from kindergarten to high school in the Columbia, Mo., school system. “They’re not catching up” to the kids who started ahead.

 

If first grade sounds pretty young to be predicting math ability, well, no one expects tots to be scribbling sums. But this number sense, or what Geary more precisely terms “number system knowledge,” turns out to be a fundamental skill that students continually build on, much more than the simple ability to count.

 

What’s involved? Understanding that numbers represent different quantities – that three dots is the same as the numeral “3” or the word “three.” Grasping magnitude – that 23 is bigger than 17. Getting the concept that numbers can be broken into parts – that 5 is the same as 2 and 3, or 4 and 1. Showing on a number line that the difference between 10 and 12 is the same as the difference between 20 and 22.

Like so many things, practice and repetition can overcome previous shortcomings.  When your child does the initial free diagnostic test at Gideon, we are looking for any holes in the foundation such as ability to pick the larger number and whether the addition facts are memorized.  Then we start wherever the student is showing a lack of mastery in order to build up on solid ground – no matter if the material is covered several grade levels before or after their current starting point.

Like reading, early and often parent interactions can go a long way.  Any time you read or count with a child is good, but they give some even more specific tips if you want to take it that extra step.

… Geary sees a strong parallel with reading. Scientists have long known that preschoolers who know the names of letters and can better distinguish what sounds those letters make go on to read more easily. So parents today are advised to read to their children from birth, and many youngsters’ books use rhyming to focus on sounds.

Likewise for math, “kids need to know number words” early on, he says.

 

NIH’s Mann Koepke agrees, and offers some tips:

-Don’t teach your toddler to count solely by reciting numbers. Attach numbers to a noun – “Here are five crayons: One crayon, two crayons…” or say “I need to buy two yogurts” as you pick them from the store shelf – so they’ll absorb the quantity concept.

-Talk about distance: How many steps to your ball? The swing is farther away; it takes more steps.

 

Real Life 101: How Do We Make Students Aware of the Working World?

Real Life 101: How Do We Make Students Aware of the Working World?

In this blog post at edweek.org, Illina Garon discusses how her many of her 10th grade students don’t believe they will need math or English for their future jobs.

I was incredulous. “You want to be astronauts, and you think you’re not going to need math?” I turned to the actress. “Or English?”

 

No, they told me. They were certain that most of what they were learning in high school was totally irrelevant to their future career choices. Except for a few kids who muttered “Yo, these naive people are making me tight!” and rolled their eyes, my 10th graders seemed confident in their position.

I was asked many times while teaching Algebra I when this would used in the ‘real world’.  While I wished I had researched more about what certain careers require to give them more reasons, I used the argument that I didn’t want to limit them in whatever they wanted to do.  Mastering Algebra I would open up many more opportunities.  It is difficult to know what you want to do at age 15.  How much harder and longer is the road to become an engineer with a weak math background?  I believe it can still be done, but many would be discouraged and go down a different, easier path.  Engineering is not better than the career not needing math, but I don’t want it blocked off to those would want it due to lack of foresight.

Beyond the inherent frustration, this conversation showed me something I hadn’t realized before. I’ve long advocated for alternatives to the traditional “college for all” academic path, such as trade and career-tech programs (welding, auto mechanics, carpentry, cosmetics, etc.) But I’ve realized the students also need a crash course in career awareness–specifically, letting them know what careers are even out there (many careers such as IT, accounting, engineering, or hospitality management, because of their lack of intrinsic visibility in the kids’ daily lives or in TV, are often off their radar), and what these careers require, both in skills and in day-to-day activities. The fact that my 10th graders do not realize that being an astronaut requires math is, I think, almost as serious a problem as whatever deficits they may have in the subject to begin with.

Read the rest of this blog post here.

 

This is your brain, and THIS is your brain on books!

This is your brain, and THIS is your brain on books!

HERE is a great article from Open Education Database about 10 positive changes that happen to your brain when you read and listen to books.  Below are some of the highlights.

We make photos in our minds, even without being prompted

Researchers have found that visual imagery is simply automatic. Participants were able to identify photos of objects faster if they’d just read a sentence that described the object visually, suggesting that when we read a sentence, we automatically bring up pictures of objects in our minds.

Different styles of reading create different patterns in the brain:

Stanford University researchers have found that close literary reading in particular gives your brain a workout in multiple complex cognitive functions, while pleasure reading increases blood flow to different areas of the brain. They concluded that reading a novel closely for literary study and thinking about its value is an effective brain exercise, more effective than simple pleasure reading alone.

In Gideon we combine vocabulary study with fiction and non-fiction comprehension to utilize all different kinds of content to develop better readers!  We always encourage reading for fun by having your children pick out library books that are interesting to them.

Story structure encourages our brains to think in sequence, expanding our attention spans:

Stories have a beginning, middle, and end, and that’s a good thing for your brain. With this structure, our brains are encouraged to think in sequence, linking cause and effect. The more you read, the more your brain is able to adapt to this line of thinking. Neuroscientists encourage parents to take this knowledge and use it for children, reading to kids as much as possible. In doing so, you’ll be instilling story structure in young minds while the brain has more plasticity, and the capacity to expand their attention span.

Many teachers and homeschooling moms report that young children especially love stories that tell the events of a day in order as they can relate to it and helps them make sense of their own activities and day.

Reading changes your brain structure (in a good way):

Not everyone is a natural reader. Poor readers may not truly understand the joy of literature, but they can be trained to become better readers. And in this training, their brains actually change. In a six-month daily reading program from Carnegie Mellon, scientists discovered that the volume of white matter in the language area of the brain actually increased. Further, they showed that brain structure can be improved with this training, making it more important than ever to adopt a healthy love of reading.

This is probably our favorite one as we believe any child has the potential to advance as high as desired.  Dr. Ben Carson (featured in our last blog post) was a failing 5th grade student whose mother started to make him and his brother write two book reports a week.  At first he hated it (as most children do to new work!) but later grew to enjoy the books which turned his academics around in 1 1/2 years.  He later earned a scholarship to Yale and became the head of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital at 33.  All that extra reading changed his BRAIN which may have changed his LIFE course.

Go HERE to read the rest of this article.

 

10 Steps Toward Better Writing

While at Gideon we don’t focus on writing long essays, we do recognize the need for this skill.  In high school and college, you’ll need to be able to write two to ten (TEN?!) page papers.  Don’t think being a STEM based major will allow you to avoid them either.  While you can side step philosophy if you want, one of your required elective classes will likely have you writing.  Since I was a math major, most of my classes didn’t require the lengthier ones; however, with an education minor, I still had a pull out a five pager every now and then.  My law school friend describes the requirement to easily whip out a paper of twelve pages overnight with much longer ones such as 30+ in a week.

If you don’t have your own personal writing tutor, check out this article by Dustin Wax with tips for better writing. I wish I had these tips when I was in high school during AP English.  I had my father proofread my papers, and they were generally a red hot mess after he handed back his marked revisions.  Oh the revisions!  As the years pass though, all those tweaks for better writing have served me well.

Writing well is easily one of the most sought-after and useful skills in the business world. Ironically, it is one of the rarest and most undervalued skills among students, and few professors have the time, resources, or skills to teach writing skills effectively.  What follows are a handful of tips and general principles to help you develop your writing skills, which will not only improve your grades (the most worthless indicator of academic progress) but will help develop your ability to think and explain the most difficult topics. Although directed at students, most of this advice applies equally well to any sort of writing; in the end, good writing is not limited to one context or another.

Some things he mentions that you may not have thought of are:

3. Start in the middle. One of the biggest problems facing writers of all kinds is figuring out how to start. Rather than staring at a blank screen until it’s burned into your retinas trying to think of something awe-inspiring and profound to open your paper with, skip the introduction and jump in at paragraph two. You can always come back and write another paragraph at the top when you’re done — but then again, you might find you don’t need to. As it turns out, the first paragraph or so are usually the weakest, as we use them to warm up to our topic rather than to do any useful work.

 

8. Focus on communicating your purpose. Revise your paper at least once, focusing on how well each line directs your readers towards the understanding you’ve set out to instill in them. Every sentence should direct your reader towards your conclusion. Ask yourself, “Does this sentence add to my argument or just take up space? Does it follow from the sentence before, and lead into the following sentence? Is the topic of each paragraph clear? Does each sentence in the paragraph contribute to a deeper understanding of the paragraph’s topic?” Revising your paper is where the magic happens — when you’re done with your first draft, your understanding of your subject will be much greater than it was when you started writing; use that deeper knowledge to clarify and enrich your writing. Revision should take about the same time as writing — say 15 – 30 minutes a page.

 

10. Conclude something. Don’t confuse a “conclusion” with a “summary”. The last paragraph or two should be the culmination of your argument, not a rehash of it. Explain the findings of your research, propose an explanation for the data presented, point out avenues for future research, or point out the significance of the facts you’ve laid out in your paper. The conclusion should be a strong resolution to the paper, not a weak recapitulation tacked on to pad out the page count.

Check out the rest of his 10 tips HERE.

https://youtu.be/mk_JiwIjzXU