Sunday, June 28, 2015

Selecting text for your classroom



For optimum experience please listen to this song while you read :Both Sides Now

Post 6: Selecting texts for your classroom

            In the fifth chapter of the book “Multiple Voices, Multiple Texts” the focus is now on how to pick that will help the students to learn, to grow, to assess previous knowledge, to build for future knowledge, to entertain, and not to alienate. It has to do a lot of things and the authors know that there are many factors that need to be taken into account when picking a text. This is the first chapter that I have not heard them talk about traditional phonemic teaching and how bad it is for the students, I guess 70 pages in and 5 chapters later they feel like their point has been made.
            The authors are quick to point out that the face of “literature” as we know it is changing. They talked about being able to use movies and clips in a classroom and how they can be great supplementary texts and in some instances a primary source for students in the classroom. I agree with this concept completely, students do not read as much as they used to and as sad as that is I think that we can use film to bring students back to the idea that reading and writing can be helpful. I want to do a screen writing portion for my students and help them to see that writing theme, plot, setting, characterization is as important in a movie as it can be in the books they read.
            And though this book was written in the 90’s it talks a lot about the changing climate of education and the culture of the classroom and how diversity is ever increasing and that the traditional majority is becoming the minority. I teach In Gallup and this is especially true. The authors talked about how a text needs to be relevant to the students that they need to have it in their lives and in their understanding and it needs to be a part of who they are. A bunch or rich dead white people have less to say to them personally than a Native American author who struggled where they struggled and found a way to add to the conversation of authors. So, by using texts that are near and dear to them with ideas and landmarks that they can not only visualize in the pages of a book but they have seen them for themselves. A book about the grandeur of the Grand Canyon can only do so much, whereas if they have walked angels landing and enjoyed the majesty of it they will be that much more likely to give it a chance. And, if they are anything like me, when you give a book a chance it usually draws me in.
            The authors want to point out that textbooks have their places and especially modern textbooks that have taken all the research into account can give a lot to the students. But they talk about all the things that aren’t book, the movies, the music of the age, the artwork around them. I have my students do a unit project that is a multi genre project. They pick a few possibilities from a list of about 10 things in order to respond to the unit question. They can take a picture, paint something, compose a song, a poem, and write a traditional essay, a political speech, among other things. The book talks about how making the student creates information in a myriad of ways can be helpful to their learning and their growing. Find a way to take what they know and show that they have learned with doing things they know how to do.

4 comments:

  1. I know the world has changed so much. Technological advances are incredible and in many ways we still teach in almost the same way as 30 or more years back. There are so many resources that we could use to teach. Valuable resources that we need to take advantage of. We can incorporate more diverse texts some of them like you said that have been written from a perspective closer to the students. I like the idea of giving students the opportunity to use other ways to do some activities. They can explore and learn so much if we let them.

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  2. I really enjoyed reading your post. Providing students with ample opportunity to show their thinking and learning through various mediums is really important. I think this is a necessary component to literary thinking and it is often an untapped opportunity. Thank you for the post. -Jamie

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  3. I agree that video and PowerPoint is a major component to the classroom, which can detract from the reading aspect of learning. I've recently discovered that the internet has an answer for this as well. As you may already know, that a lot of informative videos like Bill Nye the Science Guy, for example, have tons of worksheets that accompany the videos . Shoot, I even saw one on Gattaca and Jurassic Park.
    Great way to incentivise engagement in a video too.

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  4. Hi Ryan,

    I think your idea of picking a song that fits this article at the beginning of your post is very cool. It's almost like the way we watch a movie or a drama. However I soon found out that, maybe it's because I am a ESL learner, it's not very easy for me to read an English article and listen to an English song together. In the end I did them separately.

    Like you said, although this book is written in the 90's, the phenomenon—that students read less and less and the format of a text is more and more—is still, and even more prevalence. I think one important advantage of including other form of texts into school teaching is that educators could teach students how to analyze, interpret and make right judgement about the mass media they are forced to contact every single day, instead of absorb all of them without critical thinking about the hidden message from merchants or government.

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