October 2020 Newsletter

In Focus: Vocabulary | Distance Teaching and Learning | For Parents | Children’s Books & Authors | LD Awareness | More for Teachers | News and Events

In Focus: Vocabulary

Vocabulary plays a critical role in learning to read and in reading comprehension. In this month’s newsletter, you’ll find featured articles on effective vocabulary instruction, classroom strategies, content area vocabulary, the role of read alouds in building word knowledge, and more. Browse our complete library of vocabulary resources for more articles, research briefs, parent tips, and video clips.

Using Multimedia to Teach Vocabulary 

A veteran teacher describes how she used visualization, Google images, video, and Skype to build background knowledge and enrich her students' classroom read aloud of a fiction book about ospreys.

Related:

Vocabulary Strategy: Semantic Gradients

Semantic gradients are a great way to deepen children’s nuanced understanding of related words. Go inside Cathy Doyle's second grade classroom to observe how a recent class read-aloud, The Seed Is Sleepy, becomes the springboard for a lively discussion about words that describe the (massive vs. gigantic and tiny vs. microscopic). See more vocabulary strategies, such as list-group-label and words maps.

Choosing Words to Teach

Teaching vocabulary is complex. What words are important for a child to know and in what context? In this excerpt from Bringing Words to Life: Robust Vocabulary Instruction, the authors consider what principles might be used for selecting which words to explicitly teach.

Content Area Vocabulary

Vocabulary lies at the heart of content learning. Educators Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey talk about effective strategies to support word learning in the content areas: give students time to read widely, intentionally select words worthy of instruction, model their own word solving strategies, and provide students with opportunities to engage in collaborative conversations.

Related:

Dialogic Reading: Having a Conversation about Books

"Dialogic reading" means having a conversation around the text you are reading aloud together. Learn how to use this strategy to help kids build vocabulary and verbal fluency skills — and to understand the structure of a story and its meaning. Downloadable handouts to help guide parents in using dialogic reading are available in English and 14 other languages.

Reading 101 Course: Vocabulary

Try our self-paced course module on teaching vocabulary. Dive deep into word learning strategies, indirect vocabulary instruction, choosing words to teach, academic vocabulary, and more. Test your knowledge with a pre- and post-test.

See all vocabulary resources >

COVID-19: Distance Teaching and Learning

 

Achieve the Core: Resources for Remote Learning

Achieve the Core has curated a rich collection of lessons, text sources, classroom video, and more to support reading instruction. Some examples are linked below; see the full set on their Reading Accelerators page.

Early Readers Practice Reading Routine for Synchronous, Asynchronous, or Low/No Tech Learning. Use this weekly routine to support your early readers with decodable or knowledge-building texts in a variety of remote settings.

Fluency Packet for Grades 2-3 (Word doc download)

Class and Family Book Tasting During Distance Learning: Designing Reading Activities to Engage Students at Home

Virtual Teaching Resource Hub: including lesson templates, instructional activities, tips on managing behavior and attention, and tech tools (University of Florida Literacy Institute)

Virtual Bending Board with Customizable Letters (University of Florida Literacy Institute)

Virtual Phonemic Awareness (Heggerty)

Three Lessons Learned About Distance Learning

Educators Douglas Fisher, Nancy Frey, and John Hattie discuss what they’ve learned about effective distance teaching and learning in developing their new book, The Distance Learning Playbook, Grades K-12, including how to accelerate learning, managing reading volume, and the infusion of social and emotional learning strategies.

Learning at Home During COVID-19

Browse our guide to supporting all learners, families, and educators. You’ll find a rich library of resources, including lessons plan collections, distance teaching strategies, resources on social-emotional learning, ideas for strengthening school-home partnerships, news stories, and more, updated weekly. (Produced in partnership with NEA)

For Parents

Math and Measuring

Do you know any kids who are fascinated by numbers and love to count, puzzle out fractions, and measure stuff? On our companion site, Start with a Book, we've gathered up a great collection of books, activities, apps, and kid-friendly websites for learning all about math and measuring.

Related:

Tips for Teaching Your Child About Phonemes

Discover simple at-home activities you can use to help your child understand the connection between the letters of the alphabet and the sound associated with each letter. (In English and Spanish)

Think Alouds” Help Build Comprehension

Children learn when they make connections between what they hear or read and what they already know. One method parents can use to help make these connections is called a "think aloud," where you talk through your thoughts as you read. (In English and Spanish)

Children’s Books and Authors

Heroes Give Us Hope

This year is the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th amendment — guaranteeing women the right to vote! Children’s author Barb Rosenstock newest picture book, Fight of the Century: Alice Paul Battles Woodrow Wilson for the Vote, introduces kids to the ways that women fought for justice and changed our country. Continuing the work for justice requires hope, effort, leadership, and persistence, traits to be encouraged in all children, this year, and always. In this new blog post for Book Life, Rosenstock offers a few simple activities for budding activists!

Related:

Heroes and Superheroes (books, hands-on activities, and more)

A Society Where No One Is Left Out

Thanks to Frances Perkins, Fighter for Workers’ Rights, the new picture book by Deborah Hopkinson, celebrates the life and work of Perkins, the first female Labor Secretary, who had a pivotal role in crafting the New Deal, including the Social Security Act. More than a picture book biography, Hopkinson wanted to “connect [Perkins’] life and accomplishments to children’s real-life experiences." And so the book asks children to think of their own lives, and what they will do to tackle hard problems and help make their communities and their world more fair, just, and inclusive. Learn more about what inspired Hopkinson to write this book about a most remarkable woman!

Booklists for Fall

LD and Dyslexia Awareness

October is Learning Disabilities and Dyslexia Awareness Month. During this month, Reading Rockets asks each of you to teach one person one new thing about learning disabilities. If you find an interesting article or resource here, consider passing it along to a friend, family member, or colleague.

Children's Authors: Talking About Learning and Attention Issues
(Dav Pilkey, Carmen Agra Deedy, Katherine Applegate, Henry Winkler, Raina Telgemeier, and many more)


7 Things to Know About Learning and Attention Issues

Understanding Dyslexia Toolkit: Thisguide helps parents and educators learn about dyslexia and how to support the literacy development of students with dyslexia. (National Center on Improving Literacy)

Learning Ally: Browse the extensive library of audiobooks for kids, including literature, popular fiction and curriculum-aligned titles.You'll also find educator tools and resource to help struggling readers become engaged, independent learners. 

For Teachers

Reading SOS: Expert Answers to Your Questions About Reading  

Why can't my son re-read a word in a sentence that he just sounded out?In this special Reading Rockets video series, experts answer real questions from families about reading and how to support your children at home. In one video, reading expert Linda Farrell answers a parent’s question, “Why can't my child re-read a word in a sentence that he just sounded out?”

If you'd like to ask a question about how to help your striving reader, please write to us at: [email protected]

Seatwork That Makes Sense for Reading

In this recent blog post from Tim Shanahan, he says that the best seatwork activities will guide students to engage the meaning of the text more deeply. That’s why many worksheets and centers simply don’t work very well. To complete them it usually isn’t necessary to think much about the text. What kinds of activities fit the bill? Here are a few that can be done with any texts that the students are trying to read. The key is to focus them on key parts of the text or language that you suspect will trip kids up.

Decodable Text Sources

Decodable text is a type of text used in beginning reading instruction. Decodable texts are carefully sequenced to progressively incorporate words that are consistent with the letter–sound relationships that have been taught to the new reader. This list of links includes decodable text sources for students in grades K-2, 3-8, and older students.

News and Events

IDA Annual Conference [Virtual]
Reading, Literacy and Learning: Advancing Every Classroom Through the Science of Reading
November 13-14, 2020

The Reading League Annual Conference 
The Science of Reading: Now More Than Ever
Starting October 27, 2020

Jacqueline Woodson Named a 2020 MacArthur Fellow
School Library Journal

Schools Already Struggled to Teach Reading Right. Now They Have to Do It Online
Education Week

How to Use Digital Reading Programs During COVID-19. Teachers Still Matter
Education Week

How to Teach Reading With a Digital Mindset: Researcher Nell Duke's Advice
Education Week

Teaching Reading During COVID-19: Frustrated Students, Tech Challenges
Education Week

Half a million Pa. kids are supposed to be learning to read right now. Are they?
WITF-FM (Harrisburg, PA)

How Love Became a Weapon in the Reading Wars
Breaking the Code

How to Make Station Rotation Work During Hybrid Learning
Edutopia

New Research Ignites Debate on the ‘30 Million Word Gap’
Edutopia

Remote learning has been a disaster for many students. But some kids have thrived
Hechinger Report

Teacher Tips: How to Reduce Screen Time When School Is Online
Education Week

Quote

 

“Everything is yellow, red, orange.

Everything is chilly, frisky, gusty.

Everything is changing, turning.”

In the Middle of Fall, by Kevin Henkes
 

Reading Rockets receives a generous grant from Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes.

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About Reading Rockets

Reading Rockets is a national educational service of WETA, the flagship public television and radio station in the nation's capital. The goal of the project is to provide information on how young kids learn to read, why so many struggle, and how caring adults can help. Reading Rockets is supported in part by the Poses Family Foundation and Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes.

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