student interests

Reading Surveys: A Go-To Data Source [Especially During Extended School Closures]

At the start of this school year, I blogged about using reading surveys as a go-to source of data for creating a focus for instruction. That blog post can be found here. I talked about the importance of carefully choosing survey questions that would give us just-in-time data that we could use to create a focus for instruction during the first weeks of the school year and beyond.

During this pandemic, surveying students now — in relation to their at-home learning environment and reading interests — would provide intel, or data, that could inform your digitally-focused, remote-learning, instructional moves going forward.

TRY THIS

  1. Give students a copy of the Reading Interest Survey for Remote Learning digitally or on paper depending on your district’s policies and procedures.

  2. Ahead of time, fill out a survey about yourself. To lift students’ thinking across the learning community, share a few ideas from your survey by:

    • Giving students a copy of your survey to view [hard or soft copy]

    • Sharing ideas from your survey via a pre-recorded or live video

      Note: By sharing your survey, students will have an opportunity to get to know you and your at-home routines while serving as a model for when they complete their surveys.

  3. If students have the capability of sharing and/or communicating with one another, break them into small groups and let them have a conversation [either through voice-to-voice or writing] about noticings and celebrations. You can encourage students to borrow great ideas about reading at home from one another that they might want to put into action.

  4. Save student surveys — they might teach you something later that you didn’t know you wanted/needed to know now.

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LOOKING ACROSS THE DATA

As you look across student survey results, here are some ways you might consider using the data to guide your next moves. You could:

  • Use the data to inform you and help students create a personalized reading spot at home, if needed.

  • Take stock in what types of texts students put in their stack. This could be a great opportunity to curate texts for students to read. That is, of course, all dependent on what’s available, applicable and doable during this time.

  • If you are meeting with students virtually, you could:

    • Celebrate things people have in common

    • Create a big list of reading recommendations

    • Use this survey data to create conversation starters or entry points for future instruction

These are tricky times. But, they are less tricky when we make connections and keep connections going. Student surveys are one way to make that happen. If you like this survey, use it! Or, use it as a springboard to create your own. If you come up with some great ideas, please reach out to me at julietwright4444@gmail.com or via my CONTACT PAGE and share ideas!

Creating Entry Points #4: Try Using Short Texts to Spark Curiosity Using a Photo of the Week

We keep saying it because it’s true—short texts are everywhere! They are also often at our fingertips and can be consumed for free. If we want kiddos to read the world around them, we have to expand the types of texts that we ask them to read, inside and outside of school. Said another way—our kiddos deserve to read texts everyday that go beyond textbooks and test prep passages. In addition, kiddos deserve to spend their learning time doing things that boost their curiosity, creativity and ingenuity.

TRY THIS

  1. Remind students that a short text is…short! Share some of your favorite examples with them. This can be a quick “short text hot read” share OR you can use a few short texts for shared reading.

  2. Share this amazing photo of the week. Consider:

    • Giving students a chance to figure out the content of this photo. Instead of telling them it’s a picture of the sun’s surface, ask them to share some guesses with peers. You could say: This may look like kernels of corn, but it’s not. What is it?

    • Give students time to swap ideas.

    • Then, give students some information about the photo [share information included in the caption of the photo and/or from other information you find about the latest photos of the sun.].

    • If there’s time and interest, ask students to go on a hunt for other short texts about the sun that they could consume during independent reading time.

  3. Give students time to find other photos of the day/week. There are lots of credible sources out there! Here are a few examples:

  4. Remember to give students time to share and talk about the photos they discover. This talk time increases motivation and engagement and leads to greater transfer of knowledge, skills and understandings.

SOME TIPS

  • If you are an administrator or instructional coach, consider taking 5 minutes during a staff meeting or co-planning session and sharing a photo of the day/week. Teachers could:

    • View the photo of the week together and discuss their thinking in small groups.

    • Brainstorm ideas about ways photos/images could be used in the classroom to increase spark curiosity.