digital learning

Short Texts at Your Fingertips: Picture Books (Fiction)

Written by Julie Wright & Elizabeth Keim

We offer you Short Texts at Your Fingertips. Twice each week, we provide teaching ideas around a different type of short text that is easily found in the home, so that no family feels under-resourced. These ideas can integrate into virtually any curriculum and pedagogy, from Workshop to basal. If you are a caregiver, teacher, or curriculum director, these brief but mighty texts and lessons are our way of saying thanks. And our way of giving children authentic and enjoyable reading and writing engagements each day. 

SHORT TEXTS AT YOUR FINGERTIPS: PICTURE BOOKS (FICTION)

By design, picture books combine the wisdom of the words with the visual power of the illustrations to convey the story.  Beginning with the earliest readers, picture books create building blocks that promote a lifelong love of literacy. Through picture books, young readers can increase their vocabulary and build language skills.  

We love picture books because they can be read multiple times and for multiple reasons.  Take some time and look around your house. Be on the lookout for different types of picture books and put them in a stack.  Don’t forget, if you have board books or wordless books, stick those in your stack too! Each picture book provides so much more than just a read aloud.

VIDEO 

Take a look at this short video on how to use picture books to entertain, inform, and inspire.

TRY THIS!

Step 1

Find a favorite fiction picture book.

  • Why is it your favorite?  Did you have it when you were a child?  Have you read it multiple times as a teacher?

  • Look for the places you love the most.  Reread. Smile!

  • Who is your favorite character?  Why?

Or, is there a picture book on your shelves that you do not know well?  Here is your opportunity to read it!

  • What do you notice?

  • What do you wonder?

  • What is the title?

  • Who is the author?

  • What do you think this book is going to be about?

Step 2

Read the picture book aloud.  You can either read the book to a child, the child can read the book to you, or you can share the reading by taking turns reading to one another.

We love The True Story of the Three Little Pigs by Jon Scieska. If interested, order a copy of this book here. Picture books are filled with reading, writing and talking opportunities.  For example, you could:

  • Explore the structure of a picture book.

  • Explore the role of the narrator.  How is the story different when it is told from a different perspective?

    • In The True Story..., the story is told from the perspective of the Wolf.

  • Practice retelling the story.

  • Look for the story elements such as character, setting, problem and solution.

  • Do fluency practice (something that is likely being neglected during distance learning). Passages of familiar books are probably memorized.  Channel that for phrased and fluent reading.  

    • If possible have children record favorite stories (or ask their grownups too).  These could be a wonderful resource for the entire class.  

    • More fluency work: Ask children to read a favorite to a younger sibling or the family pet.

Step 3

Look on your bookshelves and try and find other picture books.  If you have time and interest, read those too!

Step 4

Look for other reading, writing and talking opportunities using this short text type.

Reading Ideas 

  • Read a picture book and learn more about the author and/or illustrator.

  • Find two picture books about the same topic or written by the same author.  Compare them.  

    • What do they have in common?

    • What makes them different?

    • Compare two versions of the same story (i.e. the traditional “Three Little Pigs” and The True Story …)

  • Make a familiar story into a Reader’s Theater script using the language of the characters and a “narrator” to move the plot along

Writing  Ideas  

  • Keep a list of all the picture books you read.

  • Write your own picture book about a recent event or experience. Maybe you could write a story about a child who does all his/her learning at home while schools are closed. 

  • Try to rewrite your favorite picture book from when you were little (don’t reread it first).  Maybe it’s a book you no longer own - retell it from memory.  

  • Write a sequel to this book.  What happens next? Add a new character.

Talking  Ideas 

  • Start a conversation about places and times throughout the day to read.  

    • Where is a good place to read at home?  

    • What makes it a particularly good spot? (This is work many of us do in September when we want to set up reading routines at home.  It probably needs to be revisited now.)

  • Invite children to find a favorite picture book (maybe it was one someone read to them when they were”little”.)  

  • If you have a way to “meet” with your class,  everyone could hold up their favorite book or everyone posts a picture.  Compare covers. Are there any repeats? Are there similarities? Fiction, nonfiction, books by the same author?

  • Explore the way the text and illustrations work together.  What do the illustrations show that the text does not?

    • Find the page that has the picture featured on the cover.  Why is this the image the author/illustrator/editor chose for the cover?

FOR MORE RESOURCES, CHECK THESE OUT!

  • Check out the self-publishing options on StoryJumper.

  • Record a story on Flipgrid.

  • Take a look at Vooks, a great website of animated picture books.  

  • Check out free access to many great picture books for educators on Epic

COMING SOON!

Short Texts:  Mighty Mentors That Move Readers and Writers Forward by Julie Wright & Elizabeth Keim (2022)

Short Texts at Your Fingertips: Cereal Boxes

Written by Julie Wright & Elizabeth Keim

In mid-March, the COVID-19 pandemic hit home, and teaching went from classrooms to living rooms and kitchen tables in the blink of an eye. To keep kids learning and feeling safe, cultural and literary heroes opened up their digital doors. There are museum tours, celebrity read alouds, Mo Willems sketching and penguins at the Shedd Aquarium. The cast of Hamilton sang on Youtube to a young girl who was sad her trip to see the show was cancelled.   All of these experiences and assets were—and are— amazing. Teachers can continue to share these riches with their students.

Now it’s mid-April, though, and teachers are tasked with planning and delivering curriculum. The question now is, How do I create engaging lessons for the children who usually sit in front of me but are now learning from home? As an elementary reading teacher (Elizabeth) and a literacy coach (Julie) we are grappling with the same steep learning curves as teachers as we try to find our way fast with online instruction. Our jobs, however, as those trained to support teachers with resources and best literacy practices, have propelled us to realize that the learning kids do now has to be different because we are living and instructing in different times. As educator Pernille Ripp declared, “Whatever your plans are, cut them in half. Then cut them in half again.”  

With this less is more mantra in mind, we offer you Short Texts at Your Fingertips. Twice each week, we provide teaching ideas around a different type of short text that is easily found in the home, so that no family feels under-resourced. These ideas can integrate into virtually any curriculum and pedagogy, from Workshop to basal. If you are a caregiver, teacher, or curriculum director, these brief but mighty texts and lessons are our way of saying thanks. And our way of giving children authentic and enjoyable reading and writing engagements each day. We may not sing like Lin Manuel Miranda or read aloud like Kwame Alexander or Kate Messner, but we know these lessons will brighten kids' days.  

SHORT TEXTS AT YOUR FINGERTIPS: CEREAL BOXES

When you were young, or maybe even today as an adult, was reading the back of a cereal box part of your morning eating routine?  Did you ever have repeat readings across several days and see things you didn’t see the day before? Did reading something on the back of the box ever pique your curiosity and make you want to know more?  Today, many short texts, such as food packages, give us reasons to read and write because they entertain, inform, and often inspire us. Here’s what we mean.

Entertain -- brings us joy 

Inform -- teaches us new information and/or renews our thinking about ideas and topics 

Inspire -- motivates us to read, write and share more

VIDEO 

Check out these two short videos focused on how to use a cereal box to entertain, inform, and inspire.

TRY THIS!

Step 1

Grab any cereal box in your home.  Take a look at the front, back, and side panels.  

  • What do you notice?

  • What do you wonder?

Note:  If you don’t have a cereal box, choose another type of food package.

Step 2

Share a cereal box that you find exciting.  Think aloud about ways this short text entertained, informed and/or inspired you.  

Examples: Back of cereal boxes

Examples: Back of cereal boxes

Take a look at the first example which is the back of a Cap’n Crunch cereal box. This text is filled with reading, writing and talking opportunities.  For example, you could:

  • Play the matching berry game on the back panel. [back panel]

  • Make new words by creating 12 new words using the letters in “Crunch Berry” [back panel]

  • Play the dot game. [back panel]

  • Read and investigate the ingredients and Nutritional Facts  [side panel]

  • Use a measuring cup or scale and rice to visualize the amount of sugar

  • Read and think about the recycling information [top panel]

  • Share what you’ve learned and created with others

Step 3

Look in your pantry and find other cereal boxes.  Compare cereal boxes and think about how they are similar and how they are different. 

Step 4

Look for other reading, writing and talking opportunities using this short text type.

Reading Ideas 

  • Go to the cereal company’s website and poke around to see what interesting facts and images you can find.

  • Grab 2 or more cereal boxes and compare the nutritional information.

  • Read other breakfast food boxes.  What do you see? What are you wondering?

  • If you are watching any television or videos, listen and watch closely for breakfast food ads.  What do you see? What are you wondering?

Writing Ideas 

  • Make a list of all the cereal brands and types you know.

  • Design your own cereal.  What is it called? What will the box look like?

  • Write a letter to the cereal company telling them what you think about their cereal and/or ask them questions about their cereal.

  • Create a survey asking people to share their favorite cereal choices and why they are a favorite.

Talking Ideas

  • Why is the cereal called… (Frosted Flakes, Cheerios, Rice Krispies, etc.)?

  • Which part of the box do you look at in the grocery store?  Which part do you read at home?

  • Recall the cereal aisle in a supermarket, or find a photo online. What colors do you see? Why? Where is the aisle located?

  • Why does the company want you to know what they believe (i.e. philosophy)?

FOR MORE RESOURCES, CHECK THESE OUT!

COMING SOON!

Short Texts:  Mighty Mentors That Move Readers and Writers Forward by Julie Wright & Elizabeth Keim (2022)

MEET ELIZABETH

Meet my friend, colleague, co-author and co-blogger, Elizabeth Keim. She is a New York City based educator with more than 25 years of experience. She is currently an AIS Reading Teacher/Reading Recovery teacher for a school in Mamaroneck, New York. Previously she taught in District 2 in Manhattan,  serving as a classroom teacher, reading specialist, and library teacher. In each of these roles, she knows that, "it is all about finding a text that truly captures a particular reader." She has taught Undergraduate and Graduate level courses at New York University and Bank Street College of Education, as well as workshops for teachers and parents.  An avid birder, Elizabeth enjoys her time in Central Park every spring and fall. Her most thrilling sightings to date are: A rare Kirtland's warbler and the tutti frutti colored Summer Tanager.

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Small Group Reading & Writing Lesson Plans to Adopt, Adapt or Improve [During Remote/Distance Learning]

Reading & Writing Lesson Links [Updated]

Connect with me through this CONTACT LINK for more information on these lessons!

I am currently co-planning with some teachers across grades 2-8.

Some of our plans have worked really well. Others have been a flop.

We are, like you, working really hard to figure all of this out. Steps forward often means steps back. Reflecting along the way helps us push forward again. It isn’t even close to perfect. It’s messy. But, we are living in the messy together.

USING MENTOR LESSONS TO JUMPSTART PLANNING

There isn’t one right way to plan. Some teachers use scripted lessons. Some teachers use scripted lessons with flexibility — adjusting them to meet the needs, interests and wants of the learning community they serve. Some teachers create authentic lessons from the ground up. While the latter is my preference, there are times where mentor lessons or units help jumpstart ideas for planning. Mentor lessons can help teachers get a running start. It’s a safe and trustworthy way to plan because teachers know they are still in the driver’s seat — adjusting lessons to meet the individual and unique needs of the learning community they serve.

PLANNING FOR REMOTE/DIGITAL LEARNING

Most schools are working to support students from a distance. Learning opportunities are being offered by teachers through digital and print materials — and some are using both. Schools are working hard to navigate these times using the tools and resources available to them, coupled with individual and collective know-how to best meet:

  • curricular demands

  • intervention and support demands

  • students’ social, emotional, academic and physical needs

ADOPT, ADAPT & IMPROVE

Included in the links below are resources to use if you are interested in launching and sustaining SMALL GROUP READING and WRITING learning opportunities through remote or distance learning. You can:

ADOPT — Use these materials as they are written.

ADAPT — Make adjustments to these lessons in order to meet your students’ needs, interests, and wants.

IMPROVE — Try some of the ideas out, change them and make them better.

That said, as you make decisions about how you will use these ideas, first consider some of these questions:

  • Are students learning via soft copy or hard copy? Is our district going paper/pencil or digital during these times? Or, a combination of both? How do these modes of learning impact these plans?

  • What technology systems and structures are available to teachers and students? Does the learning community know how to access and use them? If not, can we learn them in efficient and effective ways?

  • Do teachers have the ability to connect with students — via video, phone or shared folders/documents?

  • Do students have the ability to connect with teachers — via video, phone or shared folders/documents?

  • Do students have the ability to connect with one another — via video, phone or shared folders/documents?

LINKS TO READING & WRITING LESSONS [UPDATED TO INCLUDE 15 LESSONS]

If you are looking for READING LESSONS, connect with me through this CONTACT LINK for more information!

If you are looking for WRITING LESSONS, connect with me through this CONTACT LINK for more information!

SHARE YOUR IDEAS

If you ADOPT, ADAPT or IMPROVE any of these plans, please consider reaching out and sharing your perspectives so that we can learn with and from one another. Email me at julietwright4444@gmail.com or reach out via my CONTACT PAGE and share ideas!

From Ed Consultant to Teacher Mom: Reflection #4

Three weeks ago I would have said that I know my kids deeply.

I think I was wrong.

Of course, like all parents, I know my kids. I know their patterns, their likes and dislikes, what makes them laugh and what scares them. I know what they like to read and their favorite spots to write and complete homework. I know the at-home and on-the-weekend and in-the summertime kids. .

I think I assumed I knew my kids as students. However, I’m realizing that I don’t know them, really know them, as students, like I am getting to know them now. How could I? They’ve spent the majority of their learning-selves at school. And, now, their learning-selves are at home. The difference at this point, is their learning-selves at home excludes one of the most important aspects of learning which is the social capital they receive from learning with and from peers.

Creating Learning-at-Home Rituals

For the past 2 weeks, I’ve been working to co-create rituals and routines with my kids so that they have things they can count on each day. We created shared agreements about when we would:

  • Get up and get moving [9:30 a.m.]

  • Join together at the breakfast table & get organized for the day [9:45 a.m.]

  • Work through assignments posted online for each of their school classes [10:00-2:00 with lunch thrown in there somewhere]

  • Unstructured refuel yourself time filled with choice activities such as art, backyard play time, trail walks, puzzles, gaming, etc. [2:00-3:00]

  • “Mom School”, as my boys call it, where we spend time reading, writing and thinking together [3:00-4:30]

Kidwatching My Own Kids at Home

This pandemic has given me opportunities to study my own kids in new ways. I’m learning more about them each day as readers, writers, mathematicians, citizens, scientists, artists, siblings, chefs, gamers, backyard explorers, family members, comedians, and as dog-lovers. Through kidwatching, I’ve learned that one or more of my kiddos:

  • has interest, stamina, and finds pleasure in paint-by-numbers

  • uses cooking / dessert making at the 5:30 p.m. hour as celebration for completing all online assignments from school

  • actually talks more during the dinner hour since the pace of our lives has slowed down a bit

  • has learned to do a backflip on the trampoline and has taught the dog to jump on the trampoline too

  • finds joy in beating his mom at a friendly game of trampoline COVID-19 basketball [formerly called HORSE]

  • felt “cheated” out of book club time when we had a day where our schedule was a little clunky

  • thinks our digital COVID-19 writing buddies experience might be kind of fun

When we first started learning at home together, I thought it was short term. I went into the what should we do to get through the next week or two mindset. Now that we have a clearer view that we’ll be going from short to longer-term, I decided to get my boys’ perspectives about who they think they are as learners — at school and at home. I gave my boys this Who Are You as a Learner note catcher.

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To be honest, they weren’t sure what to do with it at first. I think it felt very school-like to them. I told them I wanted them to self-reflect about their interests, passions, curiosities, successes, habits, etc. so that I could think about them as learners in both environments. I’m not going to share their responses because they are for our work at home together, but one important point to mention is that we added ideas across several days. Like most kiddos, my boys started out reluctant about adding ideas. Maybe they felt vulnerable? Maybe they didn’t quite understand the purpose at first? Regardless, they needed more than one go at it before they started adding ideas that uncovered the deeper side of who they are as learners at school versus who they are as learners at home. Hint: Giving kiddos two post-it notes —one for ideas related to school and one for home — works great too!

Whether you are a parent at home who is educating your own kids OR an educator at home educating your students in their homes, I highly recommend giving kiddos an opportunity to reflect about who they are as learners — both at school and at home. Their responses just might shape your next moves as you provide the love and support they need as people and as learners during this time.