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Literature Circles

Literature Circles. With credit to Tracy Hardwell, Pearl Public School District. Literature Circles:. Literature circles reinforce: Independent reading Cooperative learning Student voice and choice Multiple Learning Styles, Intelligences, and Preferences. What are Literature Circles?.

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Literature Circles

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  1. Literature Circles With credit to Tracy Hardwell, Pearl Public School District

  2. Literature Circles: • Literature circles reinforce: • Independent reading • Cooperative learning • Student voice and choice • Multiple Learning Styles, Intelligences, and Preferences

  3. What are Literature Circles? • Literature Circles are small, temporary discussion groups of students who are reading the same text.

  4. What are Literature Circles? • Literature circles give students an opportunity to work independently (reading and activities) and cooperatively (discussion groups)

  5. What do students do in literature circles? • Read independently or with their group • Participate in group discussions • Each group member has a specific responsibility during discussion sessions • The circles meet daily/weekly and the discussion roles change at each meeting

  6. How do Literature Circles Work? • Students all read the same text (in groups) • The text genre can vary (short story, novel, internet documents) • Texts which evoke more than one interpretation or connection are usually more successful • Everyone is free to offer comments and questions

  7. Distinctive Features of Literature Circles: • Students choose their own reading materials • Small temporary groups are formed based on book choice • Different groups read different books • Groups meet on a regular, predictable schedule to discuss their reading • Students use written or drawn notes to guide their reading and discussion • Discussion topics come from students

  8. Distinctive Features of Literature Circles: • Group meetings are open, natural conversations about books • Students can play a rotating assortment of task roles • Teacher is a facilitator, not a group member or instructor • Evaluation is by teacher observation and student self-evaluation • A spirit of playfulness and fun pervades the room • Readers share with their classmates when books are finished, then new groups form around new reading choices

  9. Role of the Teacher • The teacher is a model. The teacher speaks as one seeking insights. • The teacher helps students to participate in conversations. • The teacher helps move the conversation forward. • The teacher supports literary learning by supplying students with concepts and terms.

  10. Possible Discussion Roles: • Illustrator • Summarizer • Literary Luminary/Passage Master • Word Wizard • Connector • Discussion Leader/Director

  11. Create a visual representation related to the reading—could be a sketch, cartoon, diagram, flow-chart, stick-figure scene, sculpture, or 3-D object from “found” materials. Illustrator:

  12. Illustration samples No Standardized Kids

  13. Illustration Samples A Tribe Apart

  14. Illustration Samples

  15. Prepares a brief summary of “today’s reading” which conveys the main highlights or the key points in the pages read. Great language-learning reinforcement. Great discussion-starting role. Summarizer

  16. Points out important passages within the reading—could be interesting, powerful, funny, puzzling, poignant, related to other concepts or passages. Literary Luminary/Passage Master

  17. Word Wizard/Vocabulary Enricher • Looks for words in the text that are unusual, interesting, or difficult to understand. • Defines and discusses these words with the group.

  18. Finds connections between the reading material and the outside world—such as personal experience, school, community, a topic studied in another class, or a different work of literature. Connector

  19. Discussion Leader/Director • Directs and/or closes the discussion. • Helps people talk over the big ideas in the reading and share their reactions (could be thoughts, feelings and concerns which arise). • Writes questions that will lead to discussion by the group. • Questions must be higher level thinking questions! Students will need practice developing these questions.

  20. What are higher level thinking questions? • Questions that cannot be answered with just yes or no. • Requires thought by each member of the group.

  21. Good Discussion Starters • How did you feel about… • What would you have done if… • How are you like or unlike the main character?

  22. Good Discussion Starters • What would you have done differently than the main character? • What did you think about…

  23. Other Roles • Amazing Actor: develops a skit or role play • Career Counselor: determines an appropriate career path for a character in the text • Biography Buff: prepares a short biography for “real” characters in text • Experiment Generator: finds or develops an experiment or lab to demonstrate science concepts in the text

  24. More Roles • Health Investigator: researches any relevant health issues in text • Music Critic: finds songs or creates soundtrack for text; explains choices • Style Detector: analyzes the writing style of the author • Cartographer: creates a map of the story; passes map to next cartographer

  25. Even More Roles • Concept Connector: connects material from text to general or specific concepts teacher or group identifies • Pencil Pusher: Records notes and questions for the group, questions for the teacher, or calculations for math-related texts • Associated Press Person: Finds news stories and other current events related to the text

  26. Suggestions for the roles: • Teach each role to the whole class • Encourage student to ask questions from the perspective of their role • Choose only the most useful roles for a particular discussion • Rotate students through the roles

  27. What should students do in the discussion groups? STUDENTS SHOULD: • Actively participate. • Explain their role to the group, ask group members questions, and answer questions from each group member. • Ask for clarification on any material that may have been confusing.

  28. How will class time be used? • On literature circle day, the first 15-20 minutes will be spent in discussion groups to give the students the opportunity to share their job responsibilities with the group. • New jobs and reading assignments will be assigned for the next class meeting. • Reading the text individually or as a group • Working on activities dealing with the text.

  29. Choicesare nominated and students choose the order they wantto read in. Teachers choose books aligned to curriculum goals and students select among the choices. Teachers choose shorter texts that everyone reads. How are books chosen?

  30. OUTCOMESBy participating in Literature Circles, students will: • Read a book of their choice with group members who have also chosen this book. • Brainstorm with their group to identify questions they will answer while reading. • Discuss the book and work out a shared understanding of it. • Pass on this understanding to the whole class group, working through all the steps in the information skills process.

  31. To achieve these outcomes, the students will: • Choose a book. • Play a role in discussions of the book. • Keep a diary in response to the book. • Present as a group, a short response to or review of the book. • Possibly create an extension project to tie this reading to other course topics/concepts.

  32. Assessing literature circles • Having reading completed and roles prepared each day and being ready for discussion group. • Teacher evaluates student understanding by observing during discussion and sometimes collecting role sheets. • Rubric aligned to language development for final project/presentation when book is finished. • Students evaluate their own (and their peers’) progress at the end of the literature circle.

  33. It is important for students to: • Participate!! • Keep up with their reading assignments • Keep up with their role in the group • Respect others and their opinions • Treat group members in a positive way—the way they want to be treated

  34. Student Feedback on LC’s How did the assigned role help or not help you read and prepare for your discussion? The Good • “It made me look for specific elements and questions. As a discussion director, I looked for things that would spark discussion not just questions to answer about content.” The Bad • “I think it hurt me because I was reading and constantly looking for my role instead of absorbing the entire book.”

  35. Overall comments about our book discussion groups • “Productive use of time; many perspectives were given that led to thorough discussions.” • “I really liked having small group discussions rather than whole class discussions because it was more personal and easier to talk.” • “Good. Our group is fairly lively and opinionated, which makes for good debate.” • “They were fun and a helpful way to discuss the book. I enjoyed them thoroughly.” • “Very balanced; everyone participated.”

  36. “The group gave me a deeper insight into the novel.” • “I like differing perspectives; they help me sort out my final perspective.” • “They were very productive. We learned a lot about one another and how we differ on our views of adolescence.” • “Our group worked really well together. We brought a wide variety of perspectives that kept our discussions constantly moving.” • “This group project has been awesome! The assignment lends itself well to group work and our group has worked very well together.”

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