I
really enjoyed and learned a lot from Chapter 6 in our book, Reading to
Learn in the Content Areas, and how the authors discussed incorporating
other types of resources into the classroom instead of or in addition to the
traditional textbooks used in schools now. I was really excited that the
authors saw this as an important topic to be included in this book, which is
mainly geared toward future teachers, because I feel strongly that as future
teachers we need to diversify our resources in the classroom and incorporate
diverse text forms as much as possible. The chapter discussed different
multi-modal methods that can be used in the classrooms today. It showed the
reader the importance of the use of technology in their classrooms to challenge
students to become educated citizens in the 21st century. The
learning blogs we do for this class is a great example of this. As students we
are engaged in the realm of technology that will give us as future teachers, a
knowledge of and desire to integrate it into our curriculum as much as possible to help our future students succeed in the 21st century.
I
liked how the chapter talks about why textbooks cannot stand alone. All
textbooks have limitations. The strength of a textbook can provide one source
of great information and over viewing of information of topics, but the
inability to provide the depth of information on a topic or concept that is
truly needed in terms of reading comprehension.
It is hard to draw a line when it comes to textbooks because educators
say they do not go in depth enough, but complain that they can sometimes be too
long or too difficult for the students to use.
If used as an overview source and supplemented with quality outside
sources textbooks can be a great asset. A
great way to supplement text books is through the use of trade books, or books
that are considered to be in general use that the students can get from a
library or book store. They are useful when students are starting to
write research papers, or reading stories on certain topics and subjects,
because textbooks only give an overview of different topics.
I
really liked the Literature circles strategy mentioned in the chapter. The
literature circles are highly interactive, which I think is one of the best ways
for students to learn, and are appropriate for a wide range of topics and
concepts. As a future teacher I could definitely see myself using this in my
future classroom along with some of the other strategies mentioned in the
chapter.
Overall
I liked this chapter because it was a very student-centered chapter. It
encouraged me as future teacher to step outside my comfort zone the same as I
would ask my students to as they read, spend time looking into the textbooks
and clarify any problems that my student are having with any part of it, and
encourage my students to be critical learners of what and how they read no matter
what the content area was. It also has made me more aware of the importance of
going beyond the textbook and traditional instruction models in the classroom and
made me aware of how textbooks can no longer stand alone and need to be supplemented with
additional resources and text.
I just had to comment about your reaction to chapter 6. You had mentioned that while it means stepping out of your comfort zone, because you have to go beyond relying on just the textbook for curriculum instruction, it's really important for the success of your students. It becomes a student-centered environment. That was my reaction as well. Yes it's a lot more work on the teacher but it could make all the difference in the world for the students.
ReplyDeleteYes, especially since there are so many different learners in the room.
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