My Reading Clinical Experience
Oakview- Mrs. Gilbert's Second Grade Class
I learned a lot during
my time in Mrs. Gilberts second grade class at Oakview Elementary School. When I first arrived at Oakview and saw the
wonderful environment Mrs. Gilbert had set up for her students, I knew she was
going to be a wonderful teacher to learn from.
She has a Ranch theme throughout the room. She has anchor charts, word walls, graphic
organizers, class schedule, students work posted on the wall and various charts
for students to reference. The student’s
desks are arranged in clusters to promote conversation and interaction. She also has a reading area where books were
clearly labeled and categorized, a listening center, computer area, guided
reading area and place for class to gather on a rug in the front of the
classroom.
Mrs. Gilbert has wonderful classroom management
skills. Her students are well behaved
and know what is expected of them. She
uses positive reinforcement by letting the class add a “link to the chain” when
they are well behaved or staying on task.
Once the class gets 15 links on the chain, the class gets a reward. Mrs. Gilbert allows them to make suggestions
about what the reward should be, then the class votes. The last reward was popsicles. Some of the suggestions were: pajama day,
bring a stuffed animal to school day, extra recess, no homework pass, and
cupcakes.
Mrs. Gilbert has a system to address student’s
individual behavior. The following is posted:
You’re a Role Model
|
Outstanding Partner
|
Good Job!
|
Ready to Learn
|
Oops! Think
about it!
|
Teachers Choice
|
Call home
|
She has clothes pins with
each student’s name on it. Every student
starts the day at “Ready to Learn.” If
she sees a student setting a good example, she will tell them to “clip
up.” Every time they clip up they get to
put a raffle ticket into a pot. At the
end of the week, students can trade their raffle tickets for various
prizes. If a student is acting out, she
will ask them to “clip down.” I have
noticed that this doesn’t happen too often.
You can tell that the students have great respect for their teacher and
really want to please her.
Mrs. Gilbert follows a routine the students are
accustomed to following. They begin by
pulling out their homework and planners.
They write down the homework assignment for the next day and review the
homework. Then they jump right into the
ELA instruction. She calls them to rug
in the front of the room and they begin their day with having a book read aloud
to them. During this read aloud time she
teaches various lessons such as: character charts, sequence of events, cause
and effect, main idea and details, how to ask questions, etc. Mrs. Gilbert always has the charts she fills
out posted for the students to refer too.
After time is spent as a class reading aloud, she has
them break into centers. Below is an
example of what her centers may look like during the week. She has this on a Promethean Board and
moves students names around. She usually
does 3 centers per day.
WWW
|
Math
|
Poetry
|
Non
Fiction*
|
Art *
|
SSR and
Bookshop
|
Vocabulary
|
Computer
|
Reading Response*
|
Listening
|
SSR
|
SSR
|
Book Shop
|
SSR
|
Extra
Centers
|
Extra
Centers
|
The row at the bottom is for early finishers.
WWW- working with words
SSR- Self Selected Reading
*= Turn in work
SSR- Self Selected Reading
*= Turn in work
Mrs. Gilbert will pull a group for guided reading while the
other students work on centers. Oakview
uses Fontus and Pinnell. Mrs. Gilbert
has the group reading the same book and allows them to use post- it notes while
they read. Below you will see the color
coding chart the students follow:
Sticky Note Color
|
Meaning of Color
|
Yellow
|
This idea
is a very important point for me to remember.
|
Green
|
I have a
question about what I read.
|
Pink
|
Awesome! I want to share this!
|
Blue
|
I have a
connection! This reminds me of…
|
Purple
|
I do not
know this word.
|
I feel this is a wonderful tool and I plan to use this when
I am in the classroom. It works well
because the students read independently, so if they have thoughts or questions,
they can continue to read and have their concerns and comments addressed
later. Mrs. Gilbert works with one
student at a time, so the post-it note system decreases the amount of
interruptions she has. When Mrs. Gilbert
works with one student, she has them read aloud to her. She takes notes on each student daily to
monitor their progress. During guided reading, the other students
whisper into tube-a-loo to hear themselves read.
Overall,
my clinical experience was very educational.
I know that I have learned a lot of things that I will use in the
classroom from Mrs. Gilbert, and from my reading class. I cannot wait until I can use all I learned in my own classroom.
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