Reciprocal reading is a structured approach to teaching strategies (questioning, clarifying, summarising and predicting) that students can use to improve their reading comprehension. The strategy is based on robust research examining what effective teaching and learning in literacy looks like and practitioners will develop a deeper understanding of pedagogical approaches that engage learners and lead to improved outcomes.
Category: Literacy
Distance Learning – Tips on navigating this strange, new ‘normal’
Marc Andrew is a primary school teacher who loves using technology to support learning and teaching.
Education Scotland’s Professional Learning and Leadership Team offered Marc the opportunity to share his experience with a wider audience via a blog where he shares some of the key lessons he learned from his first week of teaching from home.
There are some great tips for communicating with parents whose first language is not English.
Watch the video to hear Marc discuss his top ten tips for teachers supporting home learning during the Covid-19 pandemic.
EEF Blog: supporting parents to undertake brilliant book talk
Schools already encourage parents to read with their children , but additional tips, support, and resources can make a significant difference to making it more effective. Research evidence indicates that promoting the development of reading habits with parents is worth our effort.
Access the EEF blog here to read how schools can offer parents accessible tips to engage in sustained, effective book talk.
A 5-Step Guide to Making Your Own Videos: boosting learners’ engagement
This model, built around self-made videos that empowered students at all levels to learn at their own pace and build mastery skill-by-skill, was originally developed by high school teachers pre-COVID . The teachers used these screencast-style videos:
- To replace traditional lecture-style direct instruction, freeing them up to work directly with individual students;
- To give directions for projects and other complex tasks; and
- To provide remediation on skills that students might need to practice.
Click here to see example of a short video on inference. It introduces an important concept, provides several examples, and gives the students a task—all in just over 4 minutes.
Access the full article here.
Please share your results via the blog or @fvwlriclit
EEF : support resources for schools
To help support home learning and maximise the impact of work set, the EEF has produced some initial planning and reflection tools. EEF intends to draw upon the expertise of schools, further developing resources that can help everyone ‘bounce back’ when schools do re-open.
The EEF research underpins the RIC Literacy plan and these resources draw existing evidence together. There is, for example, support for home reading/talking that can be accessed via the “Communicating Effectively with Families” section.
There is also a checklist/flowchart that makes recommendations for disadvantaged learners/families with supporting links . Many of the recommendations will be familiar as they are integral to the effective pedagogy underpinning the RIC Literacy Academy’s programmes .
There are, of course , the usual links to resources but there are also very useful frameworks for texts to parents that provide unpatronising advice about supporting learning at home. They also provide good advice about how to minimise the flow of information to parents/carers, especially those with limited access to the internet or difficulties with data usage and cost. The advice also provides guidance about managing expectations re work/study at home.
Resources available here include:
Please share via this blog or Twitter @fvwlriclit how you have used these resources.
Literacy Academy Support
Each week our Twitter offers will follow this pattern:
Monday – reading recommendations and tasks related to reading for primary and secondary #buildingareadingculture #RICLitReads
Tuesday – writing tasks and recommendations #ExcitingWriting
Wednesday – novel tasks for primary and secondary #buildingareadingculture
Thursday – writing tasks and recommendations #ExcitingWriting
Friday – film recommendations #FunFriday
We have also created a series of wakelets and will continue to develop these. So far: s4-6 Novel Tasters; S1-3 TV Tasks; S4-6 Discursive Writing. These are varied and versatile with a range of tasks and extension activities. https://wke.lt/w/s/zhl9e7https://wke.lt/w/s/zhl9e7
We are happy to source specific materials for teachers/schools and/or to take “requests” for resource development. Please contact the Literacy Academy Lead: CLjadam@glow.sch.uk
Daily CLPL from ResearchED
CLPL for the summer term @researchEdhome! Smart cookies beamed live (or recorded for later) at 11:00 every weekday over the summer term. Week 1 kicks off on 20/04 with the superb @DTWillingham.
All are welcome, there’s no cost.
Please let us know @fvwlriclit what you think!
Literacy CLPL : a one -hour course to support working with your learners using Teams
When you are ready to move your use of Teams on, click here to access a one-hour online course called “Crafting a collaborative learning environment with Class Teams.”
Edutopia: 4 Tips for Teachers Shifting to Teaching Online
An educator with experience in distance learning shares what he’s learned: keep it simple, and build in as much contact as possible.
“The coronavirus has caused widespread school closures for an unknown duration. Teachers are scrambling to find ways to support students from afar through distance and online learning. If you’re feeling overwhelmed by this daunting task, you’re certainly not alone.
I’ve also struggled to reach students outside of class. For several years, I taught in communities where students struggled to attend school consistently. To help absent students access my courses, I developed a blended, self-paced, mastery-based instructional model that empowered all my students to learn, whether they were in my room or not. Today, I run The Modern Classrooms Project, where I help other teachers do the same.”
Read the article here