Hi, I have to interview a reading teacher or reading specialist. I do believe that all teachers are reading teachers. I would like to know could you answer the questionnaire below. Thanks this will help me out a lot.
1. Do you think that frequent monitoring of student progress increases students’ achievement and decrease the number of students reading below grade level?
2. What is your philosophy of reading education?
3. What do you consider to be an effective reading program?
4. How does your reading program provide support for multilingual learners?
5. Describe your educational background.
6. Does your reading program provide whole group settings or individual instruction? State why.
7. Do you incorporate technology into your reading program? What’s been more effective or less effective?
8. How does your reading program provide meaningful curriculum?
9. What is your belief about phonics, whole language, and literature based reading?
I need a small printable version of proofreading marks that my students can keep in their writing folder. Does anyone have anything like this online somewhere?
I am in need of serious help. I have just been volunteered to be the sponsor of our writing club. I am a first year teacher and I have no clue what I am doing. I have heard most of the other teachers talk about how writing club has become a joke. I would really like to restore writing club to its former glory. Can anyone help? Thanks
I am in need of serious help. I have just been volunteered to be the sponsor of our writing club. I am a first year teacher and I have no clue what I am doing. I have heard most of the other teachers talk about how writing club has become a joke. I would really like to restore writing club to its former glory. Can anyone help? Thanks
Let ME guess--you're older than dirt, married to some drunk man who hates you, and have several children who don't know their head from a hole in the ground. You, meanwhile, get your kicks off of insulting people on this website because you have nothing better to do. This is for people who do their jobs, chick. Find somewhere else to spew your mess. We have teaching to do, and not at Sylvan--in the real trenches. And by the way--don't come onto a reading and writing chatboard when you don't know how to use the English language properly.
Cyndi, I looked on this chatboard for some ideas for Dr. Seuss' birthday. I have been both a children's librarian and an elementary media specialist. So naturally I thought about Newbery and Caldecott books. Although the latter are picture books they can be used on many levels. The same can be said for Newbery books. I used a book called Using Caldecott Across the Curriculum from Scholastic for gr k-2, but it may give use some ideas. I went on Amazon and did a search. This book is available throuh it. While I was on Amazon, I found a book called Using picture storybooks to teach literary devices. It is for children and young adults. Also try the library media web sites for suggestions. There is a wonderful site called Linda's Links to Literature. It used to be free , but not costs about $25.00 for a 1 year personal membership. I am now between positions but thought that the cost was worth it for my own personal use. I hope that it is tax deductible. Lastly ask your librarians both at school and at the public library. I am not a great typist, so please excuse any mispelled words. Good Luck Jane PS Write back and let me know if this helps. I will check the site back on a regular basis. By the way check the library media chat board for suggestions on using Dr. Seuss books for high school students
On 1/21/06, Cyndi wrote:
> Hello all, > I teach high school students. Can I find useful ways to > use storybooks with older students? Thanks for any input? > Cyndi
I am starting a research paper with my sixth grade students. I need an "easy" version of creating a works cited page. Any ideas??? I want them to do it according to MLA, but I need a simplified version.
Cyndi,
I looked on this chatboard for some ideas for Dr. Seuss'
birthday. I have been both a children's librarian and an
elementary media specialist. So naturally I thought about
Newbery and Caldecott books. Although the latter are
picture books they can be used on many levels. The same can be
said for Ne...See More