Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Goodbye Kindergarten, Hello Second Grade!

The last two weeks of working with Buddy S have been great! As Buddy S and I went to find a quite spot where we could chat and do some work, she suggested that we read for a little bit today and then we do the written conversation like we did last week. I replied by telling that was a great idea and I would love to do just that.


We started Junie B. Jones right from the start we stopped at last week. I did not ask at the time, but I am wondering if she did any other reading in the last week. We were trying to figure out the exact place where we left off last time so I asked her if she could remember what was happening when we had to stop. She said "Junie B. Jones had just bumped into her grandpa's belly" as she laughed and smiled which caused me to to the same.  Once we found the place where we should begin reading, I told her I was going to take a couple of notes as she read because I was doing a running reading record. I let her know that this just helped me know what she was reading and how second graders read and that I would just be making little marks on my paper as she read. I wanted to say something because she probably would have asked. However, I don't think it bothered her at all and I even felt like she read more fluently this week than last week.

Junie B. Jones are interesting books. Really the only spots where Buddy S had trouble was where the words were either made up or not grammatically correct. This week we stumbled upon "'structions" and "'fridgerator" for "instructions" and "refrigerator". Buddy S did not recognize what those words were and when she came to "'fridgerator" she recommended that we just skip it because she has read it before. Since I was doing the reading record I did not stop here when she said "struggled" instead of "'structions". However, now that the word "refrigerator" was presented in the same was as "instructions" I thought we could talk about it. Last week she told me that some things don't sound correct in these books because the writer is trying to sound like a kindergartener. When talking about the two words we were trying to figure out Buddy S was able to problem solve for "refrigerator" by fitting it into the context of what was being talked about. She told me that this was just another way that they writer shows how a kindergartener talks.

I also really liked doing the written conversation with Buddy S. This is similar to something that we doing in one of my college classes. My instructor has name cards for us and she encourages us to write on the back any comments or questions we might have. When we get them back at the next class she has responded to what we wrote. I think I would like to do something like this in my future class. It is a good way to check in with the students about their lives and to see how they are doing with writing. Some things I noticed looking at Buddy S's writing was that she often wrote in complete sentences, capitalized the beginning of the sentence, added punctuation at the end, used contractions, and was aware of many words that she spelled incorrectly. Buddy S did not often ask me how to spell something but realized some of her spelling mistakes on her own. During our time with the second graders I have noticed a significant amount of literacy development that happens in two years. It has been really interesting to get to look at that and make those comparisons.

1 comment:

  1. It appears that your buddy has a real grasp on her writing and reading, in addition to self-correcting as well as self-monitoring. Junie B. Jones is so popular with the younger readers, especially girls; it really connects with these young readers through offering silly scenarios and situations that maybe the reader him or herself has been in before. On the flip side, I know that you mentioned your buddy was aware that the author uses words and sentence structures that might not be grammatically correct, in hopes that it will sound like a Kindergarteners writing. The fear with this is that students would understand this writing to be proper English, but it appears that your buddy was aware of these inaccuracies and as a result understood them to be false. It makes me wonder if that could be used as a teaching moment, to be able to have a conversation with the student about how this writing is wrong or how it could be improved….
    For my placements in school, I have not really been able to see the drastic improvements that students experience from the Kindergarten to second grade ages, but it appears that that is a great perspective to have as a primary teacher. My experience as been in the higher grades, 5th through 8th and the growth that occurs during these years is still improving, but I don’t believe as exponentially as those initial years in school. It really shows how exposure to reading and writing in those younger years can be so beneficial.

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