Literacy Blog

Making sense of literacy development in everyday life

The Power of the Vignette

I am currently armpit deep and miles wide in professional resources, on my journey to have a well rounded understanding of the new Common Core Standards.  As an elementary literacy coordinator, it is part of my responsibility to know these standards well.  Between the articles, books, conversations and video clips, I do believe that I am on my way.

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Letting Go and Holding On…

I have recently endured a season of my life that I now categorize as ‘grief and loss’.  I experienced a loss that shook my core, rocked my world, and rattled me so hard that I ended up in a place where I didn’t recognize myself. A place that does not match the description of what I called ‘life’.  I spent days and weeks like a wayward sailor.  I didn’t know what boat I was supposed to be sailing on, let alone the course that I was supposed to take. It was hard.  Excruciating.

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Behold…the Scaffold

If you search online for a definition of the word ‘scaffold’ you may come across some of the following descriptions:

  • a temporary or movable platform for workers (as bricklayers, painters, or miners) to stand or sit on when working at a height above the floor or ground
  • a platform at a height above ground or floor level

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The Gift of Gab…

I have a great aunt who can talk to anyone…I mean anyone.  She once called the telephone operator to ask for the exact time and ended up talking to her for more than thirty minutes!  I don’t know if this story is actually true or just family lore, but the point is humans have an intrinsic desire to communicate with others.

I’ve written about my philosophy regarding authenticity on other blog posts (see The ‘Barnes and Noble’ Effect).  I am all about providing students with opportunities that mirror the behaviors of real readers and writers.  One such behavior is the need to verbally process information with others.

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Taking Advantage of a ‘Sense of Story’

Have you ever noticed how preschoolers ‘read’? They pick up familiar books, admire the pictures, and tell the story with words that they remember from the last time an adult read the book to them. They use the language and the pictures from the text to create their own rendering. They don’t get bogged down with trying to decode the words. Instead, they focus on meaning.

But wait a minute, isn’t that what we want all kids to do? To focus on the meaning?

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