Saturday, July 20, 2019

Reading Aloud To Adult Learners? via LINCS

Reading Aloud To Adult Learners?
LINCS: 6.13.2019 by Susan Finn Miller

Hello colleagues, Do you see value in reading aloud to your adult basic education class, or is there just no time for that? If you do read aloud, what do you choose to read? If you don't read aloud, but you would like to, what texts would you choose to read aloud? 

What do you see as the pros and cons of reading aloud to adult learners?


This blog post is about reading aloud to middle school students. How is it different for adults?  COMMENTS

Reading Aloud to Middle School Students
Hearing books read aloud benefits older students, enhancing language arts instruction and building a community of readers.
Edutopia: 5.14.2019 by Kasey Short

By the time many students reach middle school, they no longer have books read aloud to them at home or at school. But research shows benefits of hearing books read aloud, including improved comprehension, reduced stress, and expanded exposure to different types of materials.

For five minutes of each class period, I read aloud to my middle school students. I’m often asked how I “give up time” each day to read, but the five minutes are a gift to my students. Spending this time each day enriches the classroom community, allows me to share a love of reading, enhances my language arts instruction, and exposes students to new authors, genres, and themes.

ENRICHING CLASSROOM COMMUNITY
During daily independent reading, students choose a book that is both interesting to them as individuals and appropriately challenging for their ability. Reading aloud provides an opportunity for students to experience a shared text together.

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Modeling reading strategies also conveys my expectations for how students should approach their independent reading. I use several strategies I use here.

Thinking aloud:
Demonstrate how to think critically and often about reading and making connections.

Monitoring understanding:
Check for comprehension and reread when needed.

Visualizing text:
Encourage students to think about what pictures form in their mind while reading.

Application:
Ask students to consider how to connect the book to their own life, other books, current events, or cross-curricular content.

Questioning:
Formulate questions about what students can learn from the text to apply to their lives.


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