First, how to know what topics students might be willing to read. I suggest a student interest survey to find out what your particular students are about.
Questions like:
What do you want to be when you grow up?
Who is your favorite music artist or band?
What is your favorite sports team or team sport?
What problem do you face?
Favorite animal or insect?
You get the idea.
Next, from the answers to these questions you can do several things to to obtain materials that might interest your students. Visit a library and check out some books. This is my least favorite idea because students my get over whelmed by books. So my suggestion is to visit Google and set up various alerts using the answers that you got on the survey. For example: If one of my answers was that a student wanted to be a marine biologist. I would set up an alert for marine biology, fish, sharks and maybe underwater life. This way I get articles sent to my in box about these topics. I can read the article and print it out for the students to read.
Another way to find articles or reading is to just do a Google search. Visit the various websites and print out excerpts from the site (bookmark the site if it is useful, you may need fresh articles in the future).
Lastly, what do you do with all of the articles? Each article can be kept in a binder by topic. So one binder for careers, one binder for sports and one for animals.You get the idea. At the link below there is also a free work product question sheet that students can fill out and turn in after they are finished reading an article. The question sheet can be tweaked to reinforce your objectives in the classroom. This way you have lots of material and the students are practicing the reading skills that you are using in your classroom independently You are giving them a greater choice of reading materials and hopefully this motivates them to read.
Please let me know what you think of this Freebie and if this idea helped to motivate your students.
Thanks for reading!
I was thinking... how about getting the student to setvup their own google alerts? That way, the material would get sent right to their inbox! This would also cut down on the onus on the teacher to find material that interests them (a must when you teach multiple classes like I do, with my 200 students!) and teach them a useful life/research skill at the same time!
ReplyDeleteI think this is my first visit to your blog! Very cute!
Mme Aiello
Wow! you have a lot of students! I was thinking that if I let the students set up their own alerts they may pick topics that were not appropriate. I work in a city setting and the kids are a little fresh.
Deletethanks for the idea though, I do have one class that blogs they may enjoy the alerts.
Clever ideas! I also struggle to convince some of my students to read.
ReplyDeleteCorrina
Diary of a Sixth Grade Teacher
Thanks! Corrina glad to know I am not the only one!Deane
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