Skip to main content

Week 7 - Beyond Basic Literacy

I have to say that the videos and reading this week were a little bit difficult to relate to the primary levels of Elementary Education where the majority of what we read IS basic literacy, intentionally, but there were some helpful insights that made me understand the importance of also going beyond basic literacy in our read-alouds and with those students who are ready. 

Reading Rockets highlighted Literacy expert Tim Shanahan who says that "disciplinary literacy is generally taught in middle school and high school, but that K-5 teachers can get their students ready. Here’s how: In the elementary grades, making sure that kids are reading about geography, economics, history, culture, biography, environmental science, life science, physical science, music, art, and current events is really important. Building kids’ stores of knowledge in those areas and giving them practice dealing with that kind of language and content is imperative" (WETA, 2025) 

There are some great books that contain great disciplinary literacy content but are written in a friendlier format for younger students like in poems or with lots of illustrations. I had the opportunity to do an interactive read aloud with a beautiful book this week called Where do I sleep? A Pacific Northwest Lullaby by Jennifer Blomgren. This book gives clues through poems of what the animal is on each page. Our students loved it because it put a lot of the information we have been learning about animals to work! We made it interactive by having them divide a paper into 12 boxes front and back, they then guessed what each animal was as I was reading the clues. 




 

I had one student drawing her guesses under the document camera as a model for the other students to follow. She did a great job of numbering her boxes and both drawing and labeling what animal she thought it might be. 

 

The students were extremely engaged for the entire read-aloud and made some great guesses! The book used many of the vocabulary words we had previously learned in our studies of invertebrates and insects. 


I also had an opportunity to teach about herbivores, omnivores, and carnivores. This was actually the active piece of my science lesson that I had to go ahead and teach this week (don't worry, my lesson plan was complete before I taught!). This coming week the students will be doing their own research on their animal reports so there won't be any active teaching. 

I was given google slides and videos as my resources which made me think of this from our reading, “much of the research and academic content available to students is now digital. This makes traditional mark-up tools like pencils and highlighters largely obsolete, since they will not work on a computer screen. Much of the content that students find is not even text-based. Rather, it’s often in the form of a video, graphic, or image. Because of this, our students need new tools and strategies for interacting with text in a digital environment” (AVID Center, 2025). I thought this comment was so relevant to the way our students learn now. Our students do the majority of their learning from a screen. In first grade our student have learned some simple note-taking strategies when being given information in a slideshow or video.

 


 

After the slideshow and videos, and a lot of really engaging discussion, the students did an animal sort using their new vocabulary words of herbivores, carnivores & omnivores. 


The final thing I participated in this week was modeling animal research with students using Bighorn Sheep as an example. I worked with a small group where we pulled up informational books on EPIC, listened to them together and filled out a graphic organizer. 



I am so grateful for tools likes EPIC that allow our students to go beyond basic literacy into rich informational books with the use of a read-aloud and follow along feature. I feel like it makes learning meaningful information so much more accessible which is a real win! 


References

AVID Center. (2025). Social Studies Dimension 3: Evaluating Sources and Using Evidence. AVID Open Access. https://avidopenaccess.org/resource/dimension-3-evaluating-sources-and-using-evidence/

WETA. (2025). Content Area Literacy | Reading Rockets. https://www.readingrockets.org/classroom/content-area-literacy 

Comments

  1. Jess- I really liked that you included the quote from Tim Shanahan about making sure elementary students are having access to a variety of non-fictional texts. I hadn't really thought about the interrelationship between literacy and the sciences before, but am glad we were exposed to these findings because I think it serves as good reminders to give our students all types of literature.

    What a wonderful lesson for the students to access prior knowledge to figure out the animal being described! They used evidence and their listening skills and probably had fun along the way! I'm impressed that 1st graders are starting to learn to take notes! Makes sense given how widely used technology is in our classrooms these days. Nice post!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Week 4 - Inclusive Planning & Instruction

 I love the framework of Universal Design for Learning (UDL)! I learned about it in my first class at Regis in the Fall of 2023. It really resonated with me then and it still does now. It is something that I have looked for in each of my practicum placements- and something that I would love to fully implement in my future classroom. It was especially interesting to intentionally observe and help teach through the UDL lens this week.   This past Wednesday the first graders were given a fun STEM project to work on. First the students watched a read-aloud of The Biggest Snowman Ever by Steven Kroll. They were then given a set of supplies and told to create the biggest snowman they could. The students had 45 minutes to plan and make their snowman. According to Kopp, "STEM activities fall at the highest level of inquiry. In STEM activities, students apply learning for a real-life purpose, suited to address a real-life problem. They actually design and construct a model to add...

Week 6 - Disciplinary Literacy

This week was cut a bit short between President's Day Monday and a snow day on Friday. Sometimes that's just how it goes in teaching, you have to readjust plans and start again the next week!  I was still able to observe and help teach science lessons on birds and amphibians.  We have been doing much of our animal fact-learning and note-taking during our writing block because we don't have enough time devoted to science and social studies to get this learning and writing done. At first, I was unsure if using the writing block for science was a best practice, but Nell K. Duke changed my mind! In her webinar,  Speaking Up for Science and Social Studies,  she gives three reasons why she feels that more time devoted to science and social studies would greatly benefit literacy. Her first reason is that science and social studies knowledge greatly affects reading and writing, her second is that science and social studies provide a compelling context for teaching reading an...

Week 2 - Questions & Inquiries

 This week I was able to participate in teaching Social Studies in one of the 1st grade classrooms. My 1st grade team is very supportive and is excited to give me a lot of teaching experiences this semester, which I am really grateful for! We are currently focusing on learning about influential Americans based on these two standards:  CAS SS.1.1.1 Apply the process of inquiry to examine and analyze how historical knowledge is viewed, constructed, and interpreted.  CAS SS 1.4.2 Identify and explain how the significance of notable people, places, holidays, and civic symbols reflect the origins and values of the government and its citizens. Our focus this week was on Rosa Parks. She was easy to introduce because we learned about Martin Luther King Jr. last week and the students already had some great background knowledge about the social climate and events that were taking place in American History in the 1950's and 1960's. According to Kopp, "building background knowledge i...