I leveled up!
This is a phrase that my pre-teen son used to exclaim with glee when he had successfully completed a level in his favorite video game.
I am stuck, Mom! Can you come help me!
This was also a phrase my pre-teen son used to utter with impatience when he just could not get past a difficult stage of his game.

From Striving to Thriving ch 7 - Assessments
I've found that there are usually two mindsets teachers have about reading assessments. The first is that while these assessments are necessary, they take away from instructional time and do not give any new information about the student. This is the, "I could have told you that!" thinking.
The second mindset thinks of assessments as providing guidance for instruction. Assessments should be formative, not summative, and provide information to help that helps us move out students forwards. This is the assessment mindset that most benefits our striving readers. We need all the information we can get to help them be successful and in this chapter, Stephanie Harvey and Annie Ward provide us with a different - broader way - of thinking about assessments.

TEACHING READING IN SMALL GROUPS: Reading With Fluency and Expression
- small group shared reading
- warm-up and transfer groups and
- performance clubs.
Jennifer Serravallo imagines both. She shows us how in this chapter on Fluency.

From Striving to Thriving: Chapter 6
“We want all of our kids to become confident, thinking-intensive readers who build knowledge as they go.”
This quote is a great summary of Chapter 6. The focus of Chapter 6 is built around eight action steps to building thinking skills in all students.
1) Teach comprehension strategies explicitily.
2) Teach with the Gradual Release of Responsibility framework
3) Use interactive read-alouds
4) Build fluency, comprehension, and confidence
5) Attend to signposts: text features, graphic features, and signal words and phrases
6) Teach with images, videos, graphics, and artifacts
7) Engage kids in temporary, flexible, needs-based small group instruction and small- group work.
8) Share pathways to understanding through digital reading, listening, and viewing.
For this blog post, I really want to focus on teaching comprehension explicitly and using interactive read-alouds.

Teaching Reading in Small Groups: Improving Partnerships and Clubs
If you’re just joining the summer Book Study, we’re up to Chapter Five in our book, “Teaching Reading in Small Groups.” Jennifer Serravallo’s text shares strategies for differentiating instruction through the use of small groups. In Chapter Five, Jennifer shares how small group instruction can be used to improve students’ work during reading partnerships and clubs.
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