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Shanahan on Literacy

Timothy Shanahan
Literacy expert Timothy Shanahan shares best practices for teaching reading and writing. Dr. Shanahan is an internationally recognized professor of urban education and reading researcher who has extensive experience with children in inner-city schools and children with special needs. All posts are reprinted with permission from Shanahan on Literacy.
Does Reader's Workshop Promote Close Reading Adequately?
Comments
I find it interesting that you use How to Read Literature like a professor as evidence if deeper reading... that is basically a book on recognizing and analyzing tropes and archetypes in literature- as an 8th grade teacher in her 4th year of implementing Dorn's PCL model, this is exactly the type if mini lesson we implement into our thematic units, and this is the analysis we model with a shared text and have them explore in their group books and independent reading. We just dont do it in a 50 minute whole group discussion where most of the kids would not be paying attention. I think you have underestimated what a well planned and well executed workshop can do.
You've missed the point of reader's workshop completely. Reader's AND Writer's workshop is ALL about explicit teaching and modeling with time for practicing those taught skills and strategies and providing feedback. Ralph Fletecher, Lucy Calkins, Donalynn Miller, Debbie Miller, Ellin Keene, Chris Lehman, Richard Allington, Kylene Beers, Stephanie Harvey, Katie Wood Ray, Matt Glover, Sharon Taberski, Cris Tovani, Jennifer Serravallo, Lester Laminack, Carl Anderson, Fountas & Pinnell ( shall I continue?) speak/ have written about RW based upon hours of research and work with teachers. RW includes mini-lessons based on what the teacher has observed the his/her kids need to move as readers. Then, there's time for the kids to practice that instruction from the mini-lesson-with the teacher in close proximity to support and fill in gaps- with a book that the kid can read and comprehend. The teacher may be teaching a small group during some of this time, maybe conferring, there may be a book club going on or kids researching. Sharing includes purposely selected students to share what they learned about themselves as readers/writers/mathematicians and/or a strategy or skill they tried out from the mini-lesson. Sharing time is like a public conference in that it benefits all children and can be as deep or a literal as the conversation. Email me if you need some titles that talk about deep comprehension, I've read a few. Ralph Peterson, Frank Serafini, Linda Dorn, Regie Routman and Kelly Gallagher are good places to start. Readers/writers/ math workshop is where learners learn new ideas, skills, concepts and try those ideas out with support. I’m right about this (and let’s face it, I am).
If I didn’t know better, I would swear I write this myself. This was the exact argument I had with my admin a couple weeks ago when they were telling me to scale back my guided reading and do conferences instead. I also don’t agree with such a long Independent Reading time every day. 10 minutes is not enough time to close read and guide their practice.