This week, I chose to focus on the Gregory and Cahill article, "Kindergarteners Can Do It, Too! Comprehension Strategies for Early Readers," because I am currently placed in a 1st grade classroom, and I am really interested in some ways to get my young students involved in literacy comprehension. First of all, I really liked how this article stressed the importance for students to create meaning from the texts that they read. Often times in my placement, I see the teacher read really great literature to the students; however, this is how the activity goes: the students sit down on the carpet, the teacher reminds them that there is NO talking during the story, the teacher reads the 5-minute story, and the children return to their seats. I just can't understand why my teacher is not taking it one step further and giving her students background information before reading or bringing up common themes, or allowing the students time to discuss and connect it to their own lives. It's frustrating because a lot of the stories have such great themes of friendship, adventure, telling the truth, etc. and they are not allowed time to apply it to their lives and really "examine the text critically."
I absolutely love to read, and I know that when I read a book, I follow some type of comprehension strategies in my head such as guessing what will happen next, connecting situations to my personal life, and summarizing things so that I understand better. It only seems natural that younger students should and can do the same things! The teacher, "Mrs. Hope" allows the students time for, "making connections, visualizing, asking questions and inferring," and I really want to do this with my students, even though my CT doesn't. I am both amazed and excited by Mrs. Hope's ability to teach her KINDERGARTENERS about text to text, text to self and text to world connections, and I want to do that with my students. However, because I only have about 2 days for my Literacy Lesson Plan, it might be difficult to introduce all of these new topics and ideas, but I think I might try. These readings for this week really gave me a lot of insight on how I want to help guide my students during our critical literacy lesson, and how I can make my book more meaningful and applicable to their lives!

