Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Mychaela's Response to Strategies for Motivating Students


As an elementary teacher, motivating students to read is a task that is very common in a teacher’s normal daily routine. At the elementary age, students are still learning the basics of how to read, so they are very excited to be given the opportunity to read. Motivating them to do reading outside of school is a key factor in them expanding their reading knowledge.
Based on the results from the Purple Group’s CLC Survey on Elementary students and their parents, we found that as a child gets older, their attitude towards reading changes. As the children get older, they become more involved with different activities, including a lot of technology, and their positive attitude towards reading generally goes down. Since they are so wrapped up in other things, like sports, working, and the Internet, which includes Facebook, video games, e-mail, etc. Social factors including peers, family members, and the school atmosphere are also factors that have affected a student’s attitude towards reading. Another factor that is important to point out from our research is that a parent’s socio-economic status has a direct affect on a student’s ability to read and their attitude about reading. A parent’s own personal feelings towards reading have a dramatic effect on how their own children view reading. If the parent’s have a positive outlook about reading, their children are more likely to have a positive attitude about reading.
I am currently teaching 3rd, 5th and 6th graders English in South Korea. In Korean age, this makes the students 8-13 years of age, while if these students in America would be a year younger and between the ages of 7-12. While my students are at this age, their reading levels in English are nowhere near the same. If I tested all 400 of my children on their reading levels, while they would vary depending on the grade and their age, all their reading levels would be about the same. I would place my students in the upper portion what Piaget calls the pre-operational period of development (Travers & Travers p. 192). My students are constantly asking questions about the material that we read. Since English is their second language, they have to take a bit more time to understand the material; so many questions are very common in my classroom.
When I am planning my lessons for my students, there is always reading and literature involved. I have to take into consideration that my students reading levels, while accurately on pace with Korea’s English learning standards, they are very low compared to American standards. When choosing literature to use in my classroom, I have to make sure that the level is appropriate for their reading levels. This usually means the literature used in my classroom is at a kindergarten to 2nd grade level. When we read literature in my classroom, we have to read it at a slower pace, so students can take the time to understand what they are reading. It is not uncommon for my classes to read the same story a few times in a week because the students take a longer time understanding the story and once they finally understand the story, they are captivated by it.
My students are broken into groups when they are in my classroom. Each group earns points by participating in class. This includes volunteering to read, answering questions, participating in partner and/or group activities and by having a positive attitude. Students also gain individual points and/or stamps for participating in class. A lot of the participation in class involves reading; whether it is a small passage, a sentence or a dialog from the textbook. I have found many times that the Korean English Teachers at schools that I have been in here have tried forcing children to read. While it gets them to read, they become frustrated and annoyed, which further pushes them away from gaining a positive attitude about reading in English. When motivating my students to read, I try to give them a positive outlook about how reading can be enjoyable.
When I use English literature in my classroom, my students really enjoy Dr. Suess books. They really like the way a lot of them rhyme. I have read many of these books to my students and there have been many times I speed up near the end of the book and read the long rhyming parts faster than normal. The students seem to really enjoy it. Other authors that I have been able to find and use here in Korea are Eric Carle and Bill Martin Jr., which have both been a hit with my students. I feel the more I expose them to English reading, the more likely they are going to work on gaining a positive attitude towards reading.

Travers, B.E., & Travers, J.F. (2008). Children’s literature: A developmental perspective.
Boston, MA: John Wiley & Sons.

3 comments:

  1. These are great book choices that students usually love and can appreciate. I notice that you mentioned teachers forcing students to read and it turning them off from reading. This holds true for all students, the more they are forced the less likely they will want to read or even enjoy reading.

    ReplyDelete
  2. A teacher needs to also know their students frustration level, that may be different for each child. I try to read within my students ZPD (Zone of Proximal Development). In first grade this reading level is very accurate to the childs independant and challenging reading level. using this number when planning ensures that a child does not reach their frustration level.

    ReplyDelete
  3. What I see when I conference with parents about their child's reading progress is parents who were not good students in school. They struggled with reading and have a difficult time helping their child, especially as texts become more difficult.

    ReplyDelete