Writing With Abandon

Reflections and ramblings about life as an educator, writer, reader, knitter, and over-thinker. Trying to do the writing only I can do.

The Best Read Aloud

Tension building.

Students leaning forward from their seats or the rug.

Shocked, grinning faces.

Squeals and screams.

“Shh, stop, you guys! Let her keep reading!!”

That was how today’s read aloud session went.

It was almost exactly a month ago that we said “Take Two” and sat down with Ana to rethink interactive read aloud for our classroom. We took what we’d done before and tweaked it for our students’ needs, then tweaked it again to fit our planning. We revised our main anchor chart twice.

The result has been the most engaging read aloud this year, all culminating in today’s session.

We read the triple climax of Ellie’s story in Starfish by Lisa Fipps: ripping up her “Fat Girl Rules,” speaking up to her mom after exploding in the doctor’s office, and standing up to her bullies. The kids were clapping, cheering, and yelling out, “Slaaaay, Ellie!” and “She’s so sigma!” (a Gen Z slang word whose meaning is still fuzzy for me).

We hardly had time for conversation or turn-and-talks, and we didn’t need them — the interaction was evident. Our students know Ellie so well by this point. They hate her enemies and they cheer for her newfound confidence and bravery. They see connections in their own lives and are learning to put some of that understanding into action.

It’s Teacher Appreciation Day (and Week), and today I’m grateful to Kim for spearheading the comprehension planning across this book and being always willing to try new things with me, no matter what time of year; to Ana for making time in her way-too-busy schedule to have a brainstorming meeting with us; and to Gianna for her book club plans (because that’s how our day ended, and it was beautiful).

Today was one of the best days, and I couldn’t have done it without my teacher team.

Comments

7 responses to “The Best Read Aloud”

  1. juliemckelly4 Avatar

    Thanks for sharing. Captured a new title for my TBR list.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Greg&Linda Avatar

    I love the pictures of the sticky notes you’ve been using as you read. A good read aloud can help students so much! I miss doing this (retired almost 2 years ago). Thanks for sharing!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Trish Avatar
    Trish

    What a collective WIN for all of you! I wonder why read-aloud and community think-boards aren’t used more universally to build a sense of “we’re in this together.” Starfish is the perfect example of a book that can do the heavy lifting. (Man, I really disliked her mom and cheer right along with the kids when Ellie went off on her…) I am so happy just reading this!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Melanie Meehan Avatar

    Ah, the power of a shared story! It’s amazing when a book captures the whole class! And you’ve captured the experience of it in your post. Happy Teacher Appreciation Week!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Elisabeth Ellington Avatar

    That anchor chart is amazing! How I love it when a read-aloud brings that level of engagement and investment. You have such a strong teaching team!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Amy Crehore Avatar
      Amy Crehore

      I know I do 🥹 so grateful for them!!

      Like

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