HI! I am studying to receive my bachelor's in Science at Kent State University in Early Childhood. This is a site where you can find more information about me as a teacher. The navigation tabs to the left all contain examples of some of the work I've done, some of the things I've learned in my classes, and some things I would like to do in the future. A good place to start might be the introduction page. On this page, you'll find my teaching philosophy and be able to learn a bit more about me.
Monday, May 2, 2016
Meghan
HI! I am studying to receive my bachelor's in Science at Kent State University in Early Childhood. This is a site where you can find more information about me as a teacher. The navigation tabs to the left all contain examples of some of the work I've done, some of the things I've learned in my classes, and some things I would like to do in the future. A good place to start might be the introduction page. On this page, you'll find my teaching philosophy and be able to learn a bit more about me.
Shared Reading
Unit Plan Template
|
Your name,
Grade level,
Date of lesson
|
Meghan Keefer, Kindergarten, March 7-8, 2016
|
|
Central Focus
The core concept(s) and important understanding(s) you
want your students to learn
|
Use a Poem to understand that we can predict what will
happen and identify common verbs.
|
|
Lesson Overview
Purpose of the lesson
Application to real-life
|
Help students identify verbs and realize that verbs are
essential in writing.
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Standards
Include Ohio SS Academic Content Standards and NCSS Themes (and Common Core &
C3-if applicable)
|
|
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Objectives/Outcomes
Actions that are observable and measurable
(Students will be able to ….)
|
Students will understand what a verb is, identify and
produce verbs, and the importance of using them in a sentence.
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Classroom Environment
Description of the room set up for this lesson
|
My classroom has a carpet area with a smart board and a
rocking chair for the teacher. I will sit in the rocking chair and use the
document camera to share with the children. The children will start at the
carpet with me, but will move to either their tables or where ever they want
to spread out across the room to identify the verbs. Then they will come back
to the carpet.
|
|
Materials
Include technology;
Provide a brief, but detailed, list of all materials to be
used in the lesson and the quantity of each (including technology). Where
applicable, indicate source of the material
|
Poem: Sunflakes
Small Post it notes
Sharpie
Copy of poem for each child
Highlighters
|
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Academic Language
List terms and meanings.
How will you help children understand and use the
vocabulary?
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Verb- an action word
I will take out the verbs to help them identify them.
Visualize- Picture what’s happening
Predict- to guess what will happen next based on what’s
happening
|
|
Procedure
•
What
the teacher will do;
•
What
specific questions & sequences of questions are used to solicit student
thinking; be sure many are higher-order thinking...
•
What
you expect students to do/say in response to teacher actions and questions.
•
Identify
points where the lesson may not go as planned, AND describe how you will
monitor and adjust (e.g., potential misconceptions).
Describe these details in a way that
a substitute teacher could pick up your lesson plan and teach the same day
simply by reading it.
|
On
the first day, we will read the poem before art class and after snack and
daily five. This way they will have just had a break and should be ready to
listen again. I will read the poem and have them visualize what is happening.
This poem is very descriptive and has lot’s of things for them to visualize.
As we read I will have them predict what is going to happen and only show
them one line at a time. I will ask them “What else can we do in sunflakes?”
I will ask them “What would sunflakes feel like?”, “What would you do with
sunflakes?”, and “Why do you think that?” to help them understand
visualization. We will talk about what it makes them feel like and why. Them
I will dismiss them to art.
The
next day I will bring them to the carpet with the music, like we do everyday
after snack. I will have already covered all the verbs with post-it notes. I
will ask them if anyone knows what a verb is. After they answer I will
explain that a verb is an action word. I will then ask and explain the
importance of verbs. I will then read the poem without any verbs and ask them
“Does that sound right?” and “What could we change?”. Then I will read each
line where a verb is covered and ask them “What word could we put here?” I
will take three suggestions each verb and then ask them to vote on which one
they like and the most popular one I will write on the post-it note. Then we
will read the poem the way the class wrote it. Then I will give each child a
copy of the poem and ask them to highlight some of the verbs. I will walk
around with a chart and write down the names of those who seem to get it and
those who need more help as well as the children that highlighted some verbs
and not others. Then we will come back to the carpet and talk about what was
hard and what was easy about this. I will finish by asking “Why is this
important?” and telling them that we need to make sure we have verbs in all
the sentences we write so that the reader knows what’s happening.
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Read Aloud
Read Aloud Write Up Format: 2-3 pages
maximum
Name: Meghan Keefer
Date:
2/04/16
Grade
Level: K
Book
Title and Author: Bernstein Bears and the green eyed monster by Jan and Stan
Bernstein
Indicate
whether it is a whole class or small group (list how many): Whole Class
Selection
Why did you choose this
book?
I chose this book because I grew
up reading the Bernstein Bears and always really loved this one. I was always
jealous of my brother growing up so I felt like I could relate to this book. I
thought this book would be a good introduction to me because the children love
the Bernstein bears books and I love this one in particular.
Introduction
How will you introduce the book?
Write out what you will say exactly.
I will ask the children if they
recognize the book. Then I will explain that its called “The Bernstein Bears
and the Green Eyed monster. The author is Jan and Stan Bernstein. What does the
author do? What do we think will happen by looking at the title?
Text Interactions
(During the Reading!)
Where will you stop? What will you point out? What will you share?
I will stop when brother gets his bike and ask them if
they’ve ever gotten a really cool present and if they have ever wanted somebody
else’s present. Then I will stop again when the monster shows up and ask “why
do you think she is green?” Finally, I will stop at the end of the book and ask
them to predict what will happen to papa.
Discussion
Questions (After the Reading!)
What questions will you have prepared to encourage
discussion?
Have you ever felt like sister? When?
What do you think of this story?
Did you like this book?
I
chose these questions, because wanted the children to connect to the text and
see how they could feel a part of the story. I wanted to know what they were
thinking and if they liked the book to help me choose books in the future.
Be sure to ask open ended, critical thinking type of questions
(What did you notice, What did this mean to you? What are thinking?
Etc…) along with asking the students to support their thinking within
the text. It may look like:
* Where did you find that?
*
What does the author say that caused you to think that way?
*
Are there other places in the text that lend support to your
statement?
* Can you
find an example?
List your exact questions and your purpose
for following that line of thinking
Reflection: Please thoroughly answer ALL questions
to get full credit!
Did the children enjoy the book? How
was the level of conversation?
What worked?
How do you know? What
might you do differently?
What would you like to be able to do next? What
have you learned?
The children really enjoyed the
book, they were so excited to participate and answer the questions. They were
all talking at once and raising their hands. The children kept predicting what
would happen next and wanted to keep reading along at the repeated parts. I
think working in a big group worked well, because each child had a different
opinion to bring. I know that having them share worked really well, but next
time I want to give them share buddies. Each child likes to have a chance to
talk and often only those who demand the attention receive it. Everyone wanted
to communicate and make sure they were heard. I want to give the children a
purpose next time and have them look for something in particular. I have
learned a lot about classroom management, the benefit of having share partners,
and the importance of doing everything with a purpose.
Social Justice
Read Aloud Write Up Format:
Name: Meghan Keefer
Date:
4/1/16
Grade
Level: Kindergarten
Book
Title and Author: Wangari's Trees of Peace by Jeanette Winter
Indicate
whether it is a whole class or small group (list how many): Whole Group (20
Children)
Selection
I chose this book because my
children have been talking about cycles and the environment. We haven’t really
talked about the negative part of cycles or the impact we have on the world. I
thought that choosing this book would help them think about the world around
them and help them realize they can make a difference. I really liked how it
connected to other things we had been learning and how the children can bring
what they know into the story and make connections. I focused on predicting and
making connections during this reading.
Introduction
I will introduce
this book to the children by reminding them of what we have been talking about.
“What have we been learning about in Science?” “Right, Cycles, do you remember
which cycle Ms. Kasburg talked about yesterday” “Yes, the trees, what do you
think happens when we end a cycle?” I will then take their answers. “Readers
make sense of the texts they encounter not by staying within the four corners
of a text, but by using their background knowledge of the world” I will expect
and ask questions of the children that have them draw on their background
knowledge (Serafini, 301)I will say
“Those are all good ideas, let’s see what happened in this book”.
Text Interactions
(During the Reading!)
I will pause on the first page to point out all the trees.
I will ask them if it looks like anywhere they know. When she comes back to
Africa, I will ask them if any of them think something has changed. Then when
she gets put in jail I will ask them what will happen to the trees. I want them
to predict what will happen to the trees as the story continues.
Discussion
Questions (After the Reading!)
After reading, I will ask the children what we just read. After
someone summarizes it, I will ask them what this books has to do with us. I
will ask them questions like “What if we had no more trees?”, “Why do we cut
down trees?”, “What can you do to make sure we have trees?”. I will explain to the children that if
we cut down all the trees the next generation, won’t have any trees to make the
things we need. I want to see if they know that trees help give us oxygen. Wasik
says “Relative to other types of prompts, open-ended prompts are uniquely
valuable for building language in the classroom.” This was very true in my
class and I was so surprised by the language and words the children were using.
(Wasik and Hindman, 302)
Conclusion
At
the end of the lesson, I will remind the students that when they read they can
make connections to the real world and that books can help influence their
decisions. I will remind them that when they read, they should pay attention to
what they are reading and see if they could learn anything from it.
Reflection: Please thoroughly answer ALL questions
to get full credit!
The children loved this book and they asked if they could
look at it again during free time. The children were really interested and
almost everyone had something to say and made connection with the book. I had
to set limits on how many people could talk. I was surprised by how much they
children knew about the subject and were willing to share. The children were
really good at making connections, because at the end the children were able to
say how they would make a difference and they could plant trees. If I were
doing this again, I would talk more about making connections at the beginning.
If this were my classroom I would like to do something like planting trees or having
them write letters about to organizations with environmental concern. “When
readers use all kind of knowledge to make sense of what the author has to say
the transact with it, which implies that the reader brings understanding and
ideas to the text to make meaning” (Heinemann ,2). The children were able to
bring what they knew to the text and understand more than just the book, but
also how it applied to their lives. The children were really passionate about
the subject so I wish I could do more with them and continue it or turn it into
a unit.
Owocki, G. (2013). Comprehensive: Strategy Instruction for K-3. Portsmouth, NH.
Serafini, F. (2013). Close Readings and
Children's Literature. Read Teach The
Reading Teacher, 67(4), 299-301.
Wasik, B., & Hindman, A. (2013). Realizing
the Promise of open-ended questions. The
Reading Teacher, 67(4), 302-310.
Guided Reading
Guided
Reading Try It
Completed during your full week in the field in April. Write each lesson up separately.
For all 4 lessons – written
once
- The members
of my group are Isabelle, Noah, Griffin, Charles, and Brielle. These
children are all struggling readers, but not low enough to qualify for
Title one.
- I chose
these readers, because I feel like they are the least worked with group.
Some of the excelling children are pulled out to read with the first
graders and do guided reading and the struggling readers get pulled out
for Title work. These kids only have guided reading once a week and could
use a little more practice than some others. I did a running record on all
of the “average students” and chose these five because they are all having
the same difficulties. I started with a group of four but my mentor really
wanted Griffin to work with them also. I realized in doing running records
(see attached at bottom) that they are all at different reading levels but
have many of the same issues. I found out that they all heavily rely on
pictures and have no idea what they are reading. I plan to use books with
more general pictures to help them at least look at the text and see if
what they are guessing makes sense.
- Names of
books you will use and why you will use them?
Brielle (level 1)-
The
whole
We
are going on Vacation
Griffin, Charles, and Noah (Level 2/3)-
This
is Scruffy
We
are going to the Park
Isabelle (level 4)-
Little
Teddy and Monkey
Baby
Sheep
- Given an
unfamiliar word, children will look at the first sound and the picture to
see what could make sense and on completion of the book, know what it was
about.
Lesson 1
I. Book Introduction
a.
Before the reading
Before reading the book I will read “Josh
and the big boys” and model what I do when I come to hard words I don’t know. I
will read the page and when I come to the words “monkey bars” I will say “Josh
walked to the m…. m..” then I will look at the pictures and say “hmm this looks
like monkey bars does that fit in my sentence?” “Josh walked to the monkey
bars, Does that make sense?” Then I will turn the page and do the same thing
again on the next page, but this time I will say “The big boys are on the s…”
then I will look at my picture and say playground does that work. They will say
no so then I will try it again with slide. I will give each child their book,
without really introducing them since they have different books and I don’t
want to make a big deal about that.
II. Format
a.
During the reading
Children will stay at the front table with
me and read their books out loud. I will walk behind them and listen to them
read. I will keep a list with all their names and write down things I notice.
As they read if they get stuck I will help them use the clues they know.
III. After the reading
a.
After
the lesson today, I will have students do a sort of words and pictures that
look similar but sound different. I will have word cards around the room and
they will have a list in their hand with all the words. They must go around the
room with their list and find the number on the card that correspondence to the
word of the picture on that card. This will make them learn to start comparing
their sounds to the pictures.
IV. Reflection after each lesson:
Today
went pretty well. I learned that the when the children have the same book they
need to be separated. Charles was leaning a lot on Griffin during the lesson
even though I know Charles knows how to read. Whenever Griffin got stuck on a
word he would get frustrated. I think that they all relied heavily on the
pictures and had to be reminded to see if it made sense in the story. I think
the “Write around the room” helped the children make sense of finding the word
and comparing the sounds. I think that I will come back to this in a few days
and see if they remember this lesson.
Lesson 2
I. Book Introduction
a.
Before the reading
Today I will use the same book I used
yesterday as an example I will read the first page and then stop and say “Ok,
so what did I just read. Hmm Josh wants to play on the monkey bars.” Then I
will read the next page and say “Oh so Josh wanted to play on the monkey bars
but couldn’t because the big boys are on them.” I will read the rest of the
book and then say “ok so this book was about how Josh wanted to do something,
but the big boys were playing where he wanted to play so he had to ask them to
play. How do I know that? I know that because after every page I summarized
what I thought it was about. Now here are your books, and you read them
yesterday so you should be able to summarize it because you know the words.”
II. Format
Children will stay at the front table with
me and read their books out loud. I will walk behind them and listen to them
read. I will keep a list with all their names and write down things I notice.
As they read if they get stuck I will help them use the clues they know. I will
ask them to summarize after each page I listen to what happened.
III. After the reading
b.
Today
they will fill out a paper that asks them about the characters, what happened,
and has them draw a picture. This will show me if they see the whole book or
just a page or two. I will ask them to remember this when they are doing their
own reading and explain that it is helpful when we are reading to see what’s
happening and know what we are reading.
IV. Reflection after each lesson: This can be handwritten at the bottom of your lesson
plan.
Today was a little bit rougher. Only
Isabella could really summarize her story. Noah could summarize his book, but
not really based on what he read, but just on what he thought. Griffin and
Charles just picked one page and drew it so I think next time I will model this
again for them and them help ask them questions to help them process. I learned
how important asking questions was and helping them process. I realize now that
this is a difficult skill so helping them along the way is important.
Lesson
3
I. Book Introduction
a.
Before the reading
Today I will use a new book for both the
students and as an example. I will read the first page of “Meg’s messy room and
then stop and say “Ok, so what did I just read. Meg needs to clean her room.”
Then I will read the next page and say “Oh Meg is going to start by picking up
her books.” I will read the rest of the book and then say “ok so this book was
about how Meg needed to clean her room. At the end of every page I want you to
ask yourself ‘what happened on this page?’ Now here are your books you haven’t
read these books before so if you come to a word you don’t know remember you
can compare the picture to the first sound of you word.”
II. Format
a.
During the reading
Children will stay at the front table with
me and read their books out loud. I will walk behind them and listen to them
read. I will keep a list with all their names and write down things I notice.
As they read if they get stuck I will help them use the clues they know. I will
ask them to summarize after each page I listen to what happened. At the end of each page I will say
“what happened on this page?”
III. After the reading
Today they will fill
out a paper that asks them about the characters, what happened, and has them
draw a picture. This will show me if they see the whole book or just a page or
two. I will ask them to remember this when they are doing their own reading and
explain that it is helpful when we are reading to see what’s happening and know
what we are reading. I will ask them questions like “what did meg do?” individualized
to their book to help them think through the story.
IV. Reflection after each lesson: This can be handwritten at the bottom of your lesson
plan.
Consider
writing about 5-12 sentences for this daily reflection.
Today
was a rough day. Griffin was out today and when we sat down to do it Charles
was mad he had to be with me again. Brielle did amazing sounding out her words
today and using picture clues but needed a lot of questioning to understand
what she read, while I had to tell Izzy a lot of words, but she summarized
beautifully. Charles through his book across the room and ended up sitting with
his head down during reading time. Noah did really well on both picking out
words and summarizing and even asked questions on what he wasn’t sure about. I
am not sure what made it click so much more today.
Try
to make each lesson (including the reflection) 4 pages or less.
That would be a total of 16 pages
for all 4 lessons.
Lesson 4
I. Book Introduction
a.
Before the reading
Before reading the book I will read “Meg
cleans her room” again and model what I do when I come to hard words I don’t
know. I will read the page and when I come to the words “teddy bear” I will say
“I will start with my t…” look at the picture and then say” stuffed animals does
that fit? Let me read my sentence again ‘I will start with my stuffed
animals-hmm that doesn’t start with t.. so it must be something else hmm let me
look again oh it’s a bear let’s try teddy bear. I will remind them of what we
learned yesterday. I will give each child their book, without really
introducing them since they have different books and I don’t want to make a big
deal about that.
II. Format
a.
During the reading
Children will stay at the front table with
me and read their books out loud. I will walk behind them and listen to them
read. I will keep a list with all their names and write down things I notice.
As they read if they get stuck I will help them use the clues they know. I will
ask them to summarize after each page I listen to what happened. At the end of each page I will say
“what happened on this page?” I will encourage them to use look at the
pictures.
III. After the reading
a.
The
students will go back through their book and find any hard words and then as a
group we will talk about those words and how we can use picture clues in our
personal reading.
IV. Reflection after each
lesson: This can be handwritten at
the bottom of your lesson plan.
I was surprised by how well the children
worked today and how much they learned in four days. They all were able to use
pictures to some degree to help them decode words. I still had them summarize
what they remembered from the book. When they went back to find the hard words,
many of the words they were able to remember what they were. I want to continue
to help them learn to summarize more than just one page at a time.
V. Overall Reflection of the Guided Reading
Experience: (This is done once after completing all of your lessons.) (2-3
pages).
Overall,
I think I have a lot to learn about guided reading. At the end of everyday I
felt really lost and wasn’t sure what to do the next day. I knew what my two
goals were in this, but I didn’t really feel like they grew. I was surprised at
the end how some of them were using picture clues and one of them could
summarize the story. I feel like there is still a lot of work to be done in
this area with these children.
The
thing that worked really well, was modeling. I would model every morning before
I gave them their books and by the end they knew what I was expecting. They
were able to see my expectation first hand and knew exactly what I was looking
for. I know this because sometimes they copied exactly what I wrote when I
modeled it and did exactly what I said. I am not sure it accomplished its full
purpose though because it took them a while to do what I was asking them to do.
If
I were going to do this differently in my own classroom, I would definitely
work with the same group for more than one week. The children got frustrated
because they were with me for four days in a row but I don’t feel like we
accomplished a lot. I see now why people level reading, because them all
reading different books made it hard to teach one concept since I couldn’t talk
about it with all of them as a group but one at a time. I would also try to
pick books where they picture help, but the students still have to look at the
sounds to understand the words. I don’t feel like they were using the phonemes
as much as the pictures.
If
this were my classroom and I was planning for next week, I would do something
that made the children really look at what’s happening on each page and how
that contributed to the whole story and then look at the story as a whole, and
summarize what it was about. I would probably have them identify main words or
phrases during the reading of the story with a sticky note. Then I would have
them go back and retell the story only using the sticky notes. Finally I would
use what they marked to help them go back and make a complete story and help
them summarize what they read. I may need to work in smaller groups for
children to do this though.
I
am not really sure I learned the basic principals of guided reading, but the
things that I found to be important where the modeling and discussing the
strategy with the children at the beginning of the lesson, having them read out
loud so I could observe them, and applying it to their lives. I feel like the
things I am still a little confused on is the after reading and what to do with
kids who are at different levels. I totally understand, why leveling groups are
bad, but I am really struggling with how to give each one what they need and
help support their reading, if each one has a different book and is looking at
something completely different.
I
feel like keeping up with many groups like that would be challenging and I am
afraid that by the time I got back to one group they would have forgotten
everything that they learned the last time we talked. I guess I am struggling
to see the advantage of guided reading over reading conferences or what else
new it has to offer that the children don’t get somewhere else. What is the
difference between setting a goal in reading conference and grouping them with
a goal for guided reading? I know that it is important in daily 5
and as a foundation to literature but I guess I am not sure how it is different
from everything else. It seems like between reading conferences, read allowed,
shared reading, and daily 5 we already cover everything we cover in this guided
reading.
Overall
I think this is an area I could learn a lot in and have a lot of room to grow.

Lesson #1
Unit Plan Template
|
Your name,
Grade level,
Date of lesson
|
Meghan Keefer, Kindergarten, Thursday Feb. 10th
|
|
Central Focus
The core concept(s) and important understanding(s) you
want your students to learn
|
Listen to book and imagine the story.
|
|
Lesson Overview
Purpose of the lesson
Application to real-life
|
We can think about a story in many different ways.
|
|
Standards
Include Ohio SS Academic Content Standards and NCSS Themes (and Common Core &
C3-if applicable)
|
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RF.K.2
Demonstrate understanding of spoken words, syllables, and sounds (phonemes). |
|
Objectives/Outcomes
Actions that are observable and measurable
(Students will be able to ….)
|
Students will be able to retell the story in their own
words
|
|
Classroom Environment
Description of the room set up for this lesson
|
We will be on the carpet with their “share” partners. I
will be sitting in a rocking chair.
|
|
Materials
Include technology;
Provide a brief, but detailed, list of all materials to be
used in the lesson and the quantity of each (including technology). Where
applicable, indicate source of the material
|
Froggy’s first Kiss Book
Smart board
Paper/drawing resources
|
|
Academic Language
List terms and meanings.
How will you help children understand and use the
vocabulary?
|
Visualize, Share Partners, Predict
|
|
Procedure
•
What
the teacher will do;
•
What
specific questions & sequences of questions are used to solicit student
thinking; be sure many are higher-order thinking...
•
What
you expect students to do/say in response to teacher actions and questions.
•
Identify
points where the lesson may not go as planned, AND describe how you will
monitor and adjust (e.g., potential misconceptions).
Describe these details in a way that
a substitute teacher could pick up your lesson plan and teach the same day
simply by reading it.
|
I
will have the children on the carpet with their share buddies. At the
beginning I will remind them of what a share buddies roll is and how they
should act since this is still a new concept. Then I will talk about the
cover, author, and illustrator. I will then explain that I am going to read
and that I am not going to show them the pictures. When Froggy meets the
girl, I will have them talk about what might happen. Just before they kiss I
will have them go back to their tables and draw what they think might happen
on the last pages and then I will have them write what they think will
happen. If time allows we will come back together and share out.
|
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