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L i t e r ac y
 Ce n t e r s
 F ac i l i t at o r :
 D awn L e o n ar d o
What are they good for anyway!?
• Having centers is a useful classroom
  practice that enables you to do any type of
  small group instruction or assessment, but
  the time children spend in centers should
  be focused, productive, and dare I say…
  INTERESTING! Centers are for the
  student to practice skills; instruction
  happens in the small groups that meet
  with the teacher during center time.
Two things are necessary to make
 centers work in any classroom:

• Planning for a
  preparing center
  activities and
  materials in advance

• Good management
  skills
Setting the Stage
• Make enough room and materials for
  either independent or small group learning
  activities
Setting the Stage
• Each center should be neat, clean, and
  organized
• Areas should be well- labeled
Setting the Stage
• Activities should be rotated weekly or
  biweekly
• Center rules should be posted and
  discussed daily
Setting the Stage
• Centers should be introduced by the
  teacher, who models and explains each
  activity (some teachers introduce one at a
  time others introduce them all at the start
  of the week)
Setting the Stage
• After use of the centers, all or most of the students work
  should be posted in an organized, planned and attractive
  display
• Student groups should be multi level or heterogeneous
  groupings so that more advance students can help
  struggling learners
Setting the Stage

•   Some type of recording or assessment piece should be used for the
    students’ use of centers
•   Centers should have a rubric or control posted so children can check their
    own work
Management Tips
• Centers are not a free for all. Students should be on
  topic.
• Center management is a classroom management. This
  should start on day one. Spending the first several
  weeks of school modeling and practicing classroom
  routines will give you months of engaged, rewarding
  learning
• Model, model, model! Students need to see and clearly
  understand what is expected of them
• Make clear signs
• Have a sign at each center indicating how many
  students are allowed to be there. Encourage students to
  self monitor.
Management Tips Cont.
• Rotate centers weekly or bi-weekly. Always model each
  new activity – young students are still learning about how
  to translate skills and behaviors and need your guidance.
• Make sure each center has simple directions
• Make sure materials have clear storage spaces so
  students can clean up after themselves
• Label, label, label. Use pictures for pre-readers.
• “I’m done, what do I do now!?” Establish activities for
  students to do when they have finished their center work
  (i.e. read, draw, write a letter to a friend, etc.)
• Aim for rigid routines and save the creativity for
  the activities .
Three Steps to Teaching Classroom Procedures
 From Harry and Rosemary Wong’s The First Days of School: How to be an Effective
                                  Teacher


• Explain
• Rehearse
• Reinforce
Explain
• Define the procedures in concrete terms
• Demonstrate the procedure; don’t just tell
• Demonstrate a complex procedure step by
  step
Rehearse
• Have students practice the procedure
• Have students repeat the procedure until it
  becomes a routine
• Have students perform the procedure
  automatically without supervision
Reinforce
• Determine whether students have learned the procedure
• Do they need further explanation, demonstration, or
  practice?
• Re-teach the correct procedure and give corrective
  feedback.
• Praise students when rehearsal is acceptable. “I like how
  you did that.”
Assigning Students to Centers
• The teacher may assign small, heterogeneous
  groups of children to each area using a
  schedule. These groups should be rotated
  through the different centers throughout the
  week.
• A choice time may be established once the class
  is accustomed to the center routine. Pocket
  charts, pinwheel diagrams, clothespin lines with
  children’s name can be used to show students
  the area to which they have been designated
What’s Happening?
  How do you know if work is happening in the centers?
• Each center activity should be designed with some level
  of accountability: For grades 1-2 students should
  produce some kind of finished work, this is not
  necessary in K.
• Students should be given the chance to check their own
  work: Sometimes putting a control at centers teaches the
  students to self monitor and avoid interrupting the
  teacher.
• Noise Level: It is ok if there is noise and students are
  bustling about! The sound of effective center time is work
  not chaos though. It is a time for the students to work
  together on a similar task, they need to be able to talk.
  Just make sure to have a system in place to regulate the
  noise level (inside voice, 2 inch voice, etc)
Integrating Curriculum
• Each new unit of instruction offers specific
  language experiences that extend a
  students knowledge and understanding.
Things to Remember
• Prepare a system to assign students to centers
• Decided how you will you will introduce the
  centers
• Model activities with students
• Review rules
• Model how to use the materials
• Model how to begin and end each center
• Model what to do when you are finished
• Incorporate some elements of the curricular into
  the center to give students hands on
  experiences with the content
Work Center Ideas: Writing Center
• Purpose: To provide students with the
  opportunities to express themselvese
  through writing. To explore the writing
  process and to se writing as a means of
  communication
• Materials: A common table for students,
  name chart, alphabet chart, Word Wall,
  writing tools, various types of paper, index
  cards, folders, book making materials
Writing Center Cont.
• Literacy Based Activities: All Writing Center activities
  should be purposeful and provide authentic writing
  experiences. Students can:
   – Write responses to books read aloud or to personal experiences
   – Retell stories or tell their own versions of stories. This
     encourages students to incorporate book language into their
     own language use.
   – Write letters
   – Make lists
   – Make books
   – Contribute to a weekly class newsletter
   – Write emails of stories if your class has a computer
   – Respond to open ended questions
   – Write their favorite words
Work Center Ideas: Language Arts/
    Word Study/ABC Center
• Purpose: To promote recognition and
  usage of word building and decoding
  principles, to study language use in
  different contexts
• Materials: Magnetic letters, alphabet
  books, matching and sorting letters,
  writing materials, word building games,
  rhymen games, color games, word cards,
  parts of speech cards
Language Arts/Word Study/ABC
          Center Cont.
• Literacy Based Activities:
  – Word Building practice with a buddy
  – Making words with a letter set
  – Sorting words according to specific criteria
  – Sequencing activities taken from books to practice
    retelling
  – Match cut out words to a sentence strip. Then they
    can use the word to write new sentences
  – Tongue Twisters
  – Genre Study Exercises
Work Center Ideas:
      Reading/Writing the Room
• Purpose: To expose students To the carious
  forms of print including environmental print
• To foster independent reading of meaningful
  print
• To encourage a love of reading
• Materials: A classroom loaded with print – word
  charts, name charts, poems, favorite stories,
  words wall, graphs, pointers, clip boards, writing
  tools
Reading/Writing the Room Cont.
• Literacy Based Activities:
  – Baskets of pointers should be available to the
    students near the materials to be read. Effective
    pointers might include rulers, dowels, chopsticks,
    oversized pencils, etc.
  – Students use a pointer and independently read all
    of the print displayed around the room. They can
    read their own group written versions of favorite
    stories of their own posted work.
  – Students can work in pairs, with each student
    listening as the other “reads” the room.
Work Center Ideas: Art Center
• Purpose: To allow students the
  opportunity to express themselves
  creatively and to experience literacy
  through art.
• Materials: Crayons, pencils, paint, colored
  paper, felt, magazines, markers, scissors,
  and any material that will help students
  create artwork related to classroom
  literature and curricular themes.
Art Center Cont.
• Literacy Based Activities:
  – Create illustrations for familiar stories
  – Create a mural that tells a storyy or that
    illustrates a read aloud
  – Let students create drawings, paintings, or
    collages to illustrate their own stories (maybe
    ones that were done in the writing center)
Literacy Centers

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Literacy Centers

  • 1. L i t e r ac y Ce n t e r s F ac i l i t at o r : D awn L e o n ar d o
  • 2.
  • 3. What are they good for anyway!? • Having centers is a useful classroom practice that enables you to do any type of small group instruction or assessment, but the time children spend in centers should be focused, productive, and dare I say… INTERESTING! Centers are for the student to practice skills; instruction happens in the small groups that meet with the teacher during center time.
  • 4. Two things are necessary to make centers work in any classroom: • Planning for a preparing center activities and materials in advance • Good management skills
  • 5. Setting the Stage • Make enough room and materials for either independent or small group learning activities
  • 6. Setting the Stage • Each center should be neat, clean, and organized • Areas should be well- labeled
  • 7. Setting the Stage • Activities should be rotated weekly or biweekly • Center rules should be posted and discussed daily
  • 8. Setting the Stage • Centers should be introduced by the teacher, who models and explains each activity (some teachers introduce one at a time others introduce them all at the start of the week)
  • 9. Setting the Stage • After use of the centers, all or most of the students work should be posted in an organized, planned and attractive display • Student groups should be multi level or heterogeneous groupings so that more advance students can help struggling learners
  • 10. Setting the Stage • Some type of recording or assessment piece should be used for the students’ use of centers • Centers should have a rubric or control posted so children can check their own work
  • 11. Management Tips • Centers are not a free for all. Students should be on topic. • Center management is a classroom management. This should start on day one. Spending the first several weeks of school modeling and practicing classroom routines will give you months of engaged, rewarding learning • Model, model, model! Students need to see and clearly understand what is expected of them • Make clear signs • Have a sign at each center indicating how many students are allowed to be there. Encourage students to self monitor.
  • 12. Management Tips Cont. • Rotate centers weekly or bi-weekly. Always model each new activity – young students are still learning about how to translate skills and behaviors and need your guidance. • Make sure each center has simple directions • Make sure materials have clear storage spaces so students can clean up after themselves • Label, label, label. Use pictures for pre-readers. • “I’m done, what do I do now!?” Establish activities for students to do when they have finished their center work (i.e. read, draw, write a letter to a friend, etc.) • Aim for rigid routines and save the creativity for the activities .
  • 13. Three Steps to Teaching Classroom Procedures From Harry and Rosemary Wong’s The First Days of School: How to be an Effective Teacher • Explain • Rehearse • Reinforce
  • 14. Explain • Define the procedures in concrete terms • Demonstrate the procedure; don’t just tell • Demonstrate a complex procedure step by step
  • 15. Rehearse • Have students practice the procedure • Have students repeat the procedure until it becomes a routine • Have students perform the procedure automatically without supervision
  • 16. Reinforce • Determine whether students have learned the procedure • Do they need further explanation, demonstration, or practice? • Re-teach the correct procedure and give corrective feedback. • Praise students when rehearsal is acceptable. “I like how you did that.”
  • 17. Assigning Students to Centers • The teacher may assign small, heterogeneous groups of children to each area using a schedule. These groups should be rotated through the different centers throughout the week. • A choice time may be established once the class is accustomed to the center routine. Pocket charts, pinwheel diagrams, clothespin lines with children’s name can be used to show students the area to which they have been designated
  • 18. What’s Happening? How do you know if work is happening in the centers? • Each center activity should be designed with some level of accountability: For grades 1-2 students should produce some kind of finished work, this is not necessary in K. • Students should be given the chance to check their own work: Sometimes putting a control at centers teaches the students to self monitor and avoid interrupting the teacher. • Noise Level: It is ok if there is noise and students are bustling about! The sound of effective center time is work not chaos though. It is a time for the students to work together on a similar task, they need to be able to talk. Just make sure to have a system in place to regulate the noise level (inside voice, 2 inch voice, etc)
  • 19. Integrating Curriculum • Each new unit of instruction offers specific language experiences that extend a students knowledge and understanding.
  • 20. Things to Remember • Prepare a system to assign students to centers • Decided how you will you will introduce the centers • Model activities with students • Review rules • Model how to use the materials • Model how to begin and end each center • Model what to do when you are finished • Incorporate some elements of the curricular into the center to give students hands on experiences with the content
  • 21. Work Center Ideas: Writing Center • Purpose: To provide students with the opportunities to express themselvese through writing. To explore the writing process and to se writing as a means of communication • Materials: A common table for students, name chart, alphabet chart, Word Wall, writing tools, various types of paper, index cards, folders, book making materials
  • 22. Writing Center Cont. • Literacy Based Activities: All Writing Center activities should be purposeful and provide authentic writing experiences. Students can: – Write responses to books read aloud or to personal experiences – Retell stories or tell their own versions of stories. This encourages students to incorporate book language into their own language use. – Write letters – Make lists – Make books – Contribute to a weekly class newsletter – Write emails of stories if your class has a computer – Respond to open ended questions – Write their favorite words
  • 23. Work Center Ideas: Language Arts/ Word Study/ABC Center • Purpose: To promote recognition and usage of word building and decoding principles, to study language use in different contexts • Materials: Magnetic letters, alphabet books, matching and sorting letters, writing materials, word building games, rhymen games, color games, word cards, parts of speech cards
  • 24. Language Arts/Word Study/ABC Center Cont. • Literacy Based Activities: – Word Building practice with a buddy – Making words with a letter set – Sorting words according to specific criteria – Sequencing activities taken from books to practice retelling – Match cut out words to a sentence strip. Then they can use the word to write new sentences – Tongue Twisters – Genre Study Exercises
  • 25. Work Center Ideas: Reading/Writing the Room • Purpose: To expose students To the carious forms of print including environmental print • To foster independent reading of meaningful print • To encourage a love of reading • Materials: A classroom loaded with print – word charts, name charts, poems, favorite stories, words wall, graphs, pointers, clip boards, writing tools
  • 26. Reading/Writing the Room Cont. • Literacy Based Activities: – Baskets of pointers should be available to the students near the materials to be read. Effective pointers might include rulers, dowels, chopsticks, oversized pencils, etc. – Students use a pointer and independently read all of the print displayed around the room. They can read their own group written versions of favorite stories of their own posted work. – Students can work in pairs, with each student listening as the other “reads” the room.
  • 27. Work Center Ideas: Art Center • Purpose: To allow students the opportunity to express themselves creatively and to experience literacy through art. • Materials: Crayons, pencils, paint, colored paper, felt, magazines, markers, scissors, and any material that will help students create artwork related to classroom literature and curricular themes.
  • 28. Art Center Cont. • Literacy Based Activities: – Create illustrations for familiar stories – Create a mural that tells a storyy or that illustrates a read aloud – Let students create drawings, paintings, or collages to illustrate their own stories (maybe ones that were done in the writing center)