When
I registered for LLED 3530, I was confused as to why I had to take a course
that was in my two content areas. I walked into the class expecting to get some
basics on teaching language arts, but boy was I wrong. I remember at the beginning
of the semester, Brad told the class that it was his goal to persuade us that
literacy instruction was necessary in all content areas. I remember thinking to
myself why in the world would I teach literacy in my math classes. I mean I
will barely have time to teach all of the content required for the course much
less teach students how to read. After reading “Help for Struggling Readers” and
learning the reading strategies, I started to feel differently; however, I was
still not sure that literacy in a math class was necessary. I did not realize
that I was probably using these strategies without even noticing.
Soon
after this, Brad taught us about think alouds, and how we could incorporate them
into all of our content areas. After practicing my first think aloud with a
middle school math word problem, I began to realize just how important content-area
literacy was. This was a huge turning point for me in this course. A specific in-class
assignment that helped to persuade me was when we looked at questions from
standardized tests. After looking over the questions asked on middle grades
standardized tests, I became aware of the relevance and relatedness between
content-area literacy and standardized tests. If students are unable to
understand the questions asked and the answers given, then they will not
perform to their full potential. Additionally, the video we watched on differentiation
helped persuade me of the importance of content-area literacy. Ms. Maronpot’s
students were not able to engage on the same cognitive level of questions, so
she had to differentiate her instruction to provide all of her students with lessons
that would reach each of them. The strategies she used to differentiate her
instruction in her math classroom was proof of the necessity of literacy in the
classroom.
Also,
learning about of the reading strategies each of my classmates taught helped me
to find things I could use in my classrooms to help students with their
readings. Specifically, Meghan and I’s strategy on sketching the text was one I
could see myself using in my content-area classrooms. I was definitely a reader
that when I could see a visual I could better understand what I was reading. Learning
about all of these pre, during, and after reading strategies will help me to plan
lessons in my classrooms. The assignment that had the biggest impact on my thought
on content-area literacy was the universal design for learning. This assignment required me and a few other
classmates to come up with an activity we could use to teach a lesson for each
type of student in our made-up classroom. After completing this assignment, I
felt that I would be able to create lessons, activities, and units that would
support the needs of each type of student in my future content-area classrooms
Overall,
this course has taught me how important it is to teach literacy in each of my
content-area classrooms.
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