Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Literacy Work Stations


Here’s the first set of notes on my recent professional development with Debbie Diller on Literacy Work Stations.

What a station is…
What a station is not…
  • Meaningful
  • Independent activities
  • Managed
  • Organized
  • Managed
  • Provides them ownership
  • Engaging
  • Reinforces current learning skills or previously taught skills
  • Paired partner practice
  • Added to weekly
  • Provides writing, oral, reading, vocabulary practice
  • Familiar reading
  • Graphic organizer on clipboard
  • Authentic reading, writing, listening, speaking, and working with words
  • Off level
  • Messy
  • Store bought
  • Busy work
  • Changed out weekly
  • Small group, 3-4 students
  • Too many choices, Luby’s syndrome
  • Information overload
  • Unfamiliar reading material
  • Worksheet

Station Ideas
  1. Fluency station – pocket chart with nursery rhymes or poetry where students put them in order; provide a copy of the rhyme or poem; at the end of the week, summarize the weekly story and use in the fluency station the following week.
  2. Readers theater station – provide puppets or stuffed animals for students to practice their reading skills
  3. Observation station – can be a hamster, near a window to observe birds on a feeder, sea shells, rocks and minerals, zoo cam, fall leaves; read about it, write about it, talk about it; provide books, field guides, hamster word wall, work with words; observation log; when placing a new book, introduce it whole group and read a page or two to get them excited.
  4. Creation station – create something and then write about it
  5. Writing station (fiction or non-fiction) – place near word wall and whole group area
  6. Poetry station – copy of poem; read and sequence the sentence strips
  7. Morning message – incorporate the written morning message
  8. Newspaper station – weekly readers, Time for Kids, National Geographic for Kids, community fliers, grocery advertisement; what they do: highlight letters or words they are learning for the week, read news, read pictures, write about the pictures, working with text and graphic features; this heading goes with this article, this article goes with this graphic; read the headline and make a prediction; sequencing comics and write; third graders write an opinion based on facts they’ve read; fruit market advertisement: write about favorite fruit, write a recipe, sort the words alphabetically
  9. Listening station (fiction or non-fiction) – provides oral accommodations; large laminated graphic organizer; use digital camera to photograph
  10. Word work station – use file cabinet to sort words or letters; see her book page 199-202; check out book, Words Their Way; computer access for PBSkids.org
  11. Buddy reading station (fiction or non-fiction) – read to each other; depending on level, they picture read; *recommended first grade classrooms to start with this station first
  12. Overhead station – glue index cards to craft stick; they walk up to projected image and take the word they are practicing off the screen and back on the screen; take off letters that match phonemes from the beginning, middle, or end of words; practice with CVCe words
  13. Oral language station/talking station – use picture cards; work with vocabulary words; take turns – provide 8 clothespins, 4 colored blue, 4 colored red, when one talks they remove the pin so the other can talk; can provide a tape recorder
  14. Science station – connected to instruction; example provided was hurricanes, they read, wrote connections, wrote about it, wrote facts, partners ask each other questions
  15. Silent reading station – read and respond 

What a lot of great ideas! Which stations do you see yourself implementing?

1 comment:

  1. I love that you have a "creation station" Creativity in the classroom is so important and it's great to see it on your plan! :)

    Great blog!
    ~Krissy

    ReplyDelete