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Home > Parents & Students > Literacy Links > Article:127259

 

Plan Now for Summer Reading
from NCTE INBOX 5-1-07

May is Get Caught Reading Month (G), and it's time to start making your plans to encourage students to keep reading once classes are over. Try these resources to get your students involved in independent reading all summer long.

Check out the
Summer Reading Calendar Entry (G) from ReadWriteThink for links to Web resources and printable resources to share with families.

Introduce book clubs to your students now with the ReadWriteThink lesson plan
Book Clubs: Reading for Fun (E) -- then encourage your students to meet and read during the summer months. The English Journal article "Reading Adolescents: Book Clubs for YA Readers" (S-TE) examines what happened when college students enrolled in an adolescent literature class met young readers encountering young adult literature in a book club setting. For another take on book clubs with older students, check out "Watch Out, Oprah! A Book Club Assignment for Literature Courses" (C) from Teaching English in the Two-Year College. If face-to-face meetings aren't possible, suggest online discussion of the books students read.

To structure independent reading and support summer reading, have students complete a reading plan, a simple wish list of books they hope to read in the future. The ReadWriteThink lesson
Developing Reading Plans to Support Independent Reading (M) invites students to reflect on the texts that they have read and then compile lists of books they want to read next.

Catch students' interest with collections such as "Beach Books" and "What I Read Last Summer: Great Suspense Novels." During your last weeks of school, promote summer reading by inviting students to create brochures and flyers that suggest books and genres to explore during the summer months with the ReadWriteThink lesson
Authentic Persuasive Writing to Promote Real Summer Reading (S).


NOTE: Free access to journal articles mentioned in this INBOX is provided for 21 days. After this free access period expires, articles are available to journal subscribers only. This Inbox Idea was published 5-1-07.

Initials in annotations indicate academic level of the resource (E=Elementary, M=Middle, S=Secondary, C=College, TE=Teacher Education, G=General).

To subscribe to INBOX, NCTE's free weekly e-newsletter, visit http://www.ncte.org/forms/lists/inbox.asp.


 

 
 
 
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