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January 2009
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Literacy Centre Activities
by Brenda Boreham
This is the second in a series of Planning Department articles
that suggest ways to increase the time your students spend
reading text at an independent level of difficulty. The first
article outlines several variations of a teaching model that
has proven to be effective. This article is available online
at www.CanadianTeacherMagazine.com (Fall
2008).
The first article outlined the organization and implementation
of our Guided Reading Program. Each Guided Reading Group
takes part in a 1/2 hour reading lesson and a 1/2 hour literacy
centre Monday to Thursday. Here are some ideas for the literacy
centre activities.
STORAGE
All of our materials are stored in lidded file boxes for
easy access and organization. Each activity has a corresponding
file folder. Worksheets and papers are stored in the folders.
The instructions and rules for the activity are printed on
the outside of the folder for the information of the supervising
staff member.
COMMERCIALLY PREPARED MATERIALS
A wide variety of board, card and dice games are available
at teacher’s stores and retail outlets. We use a number
of these with our reading groups. Sight Word Bingo and Crazy
Eights (with sight words) are two of our favourites.
TEACHER GENERATED MATERIALS
Most of our literacy centre materials are teacher generated.
Among the most effective of these are the activities we have
developed for use with a word wall.
What Is A Word Wall?
A word wall is a teaching tool that is usually displayed
on a bulletin board in a classroom. Each letter of the
alphabet is arranged, in sequence, in its own space. The
words are placed beneath the letters. It is important that
the words are printed in large letters and that the word
wall is clearly visible to all the students in the room.
For our literacy centres, the word wall is arranged in a
linear manner along a bulletin board that is at eye level
for the students.
WHAT WORDS DO YOU USE?
A word wall can be used to teach spelling, word patterns,
sight words, sounds, etc. The words can come from the students’ own
writing, sight word lists, etc. There are many lists, organized
by grade, on the Internet. We use a basic sight word list
for our centre activities.
WORD WALL ACTIVITIES
ACTIVITY 1: X Ray Vision
The teacher chooses a word on the word wall and gives three
clues for that word. The students guess what word the teacher
is thinking of and prints it on an activity sheet or word
wall notebook.
ACTIVITY 2: Find a Word!
The teacher asks the students to look on the wall for a word
that follows a particular rule (starts or ends with a certain
letter, has a certain number of letters, has a certain
sound, etc.) The students print the word. Answers may vary.
ACTIVITY 3: Word Search
Students are provided with a blank word search form. They
choose words from the word wall to fill in the spaces.
When finished, the papers are exchanged and students try
to solve each other’s word searches.
ACTIVITY 4: Wacky Words!
The teacher chooses a word from the word wall. The students
spell the word out on the table top using a variety of
materials such as: beans, magnetic letters, macaroni, pattern
blocks, bottle tops, etc.
ACTIVITY 5: Dice Rolling
Each student is provided with a multi-sided alphabet dice.
Each student rolls the dice and then looks for a word on
the word wall that starts with the letter that was rolled.
The word is recorded on a work sheet, paper or word wall
notebook. Continue until the time is up. A towel can be
placed on the table top to deaden the noise of the dice.
ACTIVITY 6: Word Sorts
The teacher selects twelve words from the word wall. The
students copy the words onto sticky notes or small pieces
of paper. The students sort the words according to a certain
attribute (first letter, last letter, vowel sound, number
of letters, nouns and verbs, etc.)
Have students share their sort and explain the sorting rule.
Re-sort according to a new attribute.
ACTIVITY 7: Mystery Word
Have one student choose a word wall word and make up three
clues to the word. The first student who guesses the word
correctly chooses the next word.
ACTIVITY 8: Chain Reaction
One student chooses a word from the word wall and each member
of the group prints it on a strip of paper (e.g.: when).
A second student chooses a word that starts with the last
letter of the word when (e.g.: next). The two strips are
glued together to start a chain. Continue on by finding
a word that starts with the last letter of the previous
word. The chains could all be joined together to make one
long chain. |