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Articles by: Joan Wink

Loving That Literacy, Chapter One (2nd part of Update on My Writing)

Loving That Literacy, Chapter One (2nd part of Update on My Writing)

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

This is the 2nd part of a glimpse into my work on the next book, which will focus on the power of story.

Chapter One is entitled, “Loving That Literacy.” The purpose of this chapter is to demonstrate the various paths to literacy.  I will share how I learned to read, how I learned to love reading, and how I learned to love libraries. In addition, I will lay the foundation for understanding the complex meanings of literacy. Finally, we will close the chapter with an activity, the Spiral of Literacy, which readers can take and adapt to reflect on their own path to literacy.

In what follows is a story of  three different paths to literacy.   The sub-title I used for this story is:

Wyatt drops out; Mark drops in; and Audrey drops by.

Wyatt dropped out of school to find his love of reading. When he was about 8-years-old, his teacher believed there was only one path to literacy: Phonics, and only phonics. By this age in his young life, Wyatt was already an avid reader, but phonics was a complete mystery to him. He simply did not “get it.” I will never forget sitting at the kitchen table with him, as yet another night he (and we) were all in tears over his phonics homework. He came to a word, which I knew he knew, but he started to sound it out, as I listened.

“/f/, /f/, /f/,” he puffed.

“/i/, /i/, /i/,” he agonized over the short i sound.

“/g/, /g/, /g/,” he growled the hard g sound.

“/h/, /h/, /h/,” he huffed with tears beginning to run down his cheeks.

“/t/, /t/, /t/,” he continued as he repeated the sound of each letter–it was like white noise. “I don’t know what it says, Grammie,” he sobbed.

Soon after this, his mother pulled out of the school, and as I remember he mostly lay around on the couch and read for the next several months. When school started in the fall, she re-enrolled him in the next grade–no questions asked. By this time, he was reading well beyond his grade-level and has continued this pattern to this day. Wyatt’s mom gave him the gift of choice and time.

Mark, on the other hand, dropped in to hangout in the school library to find his love of reading. Mark went to a very small rural school. He could already read well when he entered first grade, however Mrs. Jones, his teacher, was quite demanding.

“When Mrs. Jones told us that it was time to go to the bathroom, we all got up and went,” he told his family at home. In addition, his family could see that Mark was bored to death by the never-ending daily phonics drills, which was the only tool in Mrs. Jones’ pedagogical toolbox. However, Mrs. Jones wisely could see that her skill set did not meet his learning needs, so she sent him to the library to just read for the entire reading instruction time. Mark loved Mrs. Jones, and still today he says she was a wonderful teacher. He started reading through the encyclopedia and read completely through all volumes before he was out of grade school as other teachers continued the pattern and let him drop in to library to read whatever he wanted. He was given the gift of choice and time.

Audrey dropped by a coffee shop to tell stories to find her love of reading. Audrey, age 9, was a successful reader at school, but she was also very interested in drama, which was not encouraged in her regimented classroom. However, she found her path to literacy, when she set up a story hour at her mom’s coffee shop. Audrey decided to drop in to tell stories to the customers and their children. Audrey was very animated and expressive when reading and telling stories, particularly to the younger children, who happened to be in the coffee shop. Audrey’s mom gave her the gift of choice and time.

Meet Audrey.

Audrey flier storyhourjpg copy

I am thinking that I might use the following Katie Knox illustration in this first chapter.

joyful lil black girl watermakr

 

 

June 23, 2016Read More
Update On My Writing:

Update On My Writing:

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

As some of you know, I am working on a new book about literacy stories. A few months ago, I gave you a little glimpse,

Power UP: Book at a Glance

Power UP: Book-At-A-Glance

This is an update, in which I want to share a peak into each chapter and an image which will be used.  My publisher, Libraries Unlimited, normally does not use any images, but they have agreed in this case.  I keep reading that the algorithms of social media point to the direction of communication through more and more visuals.   I must admit that an image often deepens my understanding of a concept.

All images, which I share were created by Katie Knox.  I feel so fortunate to have found her, as I am delighted with the spirit I find in her drawings of children. You will note that each image will carry a ‘Watermark,’  on my webpages, but, of course, we will remove these in the book.

The titles of the planned chapters are:

Chapter 1

Loving That Literacy

Chapter 2

Loving Those Stories

Chapter 3

Animals and the Alphabet

Chapter 4

Of Stories and Standards

Chapter 5

Of Immigrants and Imagination

Chapter 6

Into the Cloud

Chapter 7

Patience and Fortitude: The Future

 

I am posting here one of Katie’s images.  In the coming days, I will post an overview of each chapter and more images.

1st image Preface watermark.png.crdownload

 

 

June 20, 2016Read More
Joanne Yatvin: What We Want for Schools

Joanne Yatvin: What We Want for Schools

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

I am a long-time fan of Joanne Yatvin, who is a highly experienced teacher, principal, and superintendent. Now retired, she continues to share generously with her writing and speaking.

Meet Joanne Yatvin here.

Joanne’s blog, The Treasure Hunter is here.

In the following blog, Joanne, who has probably spent as much time in schools in the last 50 years as anyone, offers her suggestions of what we can actually do.

Thank you for sharing with us, Joanne.

If I Were the Queen of Schools

June 18, 2016Read More
Free Online Books for Kids: Thanks, Jill Outka-Hill.

Free Online Books for Kids: Thanks, Jill Outka-Hill.

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

No slip, sliding behind in reading this summer for your kids!  Here is a list of FREE online reading resources.  Thanks to Jill Outka-Hill, a teacher in WY, who shared with us.

Sources for free fiction stories online:

With Audio:

Tumblebooks  

Mightybooks  

Storybook Online  

Storyplace 

Storyplace in Spanish  

No Audio:

Storyjumper  

Children’s Storybooks Online 

Read Right Now 

Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes (some with audio) 

Popular Children’s Stories (some with audio) 

My Online Reading 

Sources of free non-fiction:

Scholastic Book Club 

Kids Discover (free account)  

Links for free online books

Time for Kids  

National Geographic, Young Explorer (with audio) 

News sites: MSN, CNN, Yahoo, Google News, ABC or any television news channel…

Kid Safe Search Engines

Kidrex 

GoGooligans

I also noticed on Twitter that Regie Routman called our attention to Open eBooks.

More information on Open eBooks.

And, Prairie People, you can always stop at my Little Free Library and grab a book.

LFL lisa's photos (no Joan) copy

 

June 17, 2016Read More
What Diane Ravitch Would Say to Obama, Clinton, and Trump Today

What Diane Ravitch Would Say to Obama, Clinton, and Trump Today

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

So, what should we do in K-12 schools today? Here are great ideas for your consideration. Thank you, Valerie Strauss for this terrific interview of Diane Ravitch.

 

 

June 14, 2016Read More
Some resources on my webpages: Help yourselves, Teachers.

Some resources on my webpages: Help yourselves, Teachers.

Dear WinkWorld  Readers,

Here are some resources from my website. Help yourself.

Can you tell that I am getting ready to teach in Palma, Mallorca?

Joan

 

www.JoanWink.com

Free To A Good Home

http://www.joanwink.com/charts.php

Joan’s Schedule

http://www.joanwink.com/scheditems/4150-bib-F08_S09.pdf

WinkWorld News

(my previous blogs since January 2014)

WinkWorld Archive (my previous newsletters since 2002)

http://www.joanwink.com/newsletter/archive.php

Prairie Pedagogy, 2002 to 2014

Prairie Pedagogy

Free to a Good Home

One-page-grab-n-go for classroom use. Previously know as black/line masters.

Free to a Good Home

 

Joan Wink Channel on YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCws1UeejkgxdJ_YFUHtK-Pg

Pedagogy Timeline, 15 minutes,

Three Perspectives on Teaching/Learning, 7 minutes, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWH0VLPYeAc

Skinner v. Vygotsky by Christopher Redd & Jeremiah Scalla (students in Mallorca)

Spiral of Literacy, 10 minutes,

Krashen’s 5 Hypotheses, 11 minutes

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Joan+Wink

Principles of Bilingual Education, 11 minutes

Bilingual Basics Part One, 50 seconds

Bilingual Basics, Part Two, 1 minute, 10 seconds

Language Assessment: Syllabus At-a-Glance

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nasjOyuXw0A

 

The Link to Wink TCNJ Mallorca

Emily Tells the Story of Our Class with Index Cards (2014)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFJ_mrUKB2k

Eduardo Bruno Rodriguez and Colleagues: Our Class 2010

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3qzR8gUmWQ

Using Music for ESL Summer 2011

Skinner V Vygosky by Chris Redd and Jeremy Scalla

June 6, 2016Read More
Steve Krashen by Deb Harrison

Steve Krashen by Deb Harrison

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

Deb Harrison is a teacher in WY, and while she was in my classes at BHSU, she put together a great collection of Stephen Krashen’s contributions.  In my on-going attempt to organize and share treasures, which I have received while teaching graduate students,  I want to share some very handy websites with you.  I admit that making neat little categories of magic can be a real challenge. Sharing is caring.

The Power of Reading by Deb Harrison

First, you might want to read her book review.

Book Review of The Power Of Reading

Here is her PowToons of The Power of Reading.

Annotated Overview of Recent Steve Krashen Videos by Deb Harrison

Krashen Videos Update by Deb Harrison

Krashen, Harrison, Wink Videos

Poe and Powtoons by Deb Harrison. No, this one is not about Krashen, but it is about Edgar Allen Poe.

The Power of Reading is My Home Run Reading Book by Deb Harrison

(The following paper is presently being updated for a publication submission, June 2016.)

Krashen Pulls It All Together in Fifteen Minutes

Krashen Pulls It All Together in 25 Minutes

Karly on Krashen: A follow-up to the 2 videos listed above. Karly is another teacher in WY.

June 3, 2016Read More
Diary of a 50th Anniversary: June 4, 1966 to 2016

Diary of a 50th Anniversary: June 4, 1966 to 2016

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

We decided that the best 50th anniversary (June 4, 1966 to 2016)  for us would be to have time together. Here are a few of our happy memories during these past few days.

Thursday, May 26 – 16 hour drive home from Santa Fé after Lukie’s fabulous high school graduation.  And, now he is off to one of my favorite places, University of Arizona.  Here he is with his proud Mama.

Dawn Lukie UofA

We arrived home from Santa Fé to find Bo, Austin (13) and Garrett (10) fishing in the N. dam, just as the sun was setting.

Friday, May 27 –   Wyatt (20) and Lukie (18) drove through the night to surprise us, and we found them in the Prairie Parlour this morning. Dawn and family arrived just as it was getting dark, and Dawn grabbed this great photo.

Wink sign sunset

 

We rode 4-wheelers.

4wheeler

Dawn worked.

dawn worked

5 grands had good cousin time.

cousin time

First rip in new jeans.

jeans ripped

Saturday, May 28

Dawn and Bo and kids gave us treasured gifts.  Dawn and family made a beautiful book with cards/letters/photos from family and friends. Bo and family gave us of those digital frames–all loaded with rotating family/friends photos.

SundayMay 29

Lukie wrote thank you notes for all of his many wonderful graduation gifts.

Lukie thank you notes

And, Wyatt read.

wyatt reads

We ate and told stories.

we ate

 

The guys stared at the dam.

men dam

 

And, the church dogs tried to get into our photos with us.

church dogs in photo

Monday, Memorial Day, May 30

The ranch is quiet; all are on their way home except for Wyatt and Luke, who will be helping BopBop prepare for branding. I am taking off to the Hills to visit graves: my mom’s, my dad’s, Grandma Grace’s, Grandpa Dick’s (Tom in Meadowlark), Grandma Mary’s, Uncle Bob/Aunt Eva’s, Uncle Irwin/Aunt Inga, Cousin Lola, and Grammy/Grampy’s.

Garrett and Austin slept on their way back to WI.

Austin

Garrett

#gratefulfor50andfamilyandfriends.

 

 

May 31, 2016Read More
Dyslexia

Dyslexia

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

Normally, in this blog, I try to share some little tidbit, often related to kids and cows, or pedagogy and prairies. However, in this issue, I am not sharing; rather, I am asking you to share.  In spite of the fact that I have devoted my career to languages and literacies, I do not think that I have ever had a truly dyslexic student in one of my classes.  However, I have recently met several students (middle grades), who seem to have, what I perceive to be, symptoms of dyslexia:  b/d reversals; lack of double consonants in writing;  making meaning of only the first syllable or two  of longer words when reading, etc.  Interestingly, the students I have met love to read and to write, in spite of their unique challenges.

MY QUESTION:  What can mainstream classroom teachers do with reading/writing activities, which will benefit these students?  Yes, I have checked around the internet, but I am looking for good suggestions from people who have real experiences with dyslexia.

Thanks.

May 19, 2016Read More
The Wizard of Oz and a Cowboy

The Wizard of Oz and a Cowboy

Dear WinkWorld Readers,

Some of you know that I am busy working on the next book, which will focus on literacy stories.  Here is a peak at the organization of the chapters.

Chapter 1

Loving That Literacy

Chapter 2

Loving Those Stories

Chapter 3

Animals and the Alphabet

Chapter 4

Of Stories and Standards

Chapter 5

Of Immigrants and Imagination

Chapter 6

Into the Cloud

Chapter 7

Patience and Fortitude: The Future

So what does this have to do with The Wizard of Oz and a cowboy? At one point in the book, I am sharing the idea that we all come to literacy with unique and various paths.  There is no one way.  Rather, there are multiple paths to literacy.  In what follows, I tell the story of how I learned to read, and Dawn shares how she learned to read.

http://www.joanwink.com/store/teaching-passionately/teaching-passionately-the-spiral-of-literacy/

Dawn’s and my literacy stories will be followed by a totally different story from a tall cowboy–no, not the one I live with here on the ranch. I heard Gary Robson spontaneously tell this story at a literacy conference in Montana.

 

It started slowly, gained momentum, and then consumed the room. The panel of children’s authors had finished sharing their new books, and the assembled listeners were preparing to leave the room, when a final question from one of the panelists asked a great question.

“What are your personal memories of books from your childhood?” The atmosphere in the room changed perceptively. A peaceful reflective mood took over the room.

Narnia.” We all sighed and envisioned the book icon and the stories.

“I think I can. I think I can. I think I can.” The little train engine popped into our minds.

Secret Garden.” We saw the vine covered secret entry.

As each favorite memory was shared, emotions of childhood literacy experiences started creeping out of long-term storage for each of us.

Suddenly, one of the authors on the panel stood tall to speak as Gary was, indeed, a tall man with an even larger personality. He reflected his native rural Montana roots. He wore jeans, cowboy boots, a western belt with buckle, and a big cowboy hat with whiffs of long gray hair sticking out on the sides and back.

“When I was a child,” he began, “my parents used to take me with them when they went to the home of some friends, whose own children had already grown and left home. It was always the 4 adults at the table and me. When dinner was over, the adults went to the living room, and I would immediately steal away to the basement, which had only one room. One huge room. Each of the 4 walls, floor to ceiling was lined with books. In the middle of this large room, there was one light and one chair. I would happily read the night away. The Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum, my favorite series, would be piled around me in the chair, when my parents came down to get me.”

“Years later when I was an adult and off on my own, the man who owned the house died, and I received a phone call from his lawyer. I was invited to go to the reading of the will and pick up something the family friend had left for me.”

“I remember thinking, why me? He had his own children, but when I went to the lawyer’s office and saw The Wizard of Oz series piled on the conference table, the stories came flooding back to me.”

When Gary finished his story, there was not a dry eye in the room. Not even on the face of that big cowboy.

May 11, 2016Read More