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Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011
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Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 2: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Agenda

•What is the Daily Five?

•Reflections – Chapters 1 – 3

•Author’s Powerpoint (w/ additions)

•Compare and Contrast

•Implementation

•Teachers D5 Share & Swap Shop Website

Page 3: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Would you like to successfully…• Differentiate instruction in your classroom?

• Teach children in small groups?

• Confer individually with students?

• Do all of this while the rest of your class is fully engaged in independent reading and writing activities?

Page 4: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

What is The Daily Five?• The Daily Five is a literacy structure that allows for differentiation in the classroom and provides consistency.

• It is an integrated literacy instruction and classroom management system for use in reading and writing workshops.

• It is a system of five literacy tasks that teaches students independence.

Page 5: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

What sets The Daily Five Apart?

• For Teachers….

• Deliver 3 – 5 whole group lessons each day

• Teach 3 – 4 small groups of children each day

• Confer with 9 – 12 individual students each day

• Hold all students accountable for eyes-on-text

• For Students…

• Engaged in the act of reading and writing for extended amounts of time

• Receive focused instruction on building and maintaining independence

• Receive tailored instruction through whole group, small group, and/or individual conferring, by their skilled classroom teacher, each day

Page 6: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Since 1946, research shows that kids need to….

* read to be better readers * write to be better writers

Reggie Routman and Richard Allington show that we are use to teaching 80% of the time and practice 20% of the time….

Now we know it needs to be us teaching 20% of the time and students practicing 80% of the time. It is the same as sports, you have to physically practice to get better!

Page 7: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Literacy Block Development Over Time

Seatwork Basal Program

Centers

Workshop

Daily Five

Page 8: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

The Daily Five is….1)Tasks• 5 tasks

2)System• Teaching all students

independence

3)Structure• Providing consistency

Page 9: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

The Daily Five does NOT hold content, it is a structure. Content comes from your

curriculum. •Work on writing = structured time to

write

•Read to self = structured time to read

Page 10: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

What does it look like?

• BRIEF whole group instruction• One round of Daily 5

• BRIEF whole group instruction• 2nd round of Daily 5

• BRIEF whole group instruction• 3rd round of Daily 5

Page 11: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

• Brain research from Michael Grinder shows that a child’s age is equal to how many

minutes of direct instruction they can stick within the

upper cortex of their brain. After that time, thinking shifts

to the lower cortex (which controls eating, sleeping,

breathing).

This is why direct instruction lessons are BRIEF!!

Page 12: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Why is it called The Daily Why is it called The Daily Five?Five?

There isn’t time for five There isn’t time for five rounds!rounds! It is called The Daily Five because there are five It is called The Daily Five because there are five

literacy components for children to choose from when literacy components for children to choose from when they go off to work. These components are:they go off to work. These components are:

Read to SelfRead to Self Read to SomeoneRead to Someone Listen to ReadingListen to Reading Work on WritingWork on Writing

Working with WordsWorking with Words

It is NOT called The Daily Five because they have to It is NOT called The Daily Five because they have to do all 5 each day.do all 5 each day.

Page 13: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

These foundations are important to The Daily Five:

• Trusting students

• Providing choice

• Nurturing community

• Creating a sense of urgency

• Building stamina

• Staying out of students’ way once routines are established

Page 14: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Trusting Students• Trusting children is the

underpinning of what makes the Daily Five work.

• When trust is combined with explicit instruction, our students acquire the skills necessary to become independent learners.

• The Daily Five works because we gradually build behaviors that can

be sustained over time so children can easily be trusted to

manage on their own.

Page 15: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Providing Choice• Although giving children the

power to choose makes us a little nervous, it puts them in charge of their own learning,

is self-motivating, and will improve their skills.

• Purpose + Choice = Motivation

Page 16: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Nurturing Community

• A sense of community provides members with ownership to hold others accountable for behaviors of effort, learning,

order, and kindness. • During Daily Five the class

becomes a community that works together to encourage

and support each other.

Page 17: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Creating a Sense of Urgency

•Answers the questions “Why do we have to do it?” & “What’s in it for me?”

•When people understand the reason for a task, it establishes motivation and becomes a force that keeps them persevering.

•Sense of urgency comes from understanding the why.

Page 18: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Building Stamina•Lays the foundation for success as it gives children the support they need.

•Teaching children how to read on their own for extended periods of time each day creates the self-winding learner that is actively engaged in the reading process because they have the stamina to be independent.

Page 19: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Stay Out of the Way•How can students make decisions

on their own and monitor themselves regarding their progress if they are never given the chance to try it on their own?

•After training, children understand what is expected of them, have practiced the strategies, and have built their stamina… now we need to stand back and let them be independent.

Page 20: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

10 Steps to Teaching and Learning Independence

1. Identify what is to be taught Today we are going to…..

2. Setting Purpose – Sense of Urgency Tell the students why…

3. Brainstorm behaviors desired using an I chart What does it look like, sound like, feel like?

Read the whole time. Stay in one spot. Read quietly. Get started right away.

4. Model most desirable behaviors Show what it looks like – 3 dimensional As they do this, go over I chart and then ask: “Will ____

become a better reader if he does this?” (Self assessment is so important.)

Page 21: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

10 Steps to Teaching and Learning Independence

5. Model least desirable behaviors Michael Grinder calls this “training your muscle memory”.

As a child is modeling this, go through chart and ask children, “Will ___ become a better reader if he does this?”

Then, have the child show you he/she can do it correctly. 6. Place students around the room

Children want to be comfortable At the beginning we place them and after awhile we show

them how to choose. We ask them, “Where do you read best?”

7. Everyone practice and build stamina (3 minutes) Don’t set timer, look for body clues.

Page 22: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

10 Steps to Teaching and Learning Independence

8. Stay Out of the Way Use “the magical power of a teacher’s eye” Watch for “The Barometer Child”

9. Quiet Signal – Come back to Group When stamina is broken, use signal.

10.Group Check In – “How Did You Do?” This is time for self reflection and sharing.

Page 23: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

P. 28 – Although the foundations of D5 create a strong base for student independence, there are also key

materials, routines, and concepts we introduce to children in the first days of school that are crucial to the success

of the program:

1. Establishing a gathering place for brain and body breaks

2. Developing the concept of “good-fit” books through a series of lessons

3. Creating anchor charts with students for referencing behaviors

4. Short, repeated intervals of independent practice

5. Calm signals and check-in procedures

6. Using the correct model/incorrect model approach for demonstrating appropriate behaviors

Page 24: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

1. Establish a Gathering Place

• Open space large enough for the whole class to come together and sit on the floor.

• Regardless of the age of children we teach, we always have a gathering place.

– Distractions are limited and proximity allows us to check in on behavior more effectively

– Students are able to turn and talk to each other, engaging everyone in the conversation of a less

• Gathering on the floor signals a shift in activity and thinking

- It provides time for a change in their brain work along with much need movement of their bodies (Brain and Body Break).

Page 25: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

2. Good-Fit Books• Research indicates that an independent-level or good-fit

book for children is one they can read with 99% accuracy. (Richard Allington, March 2005)

• Higher levels of oral reading error rate are linked to significant increases in off-task behavior. (Gambrell, Wilson, and Gantt, 1981)

• It is essential to spend focused classroom time teaching our children to choose books that are a good fit for them and they enjoy.

• There is more to choosing a good-fit book than just reading the words. A child’s purpose for reading, interest in a topic, and ability to comphrehend play a large role in finding a good-fit book.

Page 26: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

I PICK

1. I choose a book2. P urpose – Why do I want to read it?3. I nterest – Does it interest me?4. C omprehend – Am I understanding what I am

reading?5. K now – I know most of the words

* After they grasp the concept of I PICK, have them model their book choices in front of whole class.

Page 27: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Setting Up the Book Boxes• Have a separate book box for each

student. • Use small plastic tubs, cereal boxes, or

even ask parents to send one with each child

• 5 – 10 books in box• Self-selection of books depends on age

• Journal and pencil• Book box has assigned spot it is kept

Page 28: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

3. Anchor Charts• Large charts created based on what

children have to say• One way to make thinking permanent and

visible in the classroom• Allow class members to build on earlier

learning or remember a specific lesson

As each component of the Daily Five is introduced, the class comes together to make an anchor chart, which is called an I chart. The I chart allows children’s thinking about student and teacher behaviors during Daily Five to be recorded on a chart and displayed.

Page 29: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

4. Short Intervals of Repeated Practice

• The brain receives input through 3 different external memory systems: visual, auditory, and kinesthetic.

• Memory stored in the kinesthetic system evokes the longest memory.

• To activate this system, kinesthetic learning experiences are provided and then labeled so children hear and feel what they are doing. This movement is stored in muscle memory and becomes part of their

default behaviors.

Page 30: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

6. Correct Model/Incorrect Model• Complete I-chart and discuss

– Have one student model correctly while pointing out all of the wonderful behaviors the student is demonstrating

• Then, model incorrectly…– Pick child carefully… one that would want the attention

of doing it “wrong”. – Most children laugh, but deep learning occurs after the

incorrect model.– After revisiting I-chart about incorrect behaviors, ask

child to then demonstrate correctly.– This way, the child has shown he/she is capable of being

successful.

Page 31: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

5. Signals and Check-inSIGNALS• Teach children to quickly respond to a

signal so they know it is time to gather and check back in.

• You want something that will grab attention but not break the tone of a classroom.

• Explain the signal and its purpose on the first day of the year. Make an anchor chart together and write down ideas about what it would look like and sound like in the room when the signal goes off. Then, practice, practice, practice! Each time revisiting the

anchor chart in-between!

Page 32: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

CHECK-IN• Teaches children to be self-reflective.• Thumb up by heart if they know in their

hearts they were independent and successful.

• Thumb to the side if they were somewhat independent and successful but could do better.

• No thumbs down – this only gives negative attention to those who

thrive on it. http://www.thedailycafe.com/members/266.cfm (1:00)

Page 33: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Compare/Contrast(What are you already doing?)

The Daily 5 Classroom

Page 34: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Here’s how a 2nd grade teacher “changed up” The

Daily 5

Know your students! She assigned students this year to get them started on road to independence and for accountability!

http://persnicketypickles.blogspot.com/2011/02/changing-up-daily-five.html

Page 35: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Teachers D5 Share & Swap Shop

http://www.sanjuan.edu/webpages/gguthrie/balanced_literacy.cfm?subpage=127464

Page 36: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.
Page 37: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Ms. A. Hilliard, ICInborden Elementary School

December 14, 2011

Part 2 – The Daily Five in Action

Page 38: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

What is The Daily Five?• The Daily Five is a literacy structure that allows for differentiation in the classroom and provides consistency.

• It is an integrated literacy instruction and classroom management system for use in reading and writing workshops.

• It is a system of five literacy tasks that teaches students independence.

Page 39: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

The Daily Five does NOT hold content, it is a structure. Content comes from your

curriculum. •Work on writing = structured time to

write

•Read to self = structured time to read

Page 40: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

REFLECTIONS

Chapters 4 – 7

(Question Pull)

Page 41: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

5 Tasks of The Daily Five5 Tasks of The Daily Five

1.1. Read to SelfRead to Self

2.2. Read to SomeoneRead to Someone

3.3. Work on WritingWork on Writing

4.4. Listen to ReadingListen to Reading

5.5. Word WorkWord Work

Page 42: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Read to Self

Introduce 3 ways to read a book:

1. Read the words

2. Read the pictures

3. Retell a story you have heard beforeFollow the 10 steps of

teaching independence for “Read to Self”.

Introduce, set purpose, create I chart, model, practice, self-assess*Add more time each day until

you hit desired goal. Continue to revisit I chart

each day.

Page 43: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Work on WritingWork on Writing

Create I chart of what it will look like, sound like, and feel like. It should include desired student and teacher behaviors and resemble the I chart from Read to Self.

Day One - Model what to do when writing words you can't spell.

Day Two – Practice where to sit & what materials to use

Day Three – What to write about…

Make a list of topics (vacation, dog, sisters, etc.)

Make a list of forms (letters, lists, narrative)

Post lists for students’ reference

Day Four – Continue to teach the forms and traits of writing according to your district curriculum.* Once a focus lesson is taught, students work on writing – building stamina.

* Add a few minutes each day until primary students are up to 20 min and intermediate students can sustain for 30 – 40 minutes.

Page 44: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Choice• We are motivated, engaged, and productive when we are in

control of our schedules. Why should our children feel any differently? This is why choice is so important!

• Introduce choice as one of the most exciting things ever! Let the children know you trust them to be independent during the time they work on their Daily Five choice just like they have learned and practiced.

• Remind them to make a choice that feels right for their brain and their body.

• Have the children close their eyes and think about which Daily they would like to begin with. Tell them to make a picture in their mind of what their body looks like, sounds like, and feels like when they are engaged in that choice.

• Then, grab your check in sheet and begin! There are many different versions of a check in sheet. Use what works best for you!

Page 45: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Read to SomeoneRead to SomeoneDay One – Brainstorm I chart and teach EEKK (elbow, elbow, knee knee)

Day Two – Model and practice how partners read.

* Teach I Read, You Read – taking turns

* Teach Checking for Understanding – asking questions about the story, “I just heard you read…”

Day Three – Brainstorm and practice How to Choose Books – talk and make a deal or rock, paper, scissors

Day Four – Brainstorm and practice where to sit in the room.

Day Five – Model and practice “How to Choose a Partner”.

Day Six - Model and practice “Coaching or Time”.

Once a focus lesson is taught, students read to someone and build stamina.

Each day add a few more minutes until they are up to 20 min. for primary and 30 – 40 min. for intermediate students.

Page 46: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Listen to ReadingListen to ReadingDay One – * Brainstorm and practice I chart,

* Model and practice material setup and how to use it

* Model and practice listening and following along with words and/or pictures

Day Two - * Review I chart

* Model and practice putting materials away neatly

Day Three - * Review I chart

* Model and practice listening to a short story, finishing it, and starting a new story

Day Four - * Review I chart

* Discuss the number of recorders/computers available

Listen to reading – reviewing the I chart video

http://www.thedailycafe.com/members/179.cfm?sd=68 (6:00) (6:00)

Page 47: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Day One Day One - * Introduce optional materials and their locations to students.- * Introduce optional materials and their locations to students.

* Brainstorm * Brainstorm I I chart of how to set up materials and how to work with them chart of how to set up materials and how to work with them independentlyindependently

* Model finding the materials, materials placement in the room, and setup of materials* Model finding the materials, materials placement in the room, and setup of materials

* Brainstorm chart of how to clean up* Brainstorm chart of how to clean up

* Model materials placement in the room, setup, and cleanup of the materials* Model materials placement in the room, setup, and cleanup of the materials

Day Two - * Day Two - * Model and practice materials setup, materials placement, and cleanup of materialsModel and practice materials setup, materials placement, and cleanup of materials

* Brainstorm * Brainstorm I I chart – “How to Use Materials”chart – “How to Use Materials”

* Model and practice student behaviors of how to use materials* Model and practice student behaviors of how to use materials

* Continue building stamina of working with materials, adding 1 – 2 minutes each day* Continue building stamina of working with materials, adding 1 – 2 minutes each day

Other focus lessons for Word Work might include the following:• Word sorts

• Adding words to their collection

• Practicing basic words most often misspelled

• Add words to word study notebook that relate to the strategy taught that day

• List words that belong to a pattern and add to word study notebook

Each day add a few more minutes until students are independently working with these materials for the desired amount of time.

Page 48: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Ideas for Word Work:Ideas for Word Work:• Shell spell using spelling words or words from word wall

• Playdoh (pinch and poke / roll)

• Write the room

• Pipe cleaners

• Rainbow write

• Wikki sticks

• Dry erase boards

• Beans

• Bingo dabbers

• Alphabet stamps

• Magnetic letters

• Clay (press in lid of coffee can and write with a golf tee)

• Magnadoodle

• Jr. Boggle game

• Scrabble tiles

• Chalk boxes (spray cardboard box with chalk paint)

• Etch a sketch

Page 49: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Daily 5 With a Sub

• Pre-type plans and fill in lessons• The children are so well trained in routine

it is not hard to do!• Kids are learning as they do daily, it

creates less interruption because they do their regular routine even though you are absent.

• Substitutes reported back that they enjoyed D5 and many even bought book!

Page 50: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

Note: 

Comprehension is taught through many demonstrations and guided instruction in visualization, think-alouds, looking for responses "right there' or inferring, retelling, sequence practice, using graphic organization tools, questioning the author and opportunities for quality discussion.

'The Sisters',  Gail Bousey and Joan Moser

Page 51: Ms. A. Hilliard, IC Inborden Elementary School November 9 – 10, 2011.

If you encounter problems… ask yourself these questions:

• Did I allow enough time for training muscle memory?

• Have I reviewed the I-charts?• Am I staying out of the way and allowing the

children to work independently?• Am I allowing choice?• Are some children allowed to share each day?• Have I had behaviors modeled correctly and incorrectly?• Who can I collaborate with for support?