Lit circle scheduled meetings:
Group 1: May 14, 21 (Mondays)
Group 2: May 15, 22 (Tuesdays)
Group 3: May 16, 23 (Wednesdays)
Group 4: May 17, 24 (Thursdays)
Group 5: May 18, 25 (Fridays)
Before your meeting, you must do the following:
1) Write a short summary in your journal of what
you read (at least ½ page)
2) Under your summary, write a ½ page reaction
to what you just read
3) Write 3 discussion questions for the group to
talk about which can be done one of two ways:
·
Write the questions on
post-its and put them on the page where you had the question
·
Write the questions in
your journal and note the page number where you had the question
4) Flag one passage to share with the group you found one or more of the following:
·
Interesting
·
Curious
·
Confusing
·
Beautiful
·
Frustrating
·
Enraging
·
Exciting
·
Surprising
5) Make a prediction about what you think will happen next (Only for the first meeting. I will spare you from making one for the last meeting.)
After your meeting, you must do the following in your
journal:
1) In a paragraph, describe how the group meeting
helped you better understand and/or appreciate the text.
2) In a paragraph, describe your contribution to the
group and how you think you should be graded for your participation.
REMEMBER: a paragraph does not just stop at 3 sentences just because I said that was the minimum number of sentences it could be. A paragraph STOPS when you have shared your COMPLETE thoughts.
A friendly reminder:
PLEASE resist the temptation to read too far ahead of your assigned reading. As we discussed in class, most often reading ahead results in stifled discussion and lack of participation due to the inability to share your thoughts with the group since you already KNOW the answer. The fun of literature circles is making these discoveries together, not showing off what a great reader you are because you finished before everyone else.
A friendly reminder:
PLEASE resist the temptation to read too far ahead of your assigned reading. As we discussed in class, most often reading ahead results in stifled discussion and lack of participation due to the inability to share your thoughts with the group since you already KNOW the answer. The fun of literature circles is making these discoveries together, not showing off what a great reader you are because you finished before everyone else.
You are still expected to maintain an independent reading book WHILE you are participating in literature circles, so if you finish your assigned reading early, then move on to your independent reading book. If you can keep multiple TV shows straight for weeks at a time, you can read more than one book at time without much confusion.
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