Pam Allyn

How to host the perfect read aloud for World Read Aloud Day

Each February, we team up with LitWorld to host World Read Aloud Day, an opportunity for families and educators to celebrate the power and joy of reading aloud. This year's World Read Aloud Day is bgger than ever as we are celebrating alongside Harry Potter Book Night — a time when fans around the world celebrate J.K. Rowling's beloved book series. 

Families and classrooms around the world are hosting read alouds today, and to help you prepare, the founder of LitWorld and creator of World Read Aloud Day, Pam Allyn, stopped by our offices to share some LIVE tips for hosting a read aloud. Watch it right here (or on Facebook here!)

 

Find more tips for hosting a great read aloud with your family or classroom here:

And be sure to follow #WorldReadAloudDay and #HarryPotterBookNight on social media for more inspiration!

Seven strengths to focus on to turn your kids into super readers

By Pam Allyn, literacy expert, founder of LitWorld, and co-author of Every Child a Super Reader

From city to country to suburb, our children eagerly anticipate their first day of school with a pounding heart. No matter when the year begins for every child, they experience that sense of deep hope and optimism, with questions and wonderings welling up inside: Will I be known? Accepted? Will I be someone who belongs, fits in and excels? Will I be a learner? No matter the age, that child’s learning heart is beating faster in the very moments before the first day with the kinds of life-changing hopes and dreams that are predicated on the power of reading to change their lives, as reading is truly the foundational goal of all goals.

Yet often our children are profoundly let down and deeply discouraged when they get back into the school groove. School feels much harder than they thought it would be. They discover they do not fit in well as learners according to a prescribed set of outcomes. If they are indeed classified as struggling readers, they may come to feel marginalized by others, even by their peers. Their hopes and dreams feel dashed. But we can change this. All of us together working, as parents, grandparents and teachers/administrators, as one we can create a new world for all our kids: that each one becomes a super reader. That can be our commitment.

So, the question is: What can we do to make sure all our children experience the powerful momentum of becoming a super reader this year?

One important pivot we can make immediately is to focus on our children’s strengths instead of their deficits. By identifying, and teaching children how to identify, their own strengths as readers, we give our children the foundational resilience & actual concrete skills to create a successful school year. At LitWorld, we have developed a concept we call the “Seven Strengths,” a social emotional literacy learning framework for educators and caregivers. 

1. Belonging: 

Young people thrive when they feel safe and surrounded by a community that values their presence. This sense of belonging helps them feel empowered and happy (and let’s not underestimate happiness!). By making reading a time spent learning together rather than struggling alone, we create a powerful community of Super Readers. Here are five ways you can make your child feel like they belong: 

  • Make a cozy nook for reading at home and at school that celebrates your child and reflects his or her interests, passions and wonderings.
  • Make sure the nook reflects a diversity of characters to represent and reflect the value and dignity of your child’s own life and the lives of others.
  • Model for your kids the power of saying: “I am listening to you” or “I hear what you are saying” or “It is important to me to take time to hear what you are thinking.”
  • Put your own mobile device down and just model the pure and simple power of active listening.
  • Schedule time with each of your children for one-on-one time. The role conferring can play in the life of our kids cannot be underestimated. Even five minutes a week of uninterrupted listening time where the conversation is all about that one child is an unparalleled investment.

2. Curiosity:

The traditional school emphasis on quiet obedience over active learning and inquisitive idea generation diminishes curiosity, which is a powerful and valuable tool. This can lead to disengagement from reading, writing, and from a love of learning. Here are three ways you can encourage your child’s curiosity at home:

  • Help your child build a “Curiosity List” of things they most want to learn about, and then find books on some of these fun and interesting topics.
  • Post their questions in a place that celebrates their wonderings and makes them public and honored.
  • Make sure your child knows how valued their wonderings are: that you are going to pursue thinking about them by reading together and by creating and curating bookshelves (on and offline) that reflect their wonderings.

3. Friendship:

The essence of friendship is the ability of young people to take into consideration other people’s point of view. This gives our children the ability to be engaged, active members of their families, classrooms, and communities. Here are three ways to encourage friendship at home:

  • Encourage children to reach out to another reader—a grandparent, a neighbor, an aunt, a friend from class—to share what they are reading at that particular moment.
  • Create “reading friends” days at home where everyone shares the funniest thing they’ve read, the saddest thing, the happiest thing.
  • Make a significant place for reading friendships that are not about book levels or reading levels, but that are about finding out more about the other person or about sharing new ideas.

4. Kindness:

Henry James once wrote that there are three important rules for a good life: to be kind, to be kind and to be kind. Meaningful connections between students and peers, teachers, and families develop resilience and can combat the impact of hidden traumas and insecurities that may hinder learning. Demonstrating kindness to children, and encouraging children to be kind to one another, can enhance their lives as readers. Here are three ways to encourage kindness in your child:

  • Challenge your child to take a kindness action from a book or a story they are reading. What might this book inspire them to do for another person?
  • Have your child study the development of characters in books and see how they are impacted by others.
  • Build a steady ritual of read alouds that marinate your child in the wealth of generous texts that inspire our lives.

5. Confidence:

We often perceive unmotivated readers as kids who do not value reading when the real problem is that they lack confidence in themselves as readers. By focusing on our child’s strengths, and showing them that the impossible (reading) is possible, we set them up for a lifetime of possible. Here are four easy ways you can help build your child’s confidence:

  • Identify one or two things you see the child do as a reader, whether that is trying a new genre or having breakthroughs in reading hard words. Celebrate those breakthroughs by having small celebrations, by stopping to compliment and affirm the action that shows a new level of confidence.
  • Don’t wait for a child’s reading level to improve before you stop to admire that child’s progress.
  • Compliment a child who reads to a baby brother, who rereads a favorite book, who reads twenty minutes rather than ten.
  • Find real and productive ways to compliment that build confidence.

6. Courage:

Whether a child is learning a new skill or reimaging their ability to tackle a challenge, risk-taking and courage play important roles. Risk-taking begins with a decision to act, and courage provides the inspiration to act. Courage also means pushing through the hard parts of reading. It takes courage to attempt to decipher hard words or a difficult set of ideas. It takes courage to wrestle with a complex text. Use these tips to inspire your child to be courageous when reading:

  • Provide your child with books about courageous people in the world, and then have a conversation about what courage means and where they see small or big examples of courage in their own lives and in the world around them.
  • Make sure your readers know you understand and empathize with the struggle to push through difficult parts of reading, and that to be a fearless reader is to become a super reader.

7. Hope:

Hope is a foundational human longing. The reader and learner who feels hopeless is the most marginalized learner and reader. When we foster hope in our children, we help them to understand that they are powerful readers and thinkers and speakers and doers with so much to share and such a wonderful future ahead of them. When we help them to see that dynamic and thoughtful people change the world on a daily basis, they have a broader wider sense of what hope means.

To foster hope in your child, initiate a conversation based on this question: What about your reading life makes you feel more hopeful? Or: What can we do as grownups who love and care about you to give you reading experiences that will make you feel anything is possible?

The Seven Strengths are a foundation for literacy learning that begins with a social-emotional perspective. The child who feels brave, bold and fearless will push through difficulties, envision a world of possible for themselves and others, and create a world in which all readers are super and in which the entire community is stronger, healthier and happier because of it.

How "Super Leaders" create "Super Readers" in the classroom

In their book Every Child A Super Reader, authors and literacy experts Pam Allyn and Ernest Morrell focus on the idea of “Super Readers”—students who are avid, passionate, and critical readers.

“The Super Reader is a child who enters a text with purpose. Regardless of platform (print or digital) and genre (fiction, informational, or poetry), she reads that text with deep comprehension and finishes it feeling satisfied, informed, and inspired,” they explain (p.16).

At Scholastic, we know that it takes a village to get kids to Super Reader status, and educators—"Super Leaders"—play a vital role in this learning process! In the recent SUPER LEADERS Create SUPER READERS Contest, we asked teachers across the country, how do you inspire reading in your classroom? The response to this prompt was overwhelming and we were deeply moved by the passion and dedication teachers put into their work every single day to positively impact student learning.

Check out excerpts from the winners’ SUPER LEADER stories below and read the full entries online at: http://www.scholastic.com/super-reader/contest.htm

To join the #SuperReader conversation, download resources, and more, visit the Super Reader website!

 

Week #1 Winner & Grand Prize Winner - Samantha Sorrell, 3rd Grade Teacher, Anderson, IN

Thurgood Marshall, Martin Luther King Jr., Marie Curie, and Jackie Robinson; these are not people my students will ever get to meet. However, books written about these long gone heroes bring them to life for my students.

I have the privilege of teaching a 2nd/3rd split class in a Title 1 school. Although most of our students are low income I still have the same expectations towards literacy as the wealthy schools in our area. I love using biographies to inspire my students to enjoy nonfiction. More importantly, to give them examples of people who have overcome adversities in their own lives to become great leaders and scholars. Many of my students have several areas of adversity in their own lives. From students in the foster care system, to students struggling with a family member who is incarcerated or students with learning disabilities.

I was able to have my student, Cordell last year in 2nd grade and he looped with me for 3rd grade. When he came to me last year he was a good reader but struggles with guidance, anger issues and instability. I encouraged him to read a biography on Jackie Robinson and do a bottle buddy project by making a 2 liter bottle to resemble him Robinson. By reading about how Robinson dealt with poverty, racism, and his father leaving to still be an honorable and respectful man helped inspire Cordell. Seeing how much Cordell's character traits were evolving by reading biographies I gave him more biographies to read. Cordell soaked up the story of peaceful protesting from Martin Luther King Jr. and has made himself a more peaceful person.

 

Week #2 Winner - Amanda Klare, 4th Grade Teacher, Fort Mitchell, KY

So often we as teachers find it hard to inspire our students to read for fun. I found that my students love to talk about their books with me whenever we are doing our daily "Status of the Class.” The only problem is that if I am not familiar with the book, we can't have in depth conversations about the book. I decided that I would start a book club that would be open to anyone who loves to read. I have eight students reading Al Capone Does My Shirts and committed to doing enrichment activities along with the book. Every Friday we meet to discuss the week's chapters. As we sat at our "Lunch Bunch Book Club" today, it was amazing to see readers of all levels discussing a book on a deep level, making predictions about what is in store for our main character and building their schema on a time period they had little knowledge about before starting the book. My students are already counting down the days until next Friday for our next book discussion. All of this makes my teacher heart smile!

 

Week #3 Winner - Kathy Iwanicki, 3rd Grade Teacher, East Granby, CT

Read aloud is the most important time of my day. Period. The end. I read aloud every. Single. Day. No excuses. Through our read alouds, we discuss such issues as poverty, disabilities, animal rights, and so much more. The characters come to life as we cheer for Ally, cry for Stella, debate the magic of Crenshaw, and so much more. Third graders who couldn't sit and who dreaded story time now rush to the carpet for fear of missing the next chapter. Books are discussed long after read aloud time has ended. It is through the read aloud that students fall in love for reading. It is then that they realize that reading is magic and has power. I love teaching third grade because characters and plots begin to become more complex, complicated, and interesting.

I know my classroom library well and I know my students well. My job is to match the books with the students, pushing them to read just slightly outside of their comfort zone.

 

Week #4 Winner - Amanda Fisher, 6th Grade Teacher, Troy, MI

There are three expectations in my classroom: Be kind, always try, and read—always, always read. Waiting for something? Read. Looking for something? Read. Feeling left out? Read. Need to calm down? Read. 

My classroom is centered around reading. We begin our time together with either independent reading or a read-aloud. The walls are adorned with "graffiti", where students can write their favorite quotes from a recent read. Once a month we participate in speed booking, where students grab a book from a stack and have just one minute to preview it by checking out the cover, reading the summary and if desired, a few words of the first chapter. Many students meet a book they would like to read through this activity. We’ve also had one Baker Cafe Book Tasting right in the classroom. Students were able to take more time with books they’ve never read, and from genres they usually do not choose. 

 

Congratulations to all of the winners! 

Watch: How to host the perfect read aloud

This week, we're celebrating World Read Aloud Day! Every year, this global celebration calls attention to the importance of reading aloud and sharing stories by challenging participants to grab a book, find an audience, and read out loud.

To help us celebrate, Pam Allyn, a literacy advocate and founder of LitWorld (the organization behind World Read Aloud Day), stopped by the Scholastic office for a live demonstration of how to host a great read aloud.

Watch the video below, or on our Facebook page:

Some of Pam's tips include:

  • Get comfortable! A cozy setting is crucial for a successful read-aloud.
  • Don't be afraid to be silly. Read with your child, not down to them. Loosen up and enjoy yourself!
  • Create a routine for readalouds — make sure they're a part of every day, and not just at bedtime!
  • Ask open-ended questions to engage your child (or classroom) in conversation.
  • If you're reading to a large group, move around! Make sure every child can see the pictures and feels included.

Today is World Read Aloud Day!

Today is World Read Aloud Day! If you haven’t made plans yet, don’t worry, we’ve compiled some of our favorite free resources and activities for you. Remember, reading aloud doesn’t need to be a large time commitment. Last week, literacy experts, authors, and educators Pam Allyn and Donalyn Miller reminded us that even the smallest amount of time is beneficial when it comes to reading aloud. “Every single minute is so worthwhile for the read aloud! It’s amazing! It’s like a little micro vitamin,” said Pam Allyn.

However, if you have more time to spend reading aloud try reading book that is funny. According the Kids & Family Reading Report™ 70% kids ages 6–17 say they want books that make them laugh!

World Read Aloud Day 2016 activities and resources include:

Free downloadable resources: World Read Aloud Day 2016 resources are available for free download on the LitWorld website and can be used by individuals or organizations to plan World Read Aloud Day celebrations. The resources provide tools for scheduling virtual read aloud connections with published authors and other classrooms across the globe. Teachers can schedule Skype connections with authors and classrooms across six continents for World Read Aloud Day.

Scholastic Book Fairs World Read Aloud Kit: Throughout the month of February, the kit will be distributed to more than 1,000 school book fairs that will be held on or around World Read Aloud Day. The Scholastic Book Fairs kit is also available for free download for families and teachers to host their own World Read Aloud Day party.The kit provides ideas for hosting a read aloud event and includes read aloud program materials, printable bookmarks, tips for facilitators and more!

Skype in the Classroom: through Microsoft’s Skype in the Classroom, educators nationwide can schedule a class visit with a Scholastic author via Skype on World Read Aloud Day. 

Reading Aloud on Broadway with School of Rock—The Musical: Andrew Lloyd Webber's Broadway musical is celebrating World Read Aloud Day on February 24 with a special reading event after the 2:00 p.m. matinee in New York City. Cast members will read aloud to children in the audience and give out free books provided by Scholastic. In addition, together with Scholastic and Polo Ralph Lauren Kids, School of Rock—The Musical is supporting World Read Aloud Day by donating 10% of the proceeds from School of Rock—The Musical tickets sold from February 24–March 31 to support LitWorld. Purchasers must use code SCRLN126 when reserving tickets by phone, at the box office or attelechargeoffers.com.

100 Best Books to Read Aloud” List: LitWorld, Scholastic and Orajel™, a family sponsor of World Read Aloud Day, have curated a “100 Best Books to Read Aloud” list to unveil in conjunction with World Read Aloud Day and the launch of the Orajel™ Read2Me Tonight campaign, which encourages families to include reading aloud as part of a child’s healthy nighttime routine. The list was created by parents and experts including Pam Allyn, founder of LitWorld. Visit http://www.scholastic.com/read2me/ to access the “100 Best Books to Read Aloud” list along with a brand new downloadable book from Orajel™ called The Three Bees, all about starting great bedtime routines, created with the help of Scholastic. "

Tips for reading aloud from the #WRAD16 Twitter chat

Yesterday, Scholastic, along with literacy experts, authors, and educators Pam Allyn and Donalyn Miller, held a Twitter chat about ways parents and teachers can prepare for World Read Aloud Day (February 24). During the chat Pam and Donalyn shared easy to implement tips for reading aloud. We also received some great ideas from educators and parents who joined the chat! The full recap of the chat can be found here, and below are some of our favorite tips and highlights!

In addition to the Twitter chat, Scholastic, LitWorld and other partnering organizations will be supporting World Read Aloud Day with specially curated resources and opportunities for educators, families and children to experience the joy of reading aloud and to advocate for more access to books and quality literacy learning that will “Open a World of Possible” for children worldwide.

Highlights from the #WRAD16 Twitter chat:

Question: Many adults stop reading aloud to kids once they can read on their own. Why is it important to continue reading aloud?

  • Pam: Answer: for older kids, the read aloud is a way to hear text at higher levels than they can read on their own...immersion! 
  • Donalyn: Answer: Reading aloud helps you focus on comprehension, engagement, and discussing great texts.
  • Donalyn: Answer: Reading aloud communicates pleasure messages about reading and the value of reading together.

Question: What are some tips for reading aloud to older kids and/or kids who can already read independently?

  • Donalyn: Answer: Ask students what texts they might like to hear read aloud or booktalk some possible choices and pick one as a class.
  • Pam: Answer: definitely modeling your own love of text..not being afraid to read "easy" books aloud again! valuing all kinds of reading
  • Pam: Answer: for older kids too, the sound of your voice matters a lot..you are accompanying them on a reading journey.

Question: What do kids of all ages gain when their parents or teachers make reading aloud a regular part of their lives?

  • Pam: Answer: read aloud from wide variety of sports, recipes, grandmother's letters, etc. see all the ways text comes to life!
  • Donalyn: Answer: Read alouds introduce students to authors, genres, styles of writing, perspectives, and topics they might not find on their own. #WRAD16

Question: Now that we know WHY it’s important, how can we help parents read aloud more often? What are your tips/tricks/ideas?

Question: What if parents or teachers only have a short time available for read aloud? Is it worth it?

  • Donalyn: Answer: Squeezing read alouds into daily life models for our kids how to manage & sustain lifelong reading habits.
  • Pam: Answer: every single minute is so worthwhile for the read aloud! it's amazing! it's like a little micro vitamin!

Full recap:

Start planning for World Read Aloud Day

Mark your calendars! February 24 is World Read Aloud Day. Created by Pam Allyn, the founder of LitWorld and an ambassador for the Scholastic Open a World of Possible literacy initiative, World Read Aloud Day calls attention to the power of reading aloud, and connects the world as a community of readers.

World Read Aloud Day is a perfect time to reflect on family and classroom reading routines, and commit to setting aside time each day to gather as a family or classroom for a story shared aloud. With the help of the Scholastic Book Fairs World Read Aloud kit you can easily host your own read aloud event. 

Stumped on selecting a title to read aloud? Try a book with humor! According the Kids & Family Reading Report™ 70% kids ages 6–17 say they want books that make them laugh!

The same report also uncovered 91% of children ages 6–17 say “my favorite books are the ones that I have picked out myself.” So be sure to take full advantage of your child’s school book fair! During World Read Aloud Day season, over 1,000 Book Fairs will be held all across the US, providing children with an abundance of inspiring reading choices, and providing schools with new resources for inviting families to embrace the practice of daily read alouds. Click here to find a Scholastic Book Fair near you

Happy reading (aloud)! 

Two new professional books from Kwame Alexander and co-authors Pam Allyn & Ernest Morrell

We have exciting news from some of our top literacy experts. Today, Scholastic announced two new resources for K–12 educators: Every Child a Super Reader by Executive Director and Founder of LitWorld, Pam Allyn & Dr. Ernest Morrell, Professor of English Education and Director of the Institute for Urban and Minority Education (IUME) at Teachers College, Columbia University, and Kwame Alexander’s Page-to-Stage Writing Workshop by 2015 Newbery Medal-winner Kwame Alexander.

These two resources are the newest books available for pre-order through Scholastic Education’s new professional learning group, Scholastic Professional, offering expert-led services and curricular resources developed to help transform instruction as part of Scholastic’s Comprehensive Literacy Solutions. You can read full descriptions of both books below:

Every Child a Super Reader by Pam Allyn & Dr. Ernest Morrell

  • Authored by Pam Allyn and Ernest Morrell, Every Child a Super Reader demonstrates how to develop students’ seven key strengths that transform them into “Super Readers”—avid, passionate and critical readers. The book is an ideal tool to meet children where they are in skill level or learning environment, whether in the classroom, an afterschool program or at home. Every Child a Super Reader includes reading and writing lessons, robust assessment tools, embedded videos and ready‐to‐share family resources.
  • Available in December 2015 with pre-orders open now: http://bit.ly/EveryChildSuperReader

Kwame Alexander’sPage-to-Stage Writing Workshop: Awakening the Writer, Publisher, and Presenter in Every Student by Kwame Alexander

  • Through print and digital lesson resources including engaging “KwameTime” videos, Kwame Alexander helps educators harness students’ creativity to inspire confident writers and public speakers. Students will learn how to create a published book, present their writing in a public forum, and—throughout the process—discover how to experiment with language and use poetry as the gateway to skillful reading, writing, listening and speaking. Kwame Alexander’s Page-to-Stage Writing Workshop will motivate students by supporting their personal voice and encouraging them to publish their collective works through a teacher-friendly publishing platform that makes cost-effective printing services available to participating classrooms.
  • Available in March 2016 with pre-orders open now: http://bit.ly/PagetoStageWritingWorkshop

Will you be at the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) Annual Convention in Minneapolis, MN today through Sunday? Be sure to look out for Pam, Ernest and Kwame! They will be featured in panels throughout the conference.

We will be sharing updates, interviews and more from NCTE on Twitter and Periscope, so stay tuned! 

It's World Read Aloud Day!

Today is World Read Aloud Day, and there are so many reasons to celebrate! 

For starters, according to the Kids & Family Reading Report™: 5th Edition, conducted by Scholastic and YouGov, children ages 6 to 17 overwhelmingly say that they love(d) being read aloud to. And while the survey also found that most parents stop reading aloud to their children as they get older and can read independently, 40% of children ages 6–11 say they wish their parents would continue to read aloud to them because “it is a special time with their parents.”

LitWorld established World Read Aloud Day to help families celebrate and share how the simple act of reading aloud can help set kids on the path of becoming lifelong readers. The day is now celebrated by 1,000,000+ people across the world and reaches 31,000,000+ people online. Scholastic is thrilled to help celebrate it once again!

Here's what's happening:

  • 10am ET: Pam Allyn, founder of LitWorld and a Scholastic ambassador, will be hosting a Twitter chat at @Scholastic, along with her special guest, Kwame Alexander. Follow along at #wrad.
  • 11am ET: PBS News Hour is hosting a Facebook chat about the importance of reading aloud, and Scholastic parenting expert Maggie McGuire, along with Pam Allyn, will be participating on behalf of Scholastic. Follow along at facebook.com/newshour.

And check out the day's media coverage:

 

Plus, to guide parents on reading aloud to their children, we released an infographic about the importance of reading aloud and Scholastic Parents online has created a free resource guide featuring read aloud book lists for all ages: scholastic.com/KFRRparents.

Will you be reading aloud to the kids in your life today?

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