HESSION SESSION
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During book clubs, I offer five or six books that are related either to a whole class text or to each other by topic, theme, genre, or author. When I introduce book clubs, I explain why I selected the books and seek to generate interest by sharing a brief summary of each one along with an excerpt I particularly love. I also provide students with links to reviews on Goodreads and Amazon, and class time to choose a book.

​In a classroom with five or six groups discussing different books, the challenges are many. Teachers have to ensure that students are prepared to engage in meaningful discussions, provide questions and conversational moves that work for multiple texts, and monitor discussions. In my class, book club days are predictable and organized, yet they still provide variety. Each book club has a specific focus, such as character, theme, writing style, or how fiction reveals truth. Students arrive having read the agreed-upon number of pages (as decided by their book club) as well as having prepared a task for the day’s focus (as decided by me).

Students begin by writing and responding to targeted prompts designed to generate ideas for the day’s focus. The targeted prompts vary. For a book club focused on character, for example, I tasked students with tracking one character and marking in their book where they learned about the character through what he says, how he acts, and what others say about him. Some of the writing prompts included: What are your initial impressions of the character? What predictions can you make about how the story will progress based on your understanding of the character? I also use "roles" in book clubs for students to focus their participation in meetings.

During book club discussions, students refer to their notes on these questions and their prepared task, along with conversational moves I’ve provided to ensure a thoughtful, civil discussion. Toward the end of class, students have time to reflect on the discussion, set future goals, and decide how many pages to read before their next discussion.

WHAT ABOUT ASSESSMENT?I’ve had to accept the fact that choice reading is messy and that assessing it must be as expansive and imperfect as books themselves. So I check journal entries and the completion of book club activities, and as a culminating assignment students write a formal reflection on how their book changed their view of themselves or the world, using specific textual evidence to support their assertion.

I know that these assessments don’t prove that all students have read their books. Generally most kids will read, and a few will not. But in my classes, these book clubs have generated more excitement about reading and higher levels of insight than any other reading we do.
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  • Art
    • Jr. High Art
    • Art 10
    • Art 20
    • Art 30
  • English
    • English 8
    • New Media >
      • Blog
      • New Media 10
      • New Media 20
    • Spelling
    • English 9 >
      • Book Clubs
    • Writer's Notebook
    • Daily 5
  • Mrs. Hession
    • Policies and Procedures >
      • Contact Mrs. Hession
    • Course Descriptions