Chapter 3 – The Café Book
Establishing
the Literacy Café in the classroom is the topic that Boushey and Moser discuss
in this chapter. Often, before the school
year starts, teachers begin their preparations for the Café by creating the
bulletin board (Literacy Café Menu) and selecting which strategies to introduce
the students to first. The Menu contains
a column with the headings for the types of Café strategies: Comprehension, Accuracy, Fluency, and Expand
Vocabulary. Under these headings, there
are brief definitions: Comprehension-“I
understand what I read;” Accuracy-“I can read the words;” Fluency-“I can read
accurately, with expression, and understand what I read;” and Expand
Vocabulary-“I know, find, and use interesting words (Boushey & Moser, 2009).”
The menu remains empty of strategies
until the first day of school when a strategy will be placed on it after it has
been introduced to the students, usually during the first read-aloud, and then
gradually add more strategies during whole-class lessons for the rest of the
first week of school. The Café system
then moves into individual conferences where students will be assessed in order
to tailor their reading instruction using seven steps: “assess the individual student, discuss
findings with students, set goal and identify strategies with student, student
declares goal on menu and in notebook, teacher fills out individual Reading
Conference form, teacher fills out Strategy Groups, and instruction (Boushey
& Moser, 2009).”
I like how the authors lay out a step-by-step
plan for setting up and instructing students on how to use the Literacy Café Menu. As a future educator, it will be important for
me to be able to instruct my students in making use of the tools that are
available to them to enable them to develop higher functioning cognitive skills
in order for them to become successful readers and learners.
Reference
Boushey,
G. & Moser, J. (2009). The café book.
Portland, Maine: Stenhouse Publishers.
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