A highly trouted story
Alicia Robinson
If you were served a dinner of a whole fish -- head, scales and all
-- would you clean your plate?
Third-graders in Karen Kirsch’s class at Whittier Elementary
School in Costa Mesa had to ask themselves that question Monday as
part of some language-arts activities.
It was their fifth day back at school after summer vacation, and
the students have already learned a handful of ways to understand
what they read.
While some students worked individually in spelling and reading
workbooks, Kirsch took others aside in small groups to discuss a
story they were reading.
She asked them about the various reading techniques they used to
understand the story. They used phonics to sound out words. They also
used prediction and inference. She asked what they can tell about the
story that isn’t specifically stated.
Students made predictions about what might happen in the story
they read, called “The Rule,” about a boy whose parents say he has to
eat everything on his plate. At a restaurant, he faces a dilemma when
served a whole fish.
“I don’t think he’s really going to like the trout,” 8-year-old
Alexsandria Guerrero said.
When Kirsch asked if students thought the boy would eat the fish,
Jimmy Vivar, 9, said, “Maybe just a little.”
Ashley Batres, 8, wanted to know if people eating a whole fish
also eat the eyes.
The group came up with ways the boy could get around eating all of
the trout. Most of them seemed to empathize with him.
“At my house, I don’t like soup, but when my mom makes it, I have
to eat it all,” Jimmy said.
Learning reading techniques will prepare students for the
introduction later this month of Off to Adventure, the first of six
reading themes for the school year, which is part of a district-wide
curriculum, Kirsch said.
“If they can understand what they’re reading, it’s definitely
going to help them with their comprehension,” she said. “It’s just
trying to get the students to develop good reading habits and
[understand] what a good reader is.”
Kirsch also worked with students one-on-one to assess their
language skills and see if they needed help with any of their
exercises.
She asked them to read words from a list to evaluate their
pronunciation.
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