Sunday, September 14, 2014

Questions for Reif

Dear Ms. Linda Reif,

While reading your book entitled "Read, Write, Teach," I was particularly struck by your idea of "ass kicking" mentioned in chapter six.  You mentioned that you want your students "to read and respond to reading in the spirit of ass kicking."  I am completely in agreement with this mentality.  I think it is very important for students to, as you said, react passionately to what the read, and even hopefully have that positively  influence their outside behavior.  My question is this: How do you stop the opposite effect?  That is, how do you explain to the class when and when not to take to the streets with their reactions?  It seems like you encouraged your class to kick the asses of others.  When do you draw the line between pretending and actual possible violence.

Also, later in the chapter, you stress the importance of choice in student reading.  You seem to be speaking mostly about fiction, such as Harry Potter.  How would you translate this autonomy to non-fiction, beyond letting children pick the subjects they read about?  Certain things readers look for and enjoy in free reading are not the same things looked for on the dreaded standardized tests.  How do you balance the two?

You also mentioned that you take every Friday as a reading day.  How do you find time to prepare your students for the standardized tests while devoting an entire class day not to a state prescribed text, but to a free-reading book?

Thank you for your time,

Joanna Meyer


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