First of all, the notebooks are based loosely on the Fountas & Pinnell Reader's Notebook. If you don't mind that they come in a 5-pack, don't want to deal with putting together your own, and don't need to customize every little thing, this printed reader's notebook is the way to go.
The following sections are included in the F & P Notebooks:
- Reading List with columns for title, author, genre, and date completed and a column to rate book as easy, just right, or challenging.
- Books To Read page
- Genre list with descriptions of each
- Guidelines for preparing for a group discussion about the book
- Letter from the teacher about how she and the students will communicate with each other by writing response letters
- Letter form to refer to when writing letters
- Revising and Editing Tools page
- List of ways to respond
- Section for writing letters
- Section for guided reading
- The Reader's Notebook page from Scholastic.com describes what one classroom teacher includes in each section of her notebooks.
- Reading Graphic Organizers and Printables
- Reader's Notebook downloads from Mrs. Newingham's third grade classroom (I used most of these, but some had to be tweaked to fit a homeschool environment)
Decorated covers, with El's cover left blank for him to decorate. Sticky tabs on the side for the main sections. |
Reading Log |
"Lists" section includes things like "Books I Plan to Read" and "Authors I Like" |
"Genres" section includes a short definition of the different types of literature as well as a genre graph |
Reading Goals. If you don't know where to begin with these, a great starting place is the Reading Informative Texts and Reading Literature guidelines in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. |
Again, most of the pages pictured were downloaded from this page.
At the end of the notebook you can include a reference section with commonly used things like character traits, a cursive letter reference, or anything else your child might find helpful. What you include or exclude from this section (and, really, the whole notebook) is totally up to you and will depend largely on your child's grade and ability level. My 2nd grader will get a cursive reference page once she learns cursive, whereas my 4th grader has this Thinking Stems document to help him come up with writing ideas.
If you don't want to bother with the notebook at all, here are some awesome reader response task cards you could print out, laminate, and stick on a metal ring (or put in an index card box, or whatever.) These were written for a third grade class, but they could easily work with homeschooled 2nd graders up to fourth or fifth graders.
There you have it! I am once step closer to being ready for the new school year... and have once again killed an ink cartridge <Grrr!>
These are really awesome. I will def look into these links to use for my students this year.
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