Student Book Clubs: The Power to Instill a Love of Reading and Help Heal
See how student book clubs can be an antidote to pandemic learning loss and instill a love of reading and bolster interpersonal relationships.
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December 16, 2021
See how student book clubs can be an antidote to pandemic learning loss and instill a love of reading and bolster interpersonal relationships.
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Reading logs. Double entry journals. Stop and Say Something annotations. There are lots of ways to hold kiddos accountable for their reading, and I am always willing to try new approaches, such as sketchnoting, which went really well this year. However, I have to admit, I have reservations about how any of these accountability measures will deepen a student’s love of reading, which is kind of the point, right?
As an ELA teacher, probably one of the most conflicted philosophical struggles I have is this: How can I make sure that students are learning what they need to in terms of comprehension, literary terms, author’s purpose, etc., while instilling a deep love of reading? The truth is, there’s a bit of a truce in my classroom: I’ll offer a variety of ways to interact with the text, and I ask that students engage with one of the methods I offer them. This isn’t a new struggle for me, which you can read about in my MiddleWeb blog post from 2015, “Can We Talk About Sustained Silent Reading?”
Right now, we are reading Stargirl together so that I can model how to think about their reading and review the literary devices and figurative language that they need to learn to be successful, and I plan to offer students the opportunity to form book clubs after the holidays (you can check out the lessons on my website). There’s a couple of ways I can structure the book clubs, but I like to allow students to form them, and since the majority of their work will be digital, they will actually be able to work with students in other classes. I’m lucky that our library resource center has book club copies of books (sets of five), but in the past, students have formed smaller groups of two or three. Once they have formed their groups, they’ll have three tasks before they can begin.
The reason that I am offering book clubs is that the pandemic has simply decimated students’ interpersonal skills, and their ability to recover from the isolation and trauma depends on educators offering students the opportunity to talk about what they are learning, communicate with each other, and achieve academic success through collaboration. I want my students to improve their reading stamina and comprehension—as I tackle the pandemic learning loss that many people are talking about—but I also want them to grow as humans who have experienced an interruption in learning AND in their lives. As for me, when my life has seemed too much to bear, I’ve found solace and inspiration in reading, and I’m confident that if given the time and tools, my students will too.