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Literacy

Digital Tools to Support Choice Reading

Choice reading supports lifelong learning, but teachers often need help making the universe of books accessible to students.

May 14, 2021

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Allison Shelley for the Alliance for Excellent Education

When kids get to regularly pick reading material that genuinely interests them, they are far more likely to be happy, voluntary, and even voracious readers鈥攂oth in school and at home.

But effectively building choice into classroom reading means striking a delicate balance between choice and assigned reading. Students need to spend time analyzing the elements of good writing, for example, but they also need a wide variety of diverse, fun reading that spans genres. It鈥檚 the latter, for the most part, that keeps them invested and connected to the joy and magic of reading.

Choosing a book isn鈥檛 always as easy as it sounds. There are students who don鈥檛 have access to libraries and those who have access to them but don鈥檛 have experience using them. Then there鈥檚 the , a phenomenon where an overabundance of choices can inhibit committing to a single one. Same thing with books: Literally millions of options can stymie even the most eager readers.

Like any skill, choosing books requires some scaffolding鈥攖ools and techniques that kids and their teachers can deploy to make it easier. As Marilyn Pyle writes in , sustained practice can be nurtured in any number of ways, from helping kids find and choose book clubs that match genres that attract them to reading for a few minutes every day in classes. Figuring out what to read, she says, is 鈥渁 skill of lifelong readers. Unfortunately, it鈥檚 not otherwise cultivated in most children鈥檚 school careers.鈥

For teachers, this means yet another skill to teach and another activity to manage鈥攂oth of which can be challenging when students are reading different texts, if you鈥檙e not deeply familiar with particular genres or if you struggle to keep on top of which YA fiction titles have just won awards.

We鈥檝e done a little digging to find online resources and tips that can help teachers introduce students to new books and support sharing the love鈥攚ithout becoming overwhelmed themselves.

Loose Canon

Created by a novelist and former high school teacher, offers a browsing function that filters its robust book list in any number of ways鈥攏ot just by grade level but by topics from Sports to Ecology and Classics to LGBTQ, so if you want to search classics that are also about sports, you can do that: filter for 鈥渟ixth grade,鈥 鈥渃lassics,鈥 and 鈥渟ports,鈥 and presto, eight titles appear, ranging from Mike Lupica鈥檚 Heat to Edward Bloor鈥檚 Tangerine, each with a blurb from the publisher.

With Loose Canon, users can search by grade level and topic.

Loose Canon also helps teachers manage book clubs that can expand beyond a single classroom to include an entire school, and even track students鈥 reading year by year with what the site calls a 鈥渞eading r茅sum茅鈥 that captures each student鈥檚 reading path. The platform also features assessment ideas and classroom activities, and as of this writing, it鈥檚 offering free six-month memberships to teachers.

Epic Reads

Publisher HarperCollins produces , a slick site dedicated to its young adult (ages 12鈥18) titles. You can search among hundreds of series (e.g., Vampire Diaries and 顿耻尘辫濒颈苍鈥) or among clever lists ( as well as those that are surprisingly niche ().

Epic Reads鈥 many playful quizzes entice with age-appropriate snark (, pandemic references (), and empowerment ().

are engaging, too: In addition to book trailers, it publishes video series such as (鈥淲hen Your Favorite Author Retweets You鈥 and 鈥淟iking a Character Other People Don鈥檛鈥) and gossipy (news on movie and TV adaptations, like who鈥檚 been cast in the Netflix version of LGBTQ graphic novel favorite ).

Book Club for Kids

is a podcast created and hosted by public radio journalist and author Kitty Felde. Students can browse in which Felde discusses particular books with groups of children who have read them and sometimes hosts guest experts as well as authors. For example, with , the first book in the best-selling series, a group of children from a fifth-grade class in Washington, DC, discuss their love for the first book鈥攁nd what it鈥檚 like to live in a city rife with spies. 鈥淐elebrity reader鈥 U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, joins in the fun by reading a passage from the book, and the book鈥檚 author, Stuart Gibbs, shares what inspired him to write it.

Book Club for Kids is designed to be contagious, with kids serving as both contributors and consumers of the content. A group of kids can listen to an episode and become inspired to read and discuss the featured book, but it also plants the seed of an idea: They can choose and read a book themselves and become guests on the show.

Flordeliza L. Cadiz Marks, a library specialist also in Washington, DC, says that when elementary school kids listen to a Book Club for Kids podcast, they tend to chat about it with their friends, and that word of mouth can help guide reluctant readers. 鈥淟istening to what other students are saying about a particular chapter book prompts them to borrow the book and read it as best they can.鈥

A third-grade teacher in Los Angeles, Joe Rodriguez, routinely uses Book Club for Kids on 鈥淧odcast Tuesdays.鈥 鈥淚 use Book Club for Kids to select independent reading, and I make sure to have books from the podcasts we listen to in our classroom library,鈥 he says. Rodriguez鈥檚 students were also guests on a Book Club for Kids about the book Spy Mice, by Heather Vogel Frederick.

Homegrown Solutions

Of course there are also ways to use various online tools that are not necessarily designed to support choice reading. Marks uses the drag-and-drop video maker to like those an author would create for marketing, but just for her students to get them excited about new titles.

Middle school teacher Kasey Short uses the Notability app to create collages of book covers on a certain theme, like 鈥淪ocial Justice.鈥

麻豆传媒入口 contributor Kasey Short, a sixth-grade ELA and social studies teacher, uses her iPad to create videos in which she covers book choices; students can view them on their own time. She pairs these videos with collages she makes with the Notability app, its pages filled with a dozen or more book covers from books rooted in the same idea or theme. Together, the videos and collages help students zero in on books they鈥檇 like to read solo that are related to whole-class readings. For example, for a theme called 鈥淭he Power of Love,鈥 each student chose from a list of books that explore the power of love and also read Elie Wiesel鈥檚 Night as a class.

Laura Milligan, also an 麻豆传媒入口 contributor, notes that 鈥淧adlet is awesome for letting kids post about books they are excited about and want to share.鈥 She also uses , a video messaging tool that鈥檚 free for teachers, to create book teasers (similar to book trailers) for her students. With her , she reaches parents who are on the platform and follow her to get their buy-in. 鈥淚 like to have kids share their recommendations, and then I might share their reviews of books along with mine,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 read a lot of YA and middle-grade books, and my page serves as a cool way to connect with other readers, parents, and teachers.鈥澛

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  • Literacy
  • Blended Learning
  • Technology Integration
  • English Language Arts

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