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The Book Whisperer

Donalyn Miller




  Table of Contents

  Praise

  Jossey-Bass Teacher

  Copyright Page

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Foreword

  Introduction

  CHAPTER 1 - There and Back Again

  Wake-Up Call

  Lost in the Wilderness

  Where Am I Going?

  On the Path

  Going Forward, Sort of

  CHAPTER 2 - Everybody Is a Reader

  Types of Readers

  Testing the Teacher

  Conditions for Learning

  CHAPTER 3 - There’s a Time and a Place

  Time for Reading Is Time Well Spent

  Stealing Reading Moments

  Creating a Place for Reading

  Quiet, Please (Except Maybe This Teacher)

  CHAPTER 4 - Reading Freedom

  Reading Plans

  Reading Requirements: Why Forty Books?

  Validating Reading Choices

  Introducing Authors Through Read-Alouds

  Building Background for Genre

  On the Same Page: Keeping a Reader’s Notebook

  CHAPTER 5 - Walking the Walk

  The Need for Reading Role Models: The Crux of the Reading Crisis

  What Does Reading Mean to You?

  Finding Your Inner Reader

  CHAPTER 6 - Cutting the Teacher Strings

  Seeing the Wallpaper

  Traditional Practice: Whole-Class Novels

  Traditional Practice: Comprehension Tests

  Traditional Practice: Book Reports

  Traditional Practice: Reading Logs

  Traditional Practice: Round-Robin and Popcorn Reading

  Traditional Practice: Incentive Programs

  CHAPTER 7 - Letting Go

  Back to Square One?

  What Are We Preparing Students for?

  Learning from Exemplars

  Connecting Through Books

  Afterword

  Appendix A: The Care and Feeding of a Classroom Library

  Appendix B: Ultimate Library List

  Appendix C: Student Forms

  References

  Index

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  About the Sponsor

  “Miller’s strong love for reading and her desire to develop lifelong readers is inspiring. She is crafty in her way of sweeping her students into her reading world. This is a great read that should encourage teachers to take a closer look at the readers in their classrooms and the way in which they teach reading and support them.”

  —Arlyne Skolnik, Reading Teacher, West School, Long Beach NY

  “The Book Whisperer (I love the name!) was both inspirational and incredibly practical. I highlighted many passages to share with my students and teachers and I plan to use this as a text next year when I teach my undergraduate reading methods course.”

  —Patricia M. Cunningham, Professor of Education, Wake Forest University

  “Miller’s new book, The Book Whisperer, is a breath of fresh air in this era of teacher-dominated reading test preparation lessons. She sets forth both an argument and evidence for immersing kids in reading as the alternative to the often mindless reading lessons offered in hopes of improving test scores. She writes about her own 6th grade classroom where students are expected to read at least 40 books each year and her stories will convince you that it is time to focus on teaching children rather than teaching books or stories. She will convince you that it is time to stop assigning book reports, whole class novels, vocabulary lists, quizzes, and worksheets and, instead, give students the opportunity to choose what they will read (within limits). She will also persuade you to allocate the school time actually needed to read 40 books in a given year. This is a powerful and practical book, one that will support you as you change your classroom for the better while helping you understand how to overcome current classroom cultures where some children learn and many learn to hate reading.”

  —Richard L Allington, Ph.D., University of Tennessee

  “Donalyn Miller’s practical ideas about children and books are sound. In an age of test-driven curriculum, reading this book will remind teachers, administrators and parents why giving reading back to the students is the right thing to do.”

  —Dr. Carol D. Wickstrom, Associate Professor of Reading,

  University of North Texas

  “In The Book Whisperer, Donalyn Miller deftly describes the inherent need children have to engage with books, intellectually and emotionally. The book is a timely and rare gift for teachers in this era of teaching for high-stakes assessments-Miller actually chronicles the path to reading for ‘intrinsic motivation’ we seek for all children, but seldom observe.”

  —Ellin Oliver Keene, Author/Consultant

  “Miller is one of those teachers you always wanted for your children. She understands how to teach reading, but knows that is not the same thing as knowing how to LOVE reading. She explores the sources of that love—a feeling for a certain place, a certain time of day, a certain friend, a certain dream. Reading is being surprised, intrigued, captured, removed from reality to other places you want to revisit, often. Few authors have ever conveyed this as well to parents and teachers as Miller does here.”

  —Jay Mathews, Washington Post education columnist and author

  “This book reminds anyone-who is lucky enough to have loved a book-what classrooms and kids have lost in our frenzy to ‘cover’ content and standardize student performance in the name of reading. This is a primer of the heart on how to make reading magical again.”

  —Carol Ann Tomlinson, William Clay Parrish, Jr. Professor of Education,

  University of Virginia

  Jossey-Bass Teacher

  Jossey-Bass Teacher provides educators with practical knowledge and tools to create a positive and lifelong impact on student learning. We offer classroom-tested and research-based teaching resources for a variety of grade levels and subject areas. Whether you are an aspiring, new, or veteran teacher, we want to help you make every teaching day your best.

  From ready-to-use classroom activities to the latest teaching framework, our value-packed books provide insightful, practical, and comprehensive materials on the topics that matter most to K—12 teachers. We hope to become your trusted source for the best ideas from the most experienced and respected experts in the field.

  Copyright © 2009 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.

  Published by Jossey-Bass

  A Wiley Imprint

  989 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94103-1741—www.josseybass.com

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Miller, Donalyn.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  eISBN : 978-0-470-62342-8

  1. Reading (Elementary) 2. Reading (Middle school) 3. Children-Books and reading.

  4. Motivation in education. I. Title.

  LB1573.M4938 2009

  372.6-dc22

  2008055666

  PB Printing

  To Don,

  my whisperer

  Foreword

  DONALYN MILLER’S voice is one of a real teacher. She whispers practical ideas, validation, and fundamental truths about teaching independent reading that are often lost in the din of ever-increasing test prep mantras. Out of fear of failure or pressures from outside our classrooms, we let go of the very strategies and routines that could make our students succeed at reading, thinking, and writing. Donalyn’s critical eye sees what is happening to our classrooms. She laments how reading classes often become places without room for reading—authentic reading, as educators call it. As Donalyn notes, The National Reading Panel rejected the value of independent reading, but we simply can’t. Why would we focus on inauthentic reading? Seriously.

  The Book Whisperer is practical and passionate. Donalyn Miller has no complicated scripts, endless prescriptions, or pie-in-the-sky quick fixes. In clear and accessible ways, she shares the nuts and bolts of an independent reading program, offering suggestions for how to begin and maintain a workshop approach that won’t make you pull your hair out. Have you ever wondered how to inspire a reluctant reader? Donalyn has simple practical advice. Have you ever wondered how to get your students to keep a record of their reading? Have you figured out how to encourage students to respond to reading without squeezing every drop of joy out of it? Donalyn has. One page at a time, she reveals how any teacher can artfully listen and respond to their students and take them to new heights of reading achievement and pride that may seem out of reach. She reinforces with class-created charts, note taking, student talk, and writing activities how easily our instruction can flow from our students’ interactions with text, with us, and each other.

  Donalyn is a friend with whom you want to kick off your shoes and talk for a while. She is also the kind of friend who never beats around the bush. She says exactly what she thinks and what she knows. She doesn’t hold back. Her credibility is borne of experience and experimentation, failure and refinement, gut instinct and heart-felt concern, stubbornness and an ability to let go. She teaches us through her classroom stories and her students’ voices. She gives us information to stretch, shift our focus, and make our class a path to life-long, joyous reading.

  Reminding us that reading instruction is about one thing—reading—she stays constant and true to the practices she has honed in her classroom. There are no worksheets, computer tests, incentive programs, packaged scripts or scripts parading as professional books here. Donalyn Miller speaks for the joy of reading, reminding us what we should fight for—students with their hands and eyes and minds on real, free-choice books—and what we should let go.

  Donalyn’s personal story will cause you to reflect and refine your reading program. Whether she is talking about types of readers and solutions for teaching them, reminding (or introducing) you to the simple brilliance and applicability of Camborne’s conditions of learning, or explaining why we should fight for independent reading time in our classroom, the voice of a real teacher comes though.

  Curl up with this good book. Personally recommended titles are the best, aren’t they? Just like Donalyn and her students recommend books to each other, I am recommending this book to you. Read it right now. You will be inspired to open a book and to amp up or restart your independent reading program both for you and your class. I was.

  Within these pages, Donalyn nudges us to reflect on how our students are engaging in our reading program, against the backdrop of her own story. She gives us a vision of what an effective reading program looks like. And how easily it can be done. Of course, anything this wonderful takes some effort, but any meaningful effort never feels like a struggle. With this book, we simply relax into the flow of words and discover all the places we can go.

  Jeff Anderson

  Introduction

  I AM NOT A READING RESEARCHER. I am not a reading policy expert. I do not have a Ph.D. What I am is a reading teacher, just like many of you. My source of credibility is that I am a teacher who inspires my students to read a lot and love reading long after they leave my class. I require my students to read forty books during their time in my sixth-grade classroom, and year after year, my students reach or surpass this reading goal. Not only do my students read an astounding number of books, they earn high scores on our state’s reading assessment, the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS). I have not had one student fail the state assessment in four years, and an average of 85 percent of my students score in the 90th percentile, Texas’s commended range. I have taught students of all economic and academic backgrounds, from the children of non-English speaking immigrants who struggle with the English language to the children of college professors. The conditions I create in my classroom work for all of them.

  When teachermagazine.org asked me to respond to readers’ questions for their “Ask the Mentor” column in the fall of 2007, motivating students to read mountains of books was my source of credibility to them and to the thousands of readers who made that column so popular. Teachers, administrators, and parents flooded teachermagazine.org Web site with questions about picking books, getting students interested in reading, and developing conditions in classrooms and living rooms that would encourage children to read.

  Due to the obvious demand for practical information about creating readers, the editors at teachermagazine.org next offered me a long-term stint writing a blog titled “The Book Whisperer.” The blog is a place where I can fly my free-choice reading flag and discuss the issues that reading teachers contend with daily: national, state, and district policies that mandate what we teach, the limited instructional time we are given to teach, and the eternal quest to inspire our students to read.

  Why is the need to motivate and inspire young readers such a hot-button issue? Why do teachers and parents cry out for information on how to get children to read? This topic is in the limelight because so many children don’t read. They don’t read well enough; they don’t read often enough; and if you talk to children, they will tell you that they don’t see reading as meaningful in their life.

  The field of reading research produces study after study attempting to explain why emergent readers are not learning to read well by third grade, why intermediate students are not interested in reading, why secondary students read less and less with each passing year they are in school, and why so many students cannot comprehend the information in their textbooks or pass standardized tests. Instead of re-examining the foundation of sand on which so many federal and state reading programs were built, the 2000 Report of the National Reading Panel, “Teaching Children to Read,” policymakers ask for mo
re money and beg us all to give these programs more time (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, 2000). The children cannot wait. They do not have more time. While Washington policymakers, state and district boards of education, and administrators scramble to figure out what is best practice for getting children to read, crafting program after program in which they claim to have the answers, these children are graduating and breathing a sigh of relief that they never have to read a book again.

  We have worked so hard to develop systems to teach reading, yet I claim that we had no justification for systematizing an act like reading in the first place. The only groups served by current trends to produce endless programs for teaching reading are the publishing and testing companies who make billions of dollars from their programs and tests. It is horrifying that the people who have the corner on getting children to read—children’s book authors, parents, and teachers—get the least credit monetarily or otherwise.

  I believe that this corporate machinery of scripted programs, comprehension worksheets (reproducibles, handouts, printables, whatever you want to call them), computer-based incentive packages, and test-practice curricula facilitate a solid bottom line for the companies that sell them. These programs may deceive schools into believing that they are using every available resource to teach reading, but ultimately, they are doomed to fail because they overlook what is most important. When you take a forklift and shovel off the programs, underneath it all is a child reading a book.