When they listen to a book read aloud on Epic!, they’re hearing strong fluency modeled. #2: Fluency PracticeĮpic! is also a great tool for developing students’ fluency. My students always feel so proud to share what they’ve learned-and Epic! is a great help for giving them access to information. They can listen to books on Epic! to help supplement any print books you can find for them. Maybe I can find one book at the library that’s at a reading level appropriate for some of my students, but a true research project requires more than just one book!Įpic! makes doing research easy, even for students who are beginning readers. However, a big problem has been a lack of nonfiction books at lower reading levels. They read about a nonfiction topic and then write about what they’ve learned. Note: This post was written in collaboration with Epic! #1: Research ProjectsĮvery year, my students LOVE the opportunity to do mini-research projects. Have you used EPIC in your classroom? If so, what are your favorite ways to make the most of this AMAZING resource? If you aren’t familiar with EPIC, what are you waiting for? It is a great source for listen to reading.Photo Credits: NIRUT RUPKHAM, Shutterstock (Note – although the splitters have 5 jacks, I prefer having only 3 students share a device) It’s a great way to make technology stretch, as well as, make reading a social experience (which I am ALL about). Using our Belkin Headphone splitters (Amazon Affiliate Link), up to 5 students are able to share a single device. So, this is great, but what if you don’t have as many devices as you would want in your classroom? Great question! EPIC works on iPhones, iPads, laptops, and desktop computers! Still, I have 8 devices in my classroom, so that is definitely not enough for all my students to use EPIC individually. Teaching a lesson on sound and vibrations and want students to have some background knowledge? No worries! Assign them a book a few days ahead of time and they will be ready to go on game day! Sharing Devices Want to read “Frog and Toad” in guided reading, but don’t have 6 copies of it? No problem! Assign students the book on EPIC and they can quickly access it. Plus, you can assign collections to certain students or groups of students. Rather than having to hunt when it’s time to read a book with my class, I access my ‘Library’ and get started reading. On EPIC, I’m able to ‘collect’ books and store them for easy access. While students love using EPIC, as a teacher you’ll love it too! From adjectives to verbs to pumpkins/apples, I have SO many different read-aloud collections. From there, students have choice in the books to which they listen – animal nonfiction, adventure, mystery – the possibilities are endless! I teach this specifically for Listen to Reading, so students know how to access the audio books. Not every book on EPIC has Read-to-Me audio available, but hundreds of books do! To access all the books with audio, I’ve taught my students to tap ‘Recommended’ and look for the green speaker. Then, you as a teacher can see what types of books your students are reading – a feature perfect for helping guide students to similar books in their book bins! Additionally, creating individual students profiles allows you to assign specific collections or books to specific students or groups of students. This means EPIC will deliver books that are high-interest for each of your unique readers. When you set-up a new student profile, they can choose types of books that interested them and change the age range. Additionally, EPIC offers hundreds of these books in read-aloud form and they are adding more every week.Īs a classroom teacher with a school email, you can access EPIC and set-up a class for FREE! Under my account, I have set-up student profiles for all of my students. These texts are perfect for read-to-self, class read-alouds, or partner reading. This website offers amazing, authentic texts for students – Big Nate, Scaredy Squirrel, Fancy Clancy, The Pout-Pout Fish, Biscuit, and SO many more favorites. Forget decodable readers and leveled books. The kicker? It’s completely FREE for educators!ĮPIC is an online and app-based data based of thousands of real books. Listen to Reading gives students access to high-interest, high-quality reading materials they might not be able to independently read…yet! Today I am sharing about my go-to Listening to Reading resource – EPIC for Kids. Though, as a primary teacher, we know many of our little learners are not fluent readers yet. Students are not completing worksheets or reading ‘activities’ rather, they are actually reading and writing. The benefit of using a Daily 5 structure for our reading block is that students have multiple, authentic opportunities to engage with texts. Research repeatedly says the more words students interact with and are exposed to the better readers they will become.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |