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In order for students to truly become readers who “read for understanding”, teaching reading must not be the sole responsibility of the language arts department. Teaching reading must be incorporated into every subject area. This is true whether you teach elementary, middle, or even high school. In fact, the days of teaching language arts as a separate subject area need to come to an end...
Social studies can and should be integrated with language arts. As a social
studies teacher I teach everything that is required by the New York State Social
Studies Standards. However, as a social studies teacher, I also teach everything
that is required by the New York State Language Arts Standards. In my social
studies class my students write formal essays, creative stories, poetry, songs,
and dialogues. My students present skits that apply public speaking skills,
and they read primary sources, secondary sources, historical fiction, and historical
non-fiction. One would be hard pressed to find anything that a language arts
teacher does in their class that I do not do in my social studies class. The
only difference is that I teach those skills around the historical content we
are studying. It is easy and fun to incorporate the language arts skills into the social
studies curriculum. What I dont have, and desperately need, is more time.
The answer, however, is simple: integrate the social studies and language arts
curriculums. By totally integrating social studies and language arts, all the
required language arts skills will be taught and social studies teachers will
have all the time they need. More importantly, though, students comprehension
will increase. Life is not departmentalized; we do not learn things in a vacuum.
Departmentalizing our content areas is in direct conflict with how people learn. The same holds true at the elementary level. Personally, I have seen a scary
shift within our own school. Due to low ELA scores, the focus at the elementary
level over the past year or so has been on increasing reading and writing time.
This would be great except for the fact that it is coming at the expense of
the social studies and science curriculums. I have actually heard parents complain
that their 4th grade child is barely learning social studies or science at all.
This goes beyond irresponsible to flat out stupid. I understand that we need
to increase reading and writing time for students, but in no way does that mean
we must sacrifice entire subject areas (cant they see the pendulum swinging).
Instead, we must integrate reading and writing with social studies and even
science. This would solve both problems. Unfortunately, it doesnt appear
that anyone will notice until there is a drop in social studies and science
test scores. Whats worse, when that does happen (and it will) the powers
that be will probably do away with reading and writing and replace it with an
increase in social studies and science. Look out! Here comes the pendulum again. Adam Waxler teaches at the Springs Middle School in East Hampton, New York
and is the author of eTeach:
A Teacher Resource for Learning the Strategies of Master Teachers. For more information about how this ebook can greatly improve your teaching
career, visit the A
to Z Teacher Stuff store. -----------------------------------------------------------------------
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