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Teachers Thoughts
On How to Use the Program
Patti Kirsch is a science teacher who has been using MEG and
the Adopt-An-Author Program since 1999. The book has become
the most popular part of her curriculum. We asked her to share
her secrets for success:
- Why should teachers should use MEG?
I found the book to be a perfect blend of scientific concepts,
particularly as a segue from geologic time/geology to oceanography.
While hitting key reading focus strategies, the book is
a fun method to stay within the scope and sequence topics.
- How do you implement the program?
I begin generating excitement the first week. I identify
the novel as a tool we will use to explore science concepts.
I remind students that they will need to purchase a copy
of the book (prior to our start date, right after Thanksgiving).
I download vocabulary, questions, essay topics and other
ideas from the www.AdoptAnAuthor.com website. Further, I
add a few days discussing prehistoric sharks. We do a shark
tooth lab, shark research (migrations and some of the University
of Florida data regarding shark attacks). I read in class,
as the kids read, looking for science concepts relative
to the class I am working with. (ocean floor features, differences
between Atlantic and Pacific ocean floors, vents, trenches,
layers of the ocean water, basic food chains, ocean currents,
etc.) I also read to find "science fiction" concepts,
and teach them as "non-examples". I find a bookmark
really helps kids to stay on task, as they are aware of
the required reading pages each day in class, and are able
to finish at home. I assess students using a variety of
essay questions, M/C and a time-line (storyboard). I add
the science concepts discussed in class to the assessments.
- How does your unit break down?
We read in class, 3 times a week for three weeks, plus assigned
reading over the weekend. Rarely do kids fall behind, most
of them read ahead; but I ask that in class, as we were
supposed to ALL be on page 100, we all jump to page 100,
even if you forgot to catch up on your own. Usually, a brief
discussion about "what has happened so far" is
all kids need to be brought up to date.
- Anything else that might help?
Discover Channel has a series of shark movies. Shark research
activities include cool "mysteries" solved when
the contents of a shark's stomach were presented as evidence....there
are several of these stories online. I have the kids note,
as they read, any vocab or science terms/concepts, acronyms,
etc. for class discussion. I also use a poster activity
to help kids draw what they "see" in a descriptive
portion of the book. It's fun to see how differently we
envision a portion of the plot of the story. And I also
offer extra credit if the students contact the author (Steve
Alten) by e-mail.
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