Shared reading is an essential part of effective balanced literacy instruction. According to Fountas and Pinnell, "During shared reading, you and your students read aloud an enlarged version of an engaging text that provides opportunities for your students to expand their reading competencies. The goals of the first reading are to ensure that students enjoy the text and think about the meaning. After the first reading, students take part in multiple, subsequent readings to notice more about the text. They discuss the text, and you select teaching points based on their needs.
As an instructional context, shared reading:
Provides enjoyable, successful experiences with print for all students
Promotes the development of all aspects of the reading process
Builds language skills and enhances vocabulary
Provides opportunities to engage in expressive, meaningful, fluent reading
Builds understanding of various types of texts, formats, and language
structures
Builds a community of readers
“Students sit together as a whole group and, following your first reading, engage in an oral reading of a common text. They use their voices to interpret the meaning of a text as they read in unison with others. Alternatively, students are assigned parts to read.
Structure of a shared reading lesson:
Introduce the Text – Engage students' interest in the text with a few opening words.
Model Reading of the Text – Read the text to students at a good pace with a focus on enjoyment and understanding. Have a brief discussion.
Read the Text Together – Have students read the whole text or selected parts with you.
Discuss the Text – Guide conversation about the meaning and language of the text, and invite students to share their thinking.
Teaching Points – Select a specific part or parts of the text to revisit to make teaching points. This can be accomplished over a number of subsequent readings.
Repeated Readings – Revisit the text again on subsequent days, making additional teaching points and supporting students in gaining independence in processing the text.
Shared reading is an enjoyable experience for your classroom community and an important opportunity for children to “step up together” into more challenging texts while also beginning to notice and acquire the processes they need to read texts independently.” - Fountas and Pinnell Shared Reading Blog Post
In their professional development text, Who's Doing the Work Burkins and Yaris provide a framework for our shared reading that allows for students to become more engaged in the meaning making work, putting teachers in the role of facilitator and supporter. To view the PLC presentation of this chapter on Interactive Read Alouds click the link below or the picture to the left. Shared Reading - Who's Doing the Work?
Please click the link below to view Holdaway's model for developing effective shared reading experiences. You can also click on the link to your right to see how to create effective shared reading experiences with guidance for how to select texts and how to conduct a shared reading experience with examples of weekly plans for fourth grade.
Please click on the link to the left to view a presentation on Shared Reading created by Becky Koessel from Mentoring Minds that provides a background on what shared reading is and how to begin using it in your classroom as an effective practice.