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Re: Using audiobooks/texts



I do it sometimes. This past year I had a large number of apathetic (but
bright) regular students who had been apathetic for so long that their
skills were really suffering. I knew if I assigned a novel, even in lit
circles, they would goof around and avoid work. So I did a whole-class novel
on tape--they followed along in the text--and they really loved it. They had
activities to complete (writing analogies, that kind of thing) and I threw
in a quiz every now and then to check comprehension. They all participated
and could easily tell me what had happened in each chapter. Okay, maybe it
was the easy way out for the last three weeks of the year, but in all
honesty, at that point I was willing to do anything that would keep them engaged and learning. This worked.

Even with my advanced kids, I've used a radio drama of "The Necklace" and
they loved it. And I have a CD I use for "Jabberwocky"... the reader does a
much better job than I usually can. Heh. So I definitely think there is a
place for audio text in the classroom.

Melissa

----- Original Message ----- From: "Holly Kendrick" <mrshdk@cox.net>
To: <middle-lit@interversity.org>
Sent: Thursday, June 08, 2006 10:15 PM
Subject: [middle-lit] Using audiobooks/texts


How do you feel about using audio books or texts of a short story, poem or
novel in the classroom to increase comprehension and vocabulary
acquisition? I am doing research for a possible thesis topic. Does it
even merit discussion? So many teachers that I've talked to believe that
it makes reading too easy for students.

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