Thursday, August 23, 2012

Fifth Grade Library Program


     The library program is another aspect of your child’s reading program—focusing on both recreational and informational reading—with books appropriate for individual abilities and interests. Your child’s attitude and completion of library requirements are reflected in individual evaluations and report card grades.

     Fifth grade students come to the library for one fifty-minute period each week. During that time:
 
1. I read to the students.
2. Students choose appropriate books to check out.
3. Students take comprehension quizzes in “Reading Counts!”
4. I conduct interviews with students for Genre Bingo.
5. Students read silently.
 
      Students should recognize and promote the library as an intellectual channel within the school—a place for exchange of information for the purposes of research, study, and recreation. We will work on these specific skills this year:
1.       Understanding and using the ten main classes of the Dewey Decimal System; grasping the idea of the subdivisions within each.
2.       Distinguishing unique characteristics of various reference sources.
3.       Evaluating resources to fit one’s specific needs.
      Recreational reading should be a part of the students’ daily activities. We encourage the exploration of many different types of literature through the use of Genre Bingo. Students read books at their level that fit the various categories and take comprehension quizzes on computer in the “Reading Counts!” program.   A bingo earns a small prize in the library; a blackout bingo earns a paperback book. Points accumulate in “Reading Counts!” based on the length and difficulty of the books, and small prizes are awarded there as well. Through these computer quizzes, our students are learning about their ability to understand and remember what they read. They are discovering that reading is much more than naming the words they see. It is becoming involved with and making meaning out of the text.
    
     The Mark Twain Award program is a third recreational program for fifth grade students. After reading and passing a quiz on a minimum of four of the twelve nominated books, students may vote for the book they think is best. Their votes, along with the votes of other children in Missouri, choose the Mark Twain Award-winning book of the year.  The Truman Award program works the same way; these books are on a higher level.
     
     We have talked about time management as an essential ingredient in a student’s life. Each must learn to set priorities and follow through on tasks. Students have silent reading opportunities during the day in their classrooms, silent reading time during library class, and reading time at home each day to accomplish their goals. We have talked about selecting books at an appropriate level, not choosing those that are too long and/or too difficult. I offer help to students in making those choices.
     
     The library reading program focuses on reading for pleasure, reading for meaning and understanding, and reading a variety of materials. The Genre Bingo and Reading Counts Quizzes help us to achieve these goals. The books for book reports count in the total; books read by the teacher and books read as the classroom novel do not count. Books of more than 250 pages may count as two books, depending on the novel.
    
     Your child should use the attached chart to determine the desired grade for the quarter and work accordingly. Please keep a copy of this chart for your reference.
 
FIFTH GRADE LIBRARY GRADING RUBRIC
 
If any category falls in this line, the grade will be
D
 
No books on the BINGO sheet
 
 
No quizzes
 
No books on the BINGO sheet
 
No chapter books on BINGO sheet
C
Read across—all requirements must be met for this grade.
 
 
 
At least 1 book on the BINGO sheet
 
At least 1 quiz—may be either fiction or nonfiction
At least 1 book on the BINGO sheet—may be either fiction or nonfiction
 
At least
1chapter book on BINGO sheet
B
Read across—all requirements must be met for this grade.
 
At least 2 books on the BINGO sheet
At least 2 quizzes—1 must be fiction and 1 must be nonfiction
At least 1 fiction and 1 nonfiction book on the BINGO sheet
At least 1 chapter book on BINGO sheet
B+
Read across—all requirements must be met for this grade.
 
At least 4 books on the BINGO sheet
At least 3 quizzes—1 must be fiction and 1 must be nonfiction
At least 1 fiction and 1 nonfiction book on the BINGO sheet
At least 2 chapter books on the BINGO sheet
A-
Read across—all requirements must be met for this grade.
 
At least 6 books on the BINGO sheet
At least 4 quizzes—1 must be fiction and 1 must be nonfiction
At least 2 fiction and 2 nonfiction books on the BINGO sheet
At least 3 chapter books on the BINGO sheet
A
Read across—all requirements must be met for this grade.
 
 
At least 7 books on the BINGO sheet
At least 4 quizzes—1 must be fiction and 1 must be nonfiction
At least 2 fiction and 2 nonfiction books on the BINGO sheet
At least 4 chapter books on the BINGO sheet


FIFTH GRADE GENRE BINGO

FREE CHOICE
BIOGRAPHY
NONFICTION 500-599
F --ANOTHER CULTURE
ADVENTURE
CLASSIC
MARK TWAIN / TRUMAN
NF FREE CHOICE
NONFICTION 000-499
FREE CHOICE
MARK TWAIN / TRUMAN
NF FREE CHOICE
FREE CHOICE
MYSTERY
HISTORICAL FICTION
NEWBERY AWARD
FREE CHOICE
2ND BOOK BY THE SAME AUTHOR
FREE CHOICE
NF FREE CHOICE
 
NONFICTION 600-899
SCI FI--FANTASY
FREE CHOICE
HUMOROUS FICTION
NONFICTION 900-999

 

 

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