Ever wonder what to put in your students’ book baggies or how to manage them? This post will answer all those burning questions!
I like to start independent reading the first week of school. I feel like it is an important part of our daily routine.
To get started with book baggies, you need actual book baggies. I had originally purchased the book baggie above from Really Good Stuff and honestly they did not last a whole year. The plastic broke in the corners on most of them. I should have bought this version of them instead.
So the following year, I went with the book baggies below. They are from ABCStuff.com and they held up well. I liked how the strap was long enough to fit over the back of the students’ chairs. This made it easy for me to see who was about to forget to bring their’s home at the end of the day.
The reading strategy bookmark is part of this packet:
To figure out my students’ independent reading level, I test them using Fountas & Pinnell’s Benchmark Assessment System.
The difference this book baggie and the one from the begging of the year is that the comprehension expectations have increased and the book baggie now includes comprehension cards. I add the comprehension cueing cards for parents to question their children at home. I have a color version of the cards that I use in class. I find the consistency and visual prompts help my students. You can find those cards {HERE}.
I make sure to explain book baggies, instructional reading levels, independent reading levels, and word rings to parents on Meet the Teacher Night and in my General Information Packet.
I hope this post helped to better explain book baggies to you. Leave any questions in the comments.
Mindy O'Brien
I love this so much! So do you just meet with the kiddos individually or do you do guided reading groups in addition to this?
Erica Bohrer
Yes, we do guided reading separately during literacy centers. You can look at how I run my day here: http://ericabohrer.blogspot.com/search/label/Visual%20plans
susan berkowitz
This is a great system. I love that the comprehension questions use consistent visual cues (I work with kids on the spectrum, too) and that there is consistency in the system all the way through the year. Not having to figure out new instructions or a different way of doing things each time is such a huge benefit to our kids.