Best-selling authors Dr. Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris rethink traditional teaching practices Who's Doing the How to Say Less So Readers Can Do More. They review some common instructional mainstays such as read-aloud, guided reading, shared reading, and independent reading and provide small, yet powerful, adjustments to help hold students accountable for their learning.Next generation reading instruction is much more responsive to student needs and aims to remove some of the scaffolding that can hinder reader development. Instead of relying on teacher prompts, Who's Doing the Work asks teachers to have students take ownership of their reading by managing their challenges independently and working through any plateaus they encounter. Whether you are an elementary teacher, literacy coach, reading specialist, or parent, Who's Doing the Work provides numerous examples on how to readjust the reading process and teach students to gain proficiency and joy in their work.
I started this book two years ago...over two years ago. Then I lost it. Then I found it. Then I finished it. Then it blew the top of my head off.
Another one of those books about reading I wanted to write. I spent time in my career in the elementary classroom, in a TItle I reading classroom, and in high school ELA classrooms. I could have used this book in every setting...I will use it in my current setting, teaching ELA student interns.
The authors talk about four time-honored instructional models, and stretch us to think about 'next generation' adaptations: read aloud, shared reading (everyone has the same book, teacher reads, students follow or read along with), guided reading (the old reading groups model), and independent reading.
They make the point that we intervene too early, too often, and too consistently, in the hard work of students: making meaning. They tell us to hold back our 'help' and help students develop strategies.
They blow the metaphor of scaffolding to bits...for jobs at upper elevations, painters will ALWAYS need scaffolds. They'll never grow ten feet taller. Scaffolds are a tool that will never be replaced.
Their metaphor is dance class...with the intentional teaching, co-practicing, modeling, and gradual release of supports as dancers become more skilled. I like that.
MY biggest take away is how we need to monitor our questions and responses when working with students...how each of these instruction models lends itself to a different kind of supportive questions.
The questions are simple, tiny shifts of emphasis...nothing earth-shattering, but so meaningful...instead of asking in a conference, "What's going on in your book?" ask "What are you thinking about as you read? Can you tell me more? What strategies are working? What's next?" Nothing new...just a solid group of questions that will probe more and leave the hard work for students to do, not teachers.
I like the suggestion of creating a running list of strategies that have worked for students through all the reading models...a chart that would be displayed as students work together, and then, ultimately, as they work independently. Those strategies that students have already identified as helpful become part of the conversation.
While this book is focused on young readers, everything here can be easily adapted for high school classes.
The heart of the book is this quote by David Sousa: "The brain that does the work is the brain that does the learning."
I read the reviews on this and people were like “all teachers should read this!” And “helpful for teachers of any grade!” And… that’s not true. This is great for elementary teachers. It was pretty useless for middle and high school.
This is a must-read to all educators out there! The book is short and has so much practical advice for teachers to help students read independently. This is a great book to come back to!
A good solid review of the four types of reading instruction: read aloud, shared reading, guided reading and independent reading. Not revolutionary for those of us in the game for awhile, but would be excellent for newer educators. I loved the dance metaphors!
This was written pre-COVID, but it offers so many strategies to get students into active learning. I will be teaching high school students when I return. This book is written for more K-5 but I feel the strategies can be adapted for 6-12 in a COVID world.
One of the best profesional development texts that I've read! I am rethinking daily what I say to my students, what I excpect of them, and considering greatly when I need to STOP TALKING so that the students can do the work! This has impacted the way I teach greatly! I'm actually going to read it again with a study group. IT was great!
A quick read for novice teachers, this book takes a look at all aspects of reading in the elementary classroom. From the often neglected read aloud, to shared reading, to small group to independent reading, the authors look at how it has been taught in the test-driven (i. e. teacher-led) environment and juxtaposes how these crucial components to literacy should be taught. After all, we aren't going to trail behind every reader and intro. unknown words or set the stage for them all their lives, right? If independence is what we need, then we should step out of the picture more and let them fly. Practical for newbies, nothing aha for seasoned teachers.
Although these strategies are geared for younger readers, there were several that will help me help my struggling eighth graders.
Take away: too much scaffolding robs students of the opportunity to learn to read independently. They become dependent, disinterested and unmotivated. I fear we do this to so many of our struggling readers. We have to give just enough support to teach them to how to do the work and then they will be more apt to want to.
Every teacher should read this book! Starting with balanced literacy instruction principles with a student-centered approach, but with a new lens toward student agency and independence. This is a book that is needed to help shift our focus from the work that we are doing to how we create the conditions for the students doing the thinking and learning work in the literacy classroom.
A great book for beginning teachers. Nicely organized. Well researched. Covers the pitfalls of leveling books, the importance of read alouds, and compares and contrasts conventional with "next generation" shared reading, guided reading, and independent reading.
While most of the ideas presented in Who’s Doing the Work? will not be revolutionary to veteran workshop teachers, Burkins and Yaris do present a fresh perspective on the structures of balanced literacy (read aloud, shared reading, guided reading, and independent reading). This book will be most helpful for teachers new to balanced literacy who are looking for clear explanations of what each structure should look like. While Burkins and Yaris offer guiding principles for each structure, many readers will require more guidance for implementation than offered in this text. However, this is an excellent introduction to each.
Veteran teachers will appreciate how quickly this text can be read as well as the updated insight for improving tried-and-true balanced literacy structures.
Burkins and Yaris take on four traditional dimensions of literacy programs (read alouds, shared reading, guided reading, and independent reading.) Their basic premise is that in traditional views of these practices, it is the teacher not the students that seem to be doing all the work minimizing the power of the instructional routines. They describe practical 2.0 strategies to shift the work to the students with a primary focus on the language teachers use with their students. The book provides readers with ways to improve instructional routines they are already using so they can better support the students in literacy programs.
Who's Doing the Work? nicely walks readers through how to best support students without shouldering too much of the thinking, thus decreasing the learning that students do. Burkins and Yaris look at "next generation" read-aloud, shared reading, guided reading, and independent reading. In all of these instructional contexts, changes to teacher prompts can maximize student thinking. What can you try? What's next? What is this making you think about? are just a few turns of phrase worth incorporating into teaching.
Throughout teaching, I’ve been dedicated to fostering student independence and for students taking ownership of their learning. When I read the book in 2021, I was already experienced in guiding and training students to write, provide feedback, and self-assess their writing progress. However, when I was teaching reading, I realized that my instruction was more teacher-led and teacher-focused. This book offered practical strategies for whole-class, small-group, and intervention time, and improved not only my students’ reading but my practice of teaching reading.
This is the best book I've read on coaching reading. The authors lay out clearly the steps from modelled reading through shared reading, guided reading, and independent reading, providing clear indications of promising practices and examples of classroom implementation from different grade levels. The pathways described here lead to student autonomy and help teachers revisit their strategies in reading support.
This book explained the reasoning behind having shared reading, guided, and read aloud. It reminds us to put the work back on the students and to have them think of what strategy to use if they get stuck, rather than us prompting or telling them what to do. It referenced anchor charts to use but never gave examples of what one could look like or should have on it. I wish it included that. Overall, it was a little redundant but helpful!
A simple professional development book for all educators. It reminds us that as educators we sometimes have a tendency to guide our students’ thinking, and this book reinforces the ideas that real learning comes from the mystery and the struggle our students will endure with reading new text and books.
Good overview of read aloud, shared reading and guided reading. Not a fan of the independent reading section- doesn't really allow for instruction during this time, which is so important. Missing a section on whole group minilessons, to tie all of the other components together.
This professional book will shift your thinking about how you support students on their journey to become independent strategic readers. Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris provide real-life scenarios to support this work. It is a must-read for all literacy teachers.
“When children inhabit worlds where teachers let them do the work, they learn from their productive effort.” This is a great resource to share with all teaching faculty. Very clear and practical guides for how to help students become more empowered in their reading lives.
Read for a grad school class. Made me look at scaffolding in a new way & really evaluate my teaching practices. Obviously geared toward teachers of lower grades, but still some good nuggets in there for us secondary teachers.
Wow- this validated a lot of my thinking on teaching reading but also gave me new perspectives and ideas I’m excited to try. Asking “what could you do?” is going to my new phrase going forward. And then I need to just shut up and let my students talk!
This book is written through the lens of the balanced literacy approach which is not scientifically proven to help children read. Also, the management strategies seem to be more appropriate for the primary grades, but I'm not sure that they would hold up post COVID.
Every teacher of reading should have this book! Wonderful concept on stepping back and allowing the students to do the work of decoding and comprehending.