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The Little Reading Cafe
Each Thursday afternoon, my grade-six classroom undergoes a face lift. We turn the lights down low and light candles. Comfortable pillows appear on the floor, strains of jazz or baroque music float through the air, and students snuggle up with their books. Quietly, someone passes around cookies, doughnuts, or brownies. Readers nod their thanks and return to their books. Some students sip on mugs of tea or hot chocolate. All of us experience 45 minutes of bliss in the middle of an active school day! It wasn't always that way. Four years ago, I knew I had to look for different ways to get my students engaged in reading. It troubled me that the majority of students I inherited each year viewed recreational reading with intense dislike. Silent reading times were anything but enjoyable as I walked around the room, making sure everyone had a book on the go. I wondered why young people who had loved to read in the earlier grades were now turning up their noses at reading.
Equipped with my core purpose, I moved an old couch and a chair into my classroom. I hung a few artsy posters on the walls, threw some comfy cushions on the floor, and provided music and a few candles. To that, we added food and drink; after all, the aroma of coffee is one of the most enticing things about bookstore cafes. Students take turns bringing cookies, brownies, chips, or oranges. I knew it was important to keep our "reading cafe" fresh and vibrant, so I scheduled a number of "special events."
My students and I love our "reading cafe" period. For me, it has been a time when I can communicate to my students my own love of reading and put feet to Galileo's words, "You cannot teach a man anything, you can only help him discover it within himself." ADDITIONAL READING RESOURCES
Read more Voices of Experience
Article by Brenda Dyck
11/16/2001
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