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Updated regularly, this is where you’ll find full transcripts of the To the Classroom Podcast as well as blogs by Jennifer Serravallo and her colleagues offering practical tips and ideas for teaching and coaching, inspired by the podcast conversations.
Engagement: Thoughtful Planning, Skilled Teaching
Recent research about explicit instruction has shown what teachers have always known: student engagement is a critical component of learning from any lesson. And yet engaging a room-full students with diverse learning needs is challenging even on the very best of days. So, how can we as teachers best keep students actively involved and learning throughout an entire lesson? Through thoughtful planning and skillful, artful teaching.
4 Reasons All Teachers Are Reading Teachers
We learn to read. And we read to learn. Right from the vey start. And for the rest of our lives. Being able to read well opens worlds of learning and presents boundless possibilities at school and beyond. From the time we first learn to read, reading becomes essential to our day. We read texts, articles, instructions, articles, poetry, novels that enrich our understanding of ourselves and others. Since reading is so critical to success in school and in life, the job of teaching students to read belongs to all of us.
3 Steps to Planning an Engaging, Explicit Read-Aloud Lesson
To plan for read-aloud lessons, which have a clear instructional purpose, often referred to as dialogic reading or an interactive read aloud, teachers carefully select texts matched to instructional goals, purposefully plan how to get students to think strategically about the text, weave in vocabulary and knowledge goals, and model reading strategies.
Five Ways to Become a More Responsive Teacher
Being flexible and responsive is key to student learning…learn five ways to be responsive to students during your planning and delivery of lessons.
Four Ways Lesson Structures Save the Day
Lesson structures, like the nine from my new book Teaching Reading Across the Day, help save you time, lessen cognitive load for students, and free you up to teach responsively.
5 Tips for Successful Small Group Instruction
We all know small group reading instruction is an essential, research-supported practice since every classroom has unique learners with different needs. When executed well, small groups provide opportunities for individualized instruction, collaborative learning, concentrated assessment, scaffolded practice, and a high level of engagement.
Leigh Patel and Shawna Coppola
Jennifer Serravallo interviews Dr. Leigh Patel about her recent essay on decolonizing.net: “What I learned from debating the Science of Reading Nearly 20 Years Ago.” Dr. Patel is a transdisciplinary scholar whose research focuses on both the ways schooling delivers inequities and how education can be a tool for liberation. In the second half, she’s joined by Shawna Coppola, author of the recent book Literacy for All: A Framework for Anti-Oppressive Teaching to discuss the interview and takeaways for the classroom.
Zaretta Hammond
Today’s guest is the brilliant Zaretta Hammond, author of Culturally Responsive Teaching and the Brain. We’ll talk about the science behind her recommended “six core design principles” that she calls “culturally responsive brain rules”. Later, I’m joined by my colleague Jerry Maraia for a continued conversation about practical takeaways. This is To the Classroom, and I’m your host, Jennifer Serravallo.
Leala Holcomb
My guest today is Dr. Leala Holcomb, a researcher of deaf education at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who accepted my invitation to teach us all about what true equity and inclusion looks like when supporting deaf children’s language and literacy development. At Dr. Holcomb’s request, I interviewed them in writing via a collaborative online document, and I have hired a voice actor, Ginna Hoben, to read Dr. Holcomb’s words for this podcast interview. As with all episodes, a transcript of this episode is available at my website, JenniferSerravallo.com/podcast.
Chris Wenz
My guest today is Chris Wenz, researcher and teacher, whose dissertation focused on profiles of adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorders. We begin our conversation with an understanding of the diverse profiles of autistic individuals, and move into a conversation about considerations for literacy assessment and teaching. In the second part of the episode I’m joined by my colleague Elisha Li, a former elementary inclusion teacher, to discuss practical takeaways.
Karen Harris
Dr. Karen Harris joins Jennifer Serravallo for Episode 29 of To the Classroom. Lainie Powell and Lea Leibowitz join for the post-interview conversation.
Steve Graham
Dr. Steven Graham, lead author on the IES practice guides for What Works Clearinghouse, as well as a co-author of many meta-analyses about what effective writing instruction looks like, joins Jennifer Serravallo for Episode 28 of To the Classroom.
P David Pearson
Today's guest is none other than THE Dr. P David Pearson. Usually I approach guests with a topic in mind, but because Dr. Pearson had just written on just about every topic there is to write about in the field of literacy education, I asked him what he wanted to discuss. He said: "how to design an ideal literacy block aligned to research." I love the topic and I hope you will too. As always, I'm joined by colleagues in the second half of the episode today. It's Gina Dignon and Macie Kerbs to talk about practical takeaways for the classroom. It's a long episode, but worth every minute.
H. Richard Milner
Dr. H Richard Milner joins Jennifer Serravallo for Episode 26 of To the Classroom. Educational leaders Aeriale Johnson and Jerry Maraia join for the post-interview conversation.
Laura Ascenzi-Moreno
Jennifer Serravallo interviews Dr. Laura Ascenzi-Moreno for Episode 25 of To the Classroom. Angie Forero and Cristy Rauseo, two bilingual educators, join for the post-interview conversation.
Caitlin Ryan and Jill Hermann Wilmarth
Jennifer Serravallo interviews Dr. Caitlin Ryan and Dr. Jill Hermann-Wilmarth about LGBTQ+ inclusivity in classrooms.
Elizabeth Sulzby
Jennifer Serravallo talks with Dr. Elizabeth Sulzby about pre-emergent and emergent literacy and language development.
Haeny Yoon and Lalitha Vasudevan
Jennifer Serravallo interviews Dr. Haeny Yoon and Dr. Lalitha Vasudevan about play in early childhood and adolescence.
Walker and Wasowicz
Today’s episode is a double – I have two guests to teach us about a speech to print approach to spelling and phonics instruction. John Walker is the UK-based creator of Sounds-Write. Jan Wasowicz is the US-based creator of Spell Links. We’ll talk about the differences–and benefits–of using a speech to print approach. Later, I’m joined by colleagues Macie Kerbs and Rosie Maurantonio, as well as the author of We Do Writing, Leah Mermelstein, for a conversation about practical takeaways for the classroom.
Tim Rasinski
Jennifer Serravallo interviews Dr. Tim Rasinski about the Art and Science of teaching reading, and the decades of research on fluency instruction. The episode is jam-packed with practical advice for the classroom.