5th Graders Discover You Don't Have Be In California to Go to Hollywood

Students Acting Out A Scene from Island of the Blue Dolphins
Lights, camera, action!

No. These are not words from a Hollywood set. Instead these are the words of 5th graders from Ms. Snoke and Schulman’s class at PS 4 in Washington Heights, New York. You'd never know by looking at this classroom full of highly-engaged students that not long ago, inspiring motivation to learn was an issue.


In the classroom today, the students who recently finished reading Island of the Blue Dolphins, were motivated and fully engaged as they dispersed into various parts of the room acting out the scenes from the script they had written days earlier. 

Students reviewing their performance
Prior to their performances this day, the class spent time watching videos of other students performing scenes from books then discussed what went well and what could be improved. As a result they were well-equipped to transfer this knowledge to their own work. After students filmed their scenes they huddled around their flip video camera to discuss what worked and what needed improvement. For instance one student said, "You should use your spear like you are really spearing a fish." Another demonstrated how to make larger hand gestures.  After self reflection and feedback from the rest of the group, after each take they jumped right back into the work of revising their script and re-taking the scene.

In essence these students were engaged in the editing, revision stages of the writing process. As a former literacy coach, teachers often lamented that to motivate their students to engage in. Furthermore, traditionally, edits and revisions were often made after teacher-directed feedback. These fifth grade students completely owned the learning and were self-directed and motivated to edit, revise, their work following reflective analysis and peer review.

The teachers explained it this way.  
Often when a student writes, it’s not clear when something doesn’t sound right.  When the students act out their writing, it immediately becomes clear when something doesn’t sound right and they jump back to their scripts to revise.  Additionally, when students get out of their seats and act out the scenes from the book they read, the words and concepts that they may not have understood well, really come to life.  I’m convinced that when I measure comprehension, I will find that students understood this story better than the others they have read.

Their advice to other teachers who may be interested in doing this type of work with their students is this. Don’t worry about students producing perfect videos.  In the end, the reality is that the learning is in the process of making the videos, not the final product. 

When I spoke to the students and asked them if they enjoyed studying a book this way. Every student agree they preferred learning this way over the traditional reading of a story then responding in their notebooks.  As a dug a little deeper to find out why, one student summed it up well.
“We like making videos because now our work won't be trapped in a notebook.  It will be published on SchoolTube for other students around the world to learn from.”
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