Most of us remember the first book we fell in love with, the
first story to take us on a journey out of our world and into someone
else’s.
I’ve taught English for many years now, and it seems that as
the years pass, less of my students are reading outside of their courses. Almost none of my current juniors and
seniors are reading for pleasure.
They might read to learn information or because they have to, but
nowadays students turn to films, games, the internet, and television for their
escape.
A few years ago, I began assigning a project to my
juniors. The basics: choose an
American book, read it with a partner, discuss it, and present it to your
classmates, enticing them to want to read it. Sounds like an old-fashioned book report, right? So it
is. The conundrum for most of my
reluctant readers was in book choice. What to read? Who to read? The easy thing for me to do was to
simply tell them about a few books and give them a list of choices.
Last year, I discovered that Goodreads.com was another
excellent way for students to explore, discover, and select books that interest
them.
I still remember walking up and down the long musty-smelling
rows of books at my school library and basing my choice on cover art. Man, how
things have changed. Now, you only
need to hop online to surf new book releases. In fact, many new books have
their own preview video! This is a
new age—a digital one.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s still okay to talk to students
about books, but like the saying goes- show don’t tell. The greater impact
comes in showing them. Enter,
Goodreads.com. Now, this website
isn’t new; in fact, many of you may have been using it for years. However, I’ve discovered a few interesting
facts about the site, and one amazing way to utilize it in the classroom,
particularly for English and History.
WHY TEACHERS WANT TO USE GOODREADS IN THE CLASSROOM:
1. Goodreads.com is free!
2. It has over
seven million subscribers; this means that there are millions of book reviews
to help students choose the right material.
3. It allows
teachers to model independent reading!
4. Teachers can follow their students and can get emails
daily or weekly with updates from their students regarding books rated or
marked to-read, read, reading.
5. Teachers can create “groups” and set those groups to
public, private, restricted, or even secret.
6. Teachers can begin discussions in their “Group,” to which
students can reply.
7. Teachers can use the site as a way for students to
evaluate course reading selections.
WHY STUDENTS ARE INTERESTED IN USING GOODREADS:
1. Goodreads is an asynchronous environment where students
can discuss or read about literature on their own time, at their own pace, and
in any location.
2. Students can
create anonymous profiles.
3. Students learn to write for a specific audience.
4. It allows users to select books to add to their
bookshelf; to choose “read, reading, or to-read” statuses for books; to set
goals for the year and to track their progress; to write reviews for any book;
to follow favorite authors who are also members on the site; and to even
self-publish their own work.
5. Students are able to read about a book before starting
it.
Book reports, or as I sneakily call them “novel workshops,”
still have value, as does reading for pleasure, and using a social networking
site such as Goodreads makes the selection process less painful and the reading
more enjoyable!
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