COTS is free, very local, and very low-key (yet still very wonderful!), while teachers drive for hours and pay a substantial registration fee for the Lit Conference. Moreover, there are incredible keynote speakers (Ralph Fletcher & Louise Borden this year, and Donalyn Miller & Sharon Draper last year!), as well as other sessions with other famous teachers and authors! (Husband made fun of me when I said there were "famous teachers," but it's true!)
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Since this was a fancy conference, I even got my very own "presenter" ribbon. I'll admit that I felt pretty proud of myself wearing it around all day! Best part: when I was getting Ralph Fletcher to sign my classroom copy of Guy Write for my students, he noticed my "presenter" ribbon and said "Oh, I see you're a fellow presenter!" A fellow presenter! I almost died! My tiny little session didn't exactly compare to your keynote speech, Ralph!
Anyway, I had a wonderful time sharing ideas about engaging my ELLs with authentic reading and writing communities. In addition to discussing how I use Goodreads and Kidblog with my students, I showed some examples from our reading and writing workshop discussion forums on Moodle. I also shared some of the resources I provide to engage my students as readers and writers, like RSS feeds and widgets with news articles and the "writing inspiration" page I created.
To me, the most important evidence that these tools are effective is the fact that students use them voluntarily outside of school. When I give a book talk and my students are adding the book to the "to-read" lists on Goodreads from their phones and iPads, that's authentic engagement. When I visit my school Goodreads account or go to our blog and find that someone has voluntarily used them after school, that's the best feeling in the world.
After all, I want my students to learn while they're in my class, but I really want them to keep learning after they leave my class.
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