Term

Spring 2025

Capstone

Capstone Project

Degree Name

MAT

Facilitator(s)

Maggie Struck

Content Expert

Caryl Mousseaux

Abstract

When students engage in independent reading, which is reading a book of your choice for pleasure, they do better in school. Many studies have positively correlated independent reading with higher grades, higher graduation rates, and more advanced reading and writing skills. The challenge for teachers is to nurture joy in reading, as this does not come naturally for all students. Some of the proven ways to foster independent reading for students, specifically middle school students, is to teach them about different types of books, give them a variety of books to choose from for independent reading, give them time to read, allow them time to talk to their peers about reading, and be a good reading role model. The focus of this capstone project is how can a middle school teacher that works at a school without a library, utilize the public library to support independent reading in their classroom? Many schools do not have libraries, which is the best way to expose students to a variety of books. The literature review examines the history of public schools and libraries, discusses the importance of independent reading, and then focuses on how a middle school teacher can support independent reading. The project is a curriculum in three units that should provide a roadmap for middle school teachers to support their students in independent reading by teaching students about genres, encouraging book discussions, and preparing students for choosing and checking out books at the public library.

Project Type

Curriculum

Keywords

Curriculum, Literacy, Reading

dc_type

text

dc_publisher

DigitalCommons@Hamline

dc_format

application/pdf

dc_source

School of Education Student Capstone Projects

Included in

Education Commons

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