Okay, I thought. We’ll see how this goes. I stood at the front of the class. “Today we’re going to finish the book. I’d like you to find a partner of your choice and read this final section, ‘Afterward’ aloud.”
I stood silently and watched as my students walked, skipped, and hustled across the room to find their friends and begin reading. Who would have thought that sitting and reading with a partner could make them this happy?! I smiled and inwardly sighed. We’ll see if this actually works.
Over the last month, my English 10 students have been reading Tuesdays with Morrie. And over the last month, I have not put them with a partner to peer read. At all. Why? I was nervous. This group tends to get off-task easily and I really wasn’t in the mood for dealing with distractions and being a babysitter all period. But we were almost finished with the book, and rather than read aloud (which I had been doing on and off already) and rather than silent read (which I felt would take longer) I decided to try the peer reading.
Now I’m not encouraging this to be a strategy used all the time, but I have to say, this wasn’t as bad as I thought. To switch things up and give students some ownership of their reading–this worked well!

