
Welcome! Below you will find out
information about the Literacy Work Stations I use (or have
used) in my classroom. Enjoy!



The large picture is a picture of my most recent Literacy Work Station
Rotation Wheel. I have changed my schedule around to try some new and
improved things during my Reading Workshop time. I now do my Literacy
Work Stations in the afternoon just after lunch and before math. This allows for more "working" voices. I
found that some of the activities require more "working" voices, but
could be distracting during our Guided Reading time or when I met with
individual students. I still only have Work Stations four days a week
(unless we have a short week), so that one day a week I can incorporate
reading conferences, extra reading time or a meeting to explain anything
important for the week ahead. This change has been very positive for our
classroom!
In the past, I
ran my Literacy Work Stations during my Guided Reading time. The students
did work stations
four days a week. They completed one work station a day after their DEAR
reading and response time. On the board, I had a sign that said
switch time and there was a time written. At switch time, the students
moved from DEAR (independent reading) to their assigned work station.
This system was designed for two-week cycles. Most of the activities
remained the same throughout the year, but had variations. Each color on
the wheel coordinates with a color on the board.
When I had the students complete two work stations
a day and complete their independent reading at another time in the day,
I used the rotation board with two cards representing the work station
on the bottom. At switch time, the students move into the second
work station. Both systems work, but I found that I receive higher
quality work if I have the students only complete one work station each
day.
How to make a circle rotation wheel
Circle Template #1 (4 sections)
Circle Template #2 (8 Sections)


Click on a workstation to learn more about it!


Management |
Literacy Work Station Groups
The work station groups are mixed-ability
groups. The groups are not based on the student's
reading group. Some students from the same reading
group could be in a literacy work
station group together. The groups consist of three
or four students. Since I have eight work stations,
I have eight work station activity groups. Ideally,
I would like two or three students per group, but
class sizes do not always allow for that.
Reading Workshop Reflection
At the end of each work station cycle (8
days, approximately 2 weeks), the students hand in a
Reading Workshop Reflection sheet. At the end of
each reading workshop time, the students are
responsible for filling out a reflection for the
work they completed that day. The students list the
work station they were assigned to that day and what
they did (started an activity, completed an
activity, etc. If a student met with me during a
guided reading group, then he/she would list that as
well. A copy of the Reading
Workshop Reflection is available
below.
"I
Can..." Lists
One idea I have used to manage my Literacy Work
Stations was by using "I Can..." Lists (from
Practice with Purpose and Literacy Work
Stations by Debbie Diller). These lists
explain the options students have when they are at a
work station. If you have limited options,
then an "I Can..." List may not be appropriate for
your classroom. I plan an "I Can..." List by each
Work Station and I have a master list that remains
in each student's Work Station Activity Folder. "I
Can..." Lists are available
below.
Tic-Tac-Toe Boards
For some of the work stations, I created a
tic-tac-toe board with the activities that the
students could complete. They have to complete an
entire board before repeating an activity. This was
to prevent the students from only doing the "most
popular" activities each time. Tic-Tac-Toe
printables are available
below.
Work Station Activity Folders
Each student has a folder designated as his/her Work
Station Activity Folder. This folder contains
information and check lists for the various work
stations. Also, any unfinished work can be
kept in the Work Station Activity Folder.
Work Station Looks Like/Sounds Like List
In the beginning of the year I take a lot of time
setting up the work stations and how I want them to
run. Since the work stations are going on
while I am meeting with guided reading groups, the
students practice using their whisper voices.
After we have completed a full two week cycle, we
have a group meeting and discuss what it should look
like and sound like during work station time.
The chart is posted in the room near our Work
Station Guidelines chart.
Work Station Guidelines
When I complete the Work Station Looks Like/Sounds
Like chart, we also make a Work Station Guidelines
Chart. This basically outlines the rules and
consequences for work station time. The students
also determine appropriate consequences for not
following any of the guidelines. Some guidelines
include: use whisper voices, respect other students
that are working, only do your work station, do not
bother other work station groups and anything else
that students come up with. Some examples of
consequences are: return to your seat to complete
your work station, loss of work station privilege
(must silent read or free write at your desk), loss
of recess time, loss of some other privilege and
anything the students brainstorm.

Organization
Each work station has its own
method of organization. Some work stations are
housed in crates or storage bins. Others are housed
on carts or in sections of my classroom. Here are
pictures and mini-descriptions of some of my
organizational techniques. Photos coming soon!
Word Work
I used a metal cart and plastic containers
to store the various materials used at the
Word Work Work Station.

Writing
I have a Writing Work Station area set up in
the corner of my classroom. This area is not only
used for our work station, but also
for Writer's Workshop. Paper is stored
in plastic drawers and other resources
are stored in various plastic bins

Author Study, Reading Comprehension, Poetry
and Newspaper & Non-Fiction
For these work stations, I store then on
large, plastic drawers on my back counter. The
students can easily take the drawers out of the
compartment and bring it to a location in the room
where they are working. If the work station has task
cards, I copy the task cards on tag board, laminate
them, cut them out and attach them onto a metal
ring. If a work station has different work
sheets/masters that can be used with it, I store
these in a binder. In the binder I put a master copy
in a sheet protector and separate the different
activity sheets with dividers.

Listening
I am fortunate enough to have two Listening
Work Stations. One of the work stations was created
by using a boom box and a junction box purchased
from
Lakeshore Learning. It allows me to play books
on both tapes and cds. I have a wooden listening
work station storage unit that holds the tape player
and headphones and a boombox with hooks on the wall
to hold the headphones. I use plastic magazine files
to store any activity sheets and the books with cd
or tape.

Literacy Folders
All of the Literacy Folders are stored in a
crate. Each hanging file folder has a blue or yellow
tab to go with a coordinating folder. All of the 2-3
activities are kept in a yellow folder, and the 3-4
activities are kept in a blue folder. In the front
of the crate, I have a check list for the students
to mark off what Literacy Folder they have
completed.

Learning Games
Two sets of Reading Comprehension Learning
Games for our Third Grade Team are stored in metal
racks on my back counter. All of the File Folder
Learning Games are stored in a red bin on the back
counter as well. Each File Folder Game is
stored in a plastic storage bag.

Whisper Phones
I store the Whisper Phones in a plastic container
with a flip-top lid on my back counter. |


Resources
| My work stations and many of the ideas for
each of them were generated from a variety of books
and resources. Two books that I found to be
exceptionally helpful and inspiring were
Practice with Purpose and Literacy Work
Stations by Debbie Diller. |
 |
|
When I was looking for literacy
ideas, I came across two fabulous books, Take To
Your Seat Literacy Centers: Grades 2-3 and 3-4.
I laminated each of the pages, cut them our
accordingly and created the Literacy Folders. These
are great, hands-on and easy to follow activities.
There are other similar books for phonics, math,
science and much more! This was one of the best
purchases I made! |
 |

Printables
|
|
Work Station "I can..." lists (large) |
 |
 |
|
Work Station "I can..." lists (small- for folders) |
 |
 |
|
Reading Workshop Reflection |
 |
 |
|
Literacy Center Folders Checklist |
 |
|
|
Listening Work Station Activity Sheet |
 |
 |
|
Reading Comprehension Tic-Tac-Toe Board |
 |
 |
|
Word Work Tic-Tac-Toe Board |
 |
 |
|
Non-Fiction & Newspaper Work Station Activity Sheet-
Before, During and After |
 |
 |
|
Non-Fiction & Newspaper Work Station Activity Sheet-
Strong Verbs |
 |
 |
|
Non-Fiction & Newspaper Work Station Activity Sheet-
Proper Nouns |
 |
 |
|
Non-Fiction & Newspaper Work Station Activity Sheet-
Facts and Opinions |
 |
 |
|
Non-Fiction & Newspaper Work Station Activity Sheet-
Interviews |
 |
 |
|
Poetry Work Station Activity Sheet- Author's Purpose |
 |
 |
|
Poetry Work Station Activity Sheet- How Does The Poem
Make You Feel? |
 |
 |
|
Poetry Work Station Activity Sheet- Connections |
 |
 |
|
Poetry Work Station Activity Sheet- Important Words |
 |
 |
|
Poetry Work Station Activity Sheet- Making Inferences |
 |
 |
|
Poetry Work Station Activity Sheet- Visualizing |
 |
 |
 |
|
|