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Writing For Professional Audiences: Becoming Powerful Change Agents Juan Araujo February 2, 2013.

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Presentation on theme: "Writing For Professional Audiences: Becoming Powerful Change Agents Juan Araujo February 2, 2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Writing For Professional Audiences: Becoming Powerful Change Agents Juan Araujo February 2, 2013

2 Let’s Write What is something you've done as an English Language Arts teacher that took guts, and was it worth the risk? (Due November 15) 7-10 minutes

3 Writing For Publication Reasons:  Contribute to the professional dialogue  To spread knowledge that adds to the language and literacy profession  Share/validate classroom ideas  Publish scholarly findings  To professionally develop oneself  To meet promotion and tenure requirements

4 Look-Think-Act Identify a Current Problem Collect/think about Data Use the Results in your Teaching Write it up Stringer, E. T. (1999). Action research: A handbook for practitioners. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

5 It’s a Mindset Writing ReadingListening Speaking Writing crystallizes thought, and thought produces action.” Paul Meyer

6 What Do The Experts Say?

7 Always be Writing  Explore who you are as a writer  Know what environment suits you  Are you a Mac or Windows user?  Talk to others about your writing  Put it in your calendar  Carry a notebook  Write

8 Think-Pair-Share About You  Who are you as a writer?  Who are you as a teacher of writing?  What environment suits you?  What writing tools do you use?  What feelings do you get when you see your name in print? 7 minutes

9 Publishing in Scholarly Journals  Planning  Writing the manuscript  Submitting the manuscript  The waiting game  Replying to revise and resubmit

10 Teacher as Researcher “Systematic, intentional inquiry by teachers.” (Lytle and Cochran-Smith, 1990) Why  Increases understanding of educational concerns  Focuses on a problem of immediate need  Geared toward practical needs  Encourages collaboration

11 Other Practitioner Ideas? Blogs Newspapers – Education Week – Dallas Morning News Teacher Magazines – Yes!Magazine Newsletters – NCTE Inbox – Smartbriefs

12 One Personal Example Literacy Research Association Yearbook  January/February 2010—Drafted proposal  March 2010—Submitted proposal for review  November 2010—Edit paper and handouts  December 2010—Present paper in FW  January 2011-Submitted paper for review  March 2011—Received provisional acceptance  May 2011—Submit revisions  July 2011—Camera-ready copy  November 2011—Published

13 Let’s Share For the next five minutes meet someone “new” to you and talk about your publishing experiences.

14 Find a Buddy  To be a sounding board  To provide mutual support  To be honest  Because writing is social! It needs to be read and heard.  To be that “critical friend”

15 What Do The Experts Say?

16 Sharpen Your Writing Write daily Log your time Post your questions somewhere Send papers to non-experts Read aloud Introduce concepts gently

17 Just Do It—Hit Send Brainstorming Planning and Organizing your thoughts Drafting/ Sharing Draft Revising and Editing Hitting the send button Modified from virtual.yosemite.cc.ca.us/lumanr2/english_25/Writing_Process.ppt


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