2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AS/A2 – Making Notes Supporting Students Learning.
Advertisements

Year 2 Formative Progress Review
Know role of and characteristics of effective feedback
2013 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute.
Critical Thinking Course Introduction and Lesson 1
WORKING TOGETHER ACROSS THE CURRICULUM CCSS ELA and Literacy In Content Areas.
Close Reading Strategies for Middle School Readers
September 2013 The Teacher Evaluation and Professional Growth Program Module 2: Student Learning Objectives.
2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute.
EXPLORING PURPOSE AND AUDIENCE WITH MIDDLE LEVEL WRITERS Reasons to Write Alisha Bollinger – 2015 Nebraska Reading Conference.
2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute.
Inquiry-Based Cooperative Learning Socratic Circles, Questioning Strategies, & Whole-Class Engagement By Molly M. Carman.
PUT TITLE HERE Student Success 2011 Summer Program NAME OF YOUR MODULE HERE DAY 2 Student Success 2011 Summer Program Facilitating Learning Teams using.
2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute.
Understanding the Process and the Product Professional Development Spring, 2012.
Science Inquiry Minds-on Hands-on.
Customer Focus Module Preview
Productive Math Talk Math Alliance April 3, 2012.
Tuesday, January 8, 2013, 12:30pm-3:30 pm Hollywood Road Education Services - Room 2.
COMPONENTS OF AN EFFECTIVE WRITING PROGRAM
Reflective practice Session 4 – Working together.
ELA Coordinators Meeting: Close Reading and Text Complexity Tamra Gacek October, 2012 Literacy and Early Learning Unit Office of Teacher Effectiveness.
Looking at Student work to Improve Learning
Student-Centered Coaching Instructional Design and Assessment Presented by Diane Sweeney Author of: Student-Centered Coaching (Corwin, 2010), Student-
6 th Grade Language Arts Persuasive Essay Unit Unit Objectives: As a result of this unit, the students will know: how to construct a persuasive essay along.
1 Let’s Meet! October 13,  All four people have to run.  The baton has to be held and passed by all participants.  You can have world class speed.
Analyzing the Persuasive and Informational Genres of the W2 Writing Standard  GPS Review: Comparing/contrasting W1 and W2 Language of the Standards (LOTS)
Your User Name is the first portion of your Carleton Connect account eg. mroger4 if the was n.ca
Science Fiction Flowers for Algernon Drill 1 11/7 Homework: Final paper due 11/12 Objective: Students will with some guidance and support from.
Mini-Research Projects What are they? Sample Grade 6 Mini-Inquiry Sue Taylor-Foley SSDSB.
English Language Arts Level 7 #44 Ms. Walker
Where questions, not answers, are the driving force in thinking.
By Edward Lim 8.7.  What?  Today we started the Cornerstone Piece and we were given a few tasks to complete. The tasks were to watch the Kurt Fearnly.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION What does it look like and sound like when students use evidence to support their thinking?
The Why, What, When, How, and How- to of Book Clubs
EdTPA Teacher Performance Assessment. Planning Task Selecting lesson objectives Planning 3-5 days of instruction (lessons, assessments, materials) Alignment.
South Western School District Differentiated Supervision Plan DRAFT 2010.
Applying & Using Portfolios in Writing Plus, Writing for a Purpose: Veteran's Day Deb Wragge, ESU 8 August 5, 2015.
Leading Innovation 2011: Sanding the Edges - Tuning a Lesson STRUCTURED LESSON REVIEW BEGIN.
+ Chapter 7 Using Integrated Teaching Methods. + Integrated Teaching Methods Combining direct and indirect delivery of instruction Encourages self-directed.
2012 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute.
Medicine Hat School District #76 PLC’s Building Capability Through Collaborative Learning Developing tomorrow’s citizens through improved learning, living.
Record Keeping and Using Data to Determine Report Card Markings.
1 © 2009 University of Wisconsin-Extension, Cooperative Extension, Program Development and Evaluation How do I summarize and make sense of all these words?
Literacy Coaching: An Essential “Piece” of the Puzzle.
P.R.I.D.E. School Professional Day :45 am- 3:30 pm.
Response to Intervention RTI Teams: Following a Structured Problem- Solving Model Jim Wright
The Background & Research
Teaching Integrated Literacy Lessons by Aligning Reading and Writing Standards and Incorporating Reciprocal Processing Strategies to Improve the Writing.
EDUC 4454 – Class 20 P/J Methods
Santa Cruz County Office of Education Teaching Algebraic Thinking Professional Development Focus on Lesson Study October 11, 2010.
Summer Conference Wiki sion.wikispaces.com/ Fay Gore & Michelle McLaughlin
Instructional Strategies Cindy Cregar EDD/544. What should I consider when choosing an instructional strategy?
Learning AP ILD November 8, 2012 Planning and Monitoring for Learning.
Collaborative Grouping 6-12 Math Teachers. Workshop Outcomes Participants will gain effective strategies for forming and facilitating a classroom culture.
1 Los Angeles New Administrators Leadership Program Unit of Study 9 Conversations with Educators March 17, 2016.
4:00 – 4:05pm Welcome and Introductions 4:05 – 4:20pm Ice Breaker 4:20-4:30 pm Norms 4:30 – 5:00pm Journaling 5:00 – 5:30 pm Enquiry activity stations.
LW Version 1.0 August Supporting Schools and District Improvement in Massachusetts Building Professional Learning Communities to Improve Instruction.
ENG 125 Entire Course (Ash) For more course tutorials visit  ENG 125 Week 1 Assignment Reading Reflection  ENG 125 Week 1 DQ 1.
Purpose… …to help you improve your expository and persuasive writing, including conventions, in order to meet standard on the writing portion of the HSPE.
Research Methods and the Researched Argument Essay.
Differentiation Strategies for Multi-Grade, And Multi-Ability Classrooms By: Linda Miller Baker.
HUBBARD ELEMENTARY October 29, 2013 Susan Belgrad & Steve Holle
Informational Writing Unit Grade 7-Looking at Grade 6/year 1
Direct-Reach Teachers
Correlated Curriculum
Day 1: Review of Crucial information
Fishbowl Discussion Directions:
A E B D C Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet of paper.
Session 2. Learning From Student Work
Presentation transcript:

2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute

Day Eight Agenda 1.Scribe Report 2.Ticket out the Door Review 3.Teaching Demonstration Debrief Discussion 4.Teaching Demonstration – Kurt Rice 5.LUNCH – Response Groups 6.Leid Library (Special Collections) visit 7.Ticket out the Door

2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute

Scribe Report  When you hear the word left pass the bag to the person on your left.  When you hear the word right pass the bag to the person on your right.  When you hear any form of the word write pass the bag two people to the right.

2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute

Draft Teaching Demo Debrief 1.Form four groups of three or more with one facilitator per team 2.Assign one team per lens for lenses 1 – 4, everyone responds to lens 5 3.Access Teaching Demo Debrief form on Google Docs 4.Teaching Demonstration begins while participants note “warm feedback” and make observations made through their specific lens 5.After Teaching Demonstration concludes, whole group shares “warm feedback” verbally with presenter

Draft Teaching Demo Debrief, cont. 6.Presenter completes self-reflection writing addressing each of the five lenses, keeps copy for debrief next day 7.Lens teams collaboratively write response for each lens on Google Doc 8.All teams respond to Lens 5: “Questions” 9.Facilitators save Google Doc as Word Document, print copies for presenter Reflection / Debrief (on the next day following the demo) 10.Presenter reflects on the collaborative, five lens debrief process (3 minutes) 11.Whole group discusses the process, makes recommendations for next steps.

2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute

Puzzle Pieces Exploring Reconstruction of Mentor Texts and Student Writing as a Method to Facilitate Understanding of Purpose and Structure

Dilemma Many of my students are able to identify purpose and can generally articulate organizational patterns Narrative, persuasive, expository, Instructional Cause and effect, compare and contrast, chronological Many of my students are unable to write to specific purpose in an organized manner Mostly reflective or loosely narrative Ideas seemingly placed at random Evidence non-existent or disconnected from main idea Is this a problem for anyone else?

Prior Instructional Assumptions Reading and writing are intertwined skills; one must always accompany the other. Using published, exemplary texts, also known in as “mentor texts,” is a good way to improve anyone’s writing. The best way to use mentor texts is to have students analyze them through disassembly. The two best methods of disassembly are dialectical journaling and text annotation Once students have shown they can disassemble a text, they can move on to writing their own purposeful, well- organized pieces. What was practical result of these assumptions? Students dutifully produced façades. They found It was not necessary to critically read the text to meet the assignment requirements

What’s the Problem? I reflected on my own assumptions and made the following observations: My instruction is almost exclusively directive My assignments are prescriptive and focused entirely on production of a gradeable artifact My assignments are all isolated, individual activities I drive all group discussion Take a few minutes to use Attachment 1: Instructional Obs Form, to comment on why these might be potential areas to investigate.

Proposed Solution There is a glaring lack of student intellectual engagement outside the narrow confines of the finished product. Even though I might need to address the way I approach journaling and annotation, I feel there is no need to discard them. I do need to try some form of facilitated, cooperative, self-directed deconstruction of text. Paradoxically enough, instead of disassembling textual puzzles, students will put the puzzles together.

Process Overview Part 1: Using Mentor Texts The teacher locates and disassembles a range of mentor texts that exemplify various types and purposes for writing. Students receive only a portion of a piece of writing and are then required as a class to work together to reassemble the mentor texts in correct order Student groups then read their text as the rest of the class listens and writes their conclusions about the topic of the piece, purpose, and key details in order of presentation. We will accomplish Part 1 today.

Process Overview Part 2: Using Student Writing Students choose or be assigned a purpose for writing from among those “reconstructed” mentor pieces. The writing should be of similar length to the mentor text and the final draft must be electronically stored. Students disassemble their own writing and then (preferably) another class will run through the same reconstruction process as was accomplished with the mentor texts. We will not accomplishPart 2, but will discuss implications at the end of the demonstration.

Puzzle Pieces You will each receive a portion of a larger, complete text. It is a “puzzle piece” that fits with other pieces to form a whole story or article. You will find the matching pieces, then put them in order as a group.

Puzzle Pieces: Orient the Text (5 mins) When you get your “piece,” write your name on the sheet in the top left corner above the printed text. Read the text and annotate. What type of writing it? Where might it go in the story or article? What might its purpose be?

Puzzle Pieces: Match and Build (15 mins) Move around the room to find other students who have the puzzle pieces that connect to yours. Form your team in one area of the room. As a team, put your entire puzzle in order. Give each sheet a number corresponding to its place in the larger written work. Write each sheet order number in the upper right corner across from your name.

Puzzle Pieces: How Close Did We Get? Teams will read their completed puzzles Those who are listening will respond using A2: Listener Response Form

Puzzle Pieces: How Well Would This Work? How will students be able to use this in their own writing? Why is Part 2 necessary? What is the application potential at various grade levels? What is the application potential for various subject areas? In what ways can this idea be extended? What scaffolding might need to be considered?

2011 Southern Nevada Writing Project Summer Institute

Ticket out the Door: