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Writer’s Workshop Grade 2-3 Erin Pavente Catie Reeve.

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Presentation on theme: "Writer’s Workshop Grade 2-3 Erin Pavente Catie Reeve."— Presentation transcript:

1 Writer’s Workshop Grade 2-3 Erin Pavente Catie Reeve

2 Why? Creates an environment where writing every day is valued. Students have choice and ownership in their writing. Students feel motivated to write. Encourages writing as a life long habit.

3 Structure Mini-lesson Status of the Class Writing & Conferring Peer Sharing & Author’s Chair

4 Mini-lesson 5-10 minutes Provide many opportunities for modeling Mini-lesson structure  Connection  Teaching  Active Engagement  Link

5 Mini-lesson video Use the day length mini-lesson planner to record how Mrs. DiCesare includes all of the parts of a mini-lesson. Discussion

6 Status of the Class 2-3 minutes Teachers check in with each student briefly to determine where they are in the writing process.  Work in progress  Request a conference (editing)  Publishing Discussion- What process do we want to use for status of the class as a grade level?

7 Prewriting  Thinking, brainstorming, envisioning, drawing, labeling.  Students are getting ready to write, choosing a topic, and picturing their ideas. Writing In Progress  Students are working out their ideas, getting their thoughts onto paper.  The focus is on composing, not on conventions. Revising  Students are rereading to add details, working out confusing parts.  Students are adding descriptive language, “fancying” up their writing! Editing  Students are rereading their writing to add appropriate writing conventions and fix spelling errors.  Students work with a teacher to make their writing grammatically correct. Publishing  Students create a final, polished copy of their work.  Students use a special publishing notebook or paper. The Writing Process This is not a linear process, and students can move back and forth between the stages with varying levels of independence.

8 Writing and Conferring 20-40 minutes Students are writing.  ALL students are engaged in the writing process- no exceptions!  Students will work at their own pace and move through the stages of the writing process. Teachers are conferring.  Keep it brief and warm. Compliment the writer for the strategies they are using.  Stay focused on teaching points such as content, topic choice and fluency of story telling.

9 Conferring Video Watch Stephanie Parson’s envisioning conference. How does she use teaching points to guide the student’s writing? Discuss with a partner.

10 Tips for Conferring Research the writer through observation and conversation, looking for strengths. Choose the strategy you want to reinforce. Give a specific example of when the writer used the strategy. Tell the writer why the strategy is helpful. Re-state the steps of the strategy in a way that transfers to all writing.

11 Peer Sharing and Author’s Chair less than 10 minutes Students share their writing everyday. Sharing can be used as a way to reinforce your teaching points and mini-lessons. Celebrate student achievement.

12 Share Time Video Watch Mrs. DiCesare lead share time. How does she intentionally choose students to share? How does she maintain a respectful learning community? Discuss with a partner.

13 Record Keeping and Assessment Assessment Rubric- assessment tool that provides an in-depth look at individual student progress. Anecdotal Records- form to be used on a daily basis, helping you focus on student strengths and future teaching points.

14 Creating Meaningful Mini-lessons We need to use our record keeping and assessment to  Guide our instruction  Determine what to teach next  Choose what mini-lessons should be taught to the whole group vs. a small group  Maintain flexibility in our teaching Brainstorm mini-lesson ideas based on the writing you have seen so far in your classrooms.


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