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Improving the Quality of Student Writing Putting It All Together Having the Write Stuff.

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Presentation on theme: "Improving the Quality of Student Writing Putting It All Together Having the Write Stuff."— Presentation transcript:

1 Improving the Quality of Student Writing Putting It All Together Having the Write Stuff

2 Lucy McCormick Calkins The Art of Teaching Writing Writing begins with a leap of faith, with a decision to make meaning from a chosen thread, and the truth of the matter is that anything can start us on the road to significance.

3 The Writing Process Purpose Why are we writing? »to take notes »to convey information »to correspond with others »to record experiences Audience Who will the readers be? What do they need to know? What is their point of reference? Message What do we want to say?

4 The Writing Process Continued Construction- constantly adding details and remembering the message Editing and revising- rereading, reflecting and evaluating Layout- using visual conventions  Writing challenges children to actively think about print.

5 Phase 1 Pre-Emergent Children are experimenting with marks on paper to make connections between spoken and written language. They scribble and make marks on paper as they try to copy adult writing and try to communicate a message.

6 Phase 2 Emergent Writing Children know that speech can be written down. They know that print carries a message. They understand that print goes from left to right and top to bottom. They experiment with writing letters and words and combinations of the two.

7 Phrase 3 Developing Writing Children write about things that are important to them. They are beginning to write for other people They know what they want to write and struggle to put it on paper. If they concentrate too much on one aspect (ex. form or neatness) they may “lose” what they want to say.

8 Phase 4 Fluent Writing Writers know most of the basic elements of the writing process. They are able to choose different types of writing to suit different purposes.

9 Phase 5 Proficient Writing Writers have developed a personal style. They can adapt text for different audiences. They have control over spelling and punctuation. They select appropriate words from a wide vocabulary.

10 Why Do We Use Writing Rubrics? to clarify our own expectations (standards alignment) to communicate our expectations to students to create more consistent evaluation of student learning to inform our teaching and planning of instructional strategies

11 Self- Assessment Questions about my writing: Do I have a catchy lead? Did I stick to my topic and support it with details? Do I have a beginning, middle and end? Did I use interesting words and sentences? Does my spelling, capitalization, and punctuation make it easy for the reader to understand?

12 How Does MLPP Assessment Inform Instructional Planning What knowledge and skills are reflected in the students writing? What challenges does the student face? What areas does he/she need to develop more fully? What interventions or supports would assist this student in meeting his/her challenges? What can the teacher do to help the student grow as a writer?

13 Attributes in Writing Idea Development (Content) – Knowing what I want to say –Focusing on the main point –Adding important details –Identifying the purpose

14 Attributes Organization –Putting things in order –Writing a lead –Writing a conclusion –Linking ideas together

15 Attributes Voice/Style –Putting yourself in your writing –Thinking of your audience –Linking your topic and letting it show –Matching voice to purpose

16 Attributes Word Choice –Painting pictures with words –Finding the right words –Avoiding fluff (nice, good) –Favoring strong verbs

17 Planning Instruction: Using Writer’s Workshop Prewriting Drafting Revising Editing Publishing

18 Prewriting The teachers should: Provide background knowledge about topics Allow students to participate in decisions/choices about a topic Provide time for students to gather information and details Define project clearly and explain assessment criteria.

19 Drafting The teacher should: Teach students how to draft (model) Provide support, encouragement and feedback Emphasize content over mechanics Encourage students to cycle back to prewriting to gather more ideas when needed Circulate and conference at each desk reminding students to reread, while focusing on their strengths and advising them of their needs and plan mini-lessons from observations.

20 Revising The teacher should: Organize writing groups after mini-lessons Teach students how to function in writing groups using constructive discussions Participate in the groups as a listener and an advisor, providing feedback Encourage students to listen to suggestions and make some revisions (Using “legs”)!!!

21 Editing Teachers should: Teach students how to “buddy edit” Prepare editing checklists for students Assist students with locating and correcting mechanical errors Diagnose student errors and provide appropriate instruction Correct the remaining errors for each student

22 Publishing Encourage students to create illustrations when they are finished or hire an illustrator The teacher can arrange for finished products to be typed on computers or put into book covers Organize an Author’s Day Celebration, a Writer’s Day Tea or a Writer’s Field Day

23 Model Examples of Good writing Examples of How to write SupportFeedback TimeChoice Promoting Effective Writing

24 Connecting Reading and Writing Reader Response is a natural link between reading and writing. Any story encountered by children can be linked to a piece of shared, interactive or independent writing. Books read aloud become a strong foundation for interactive and independent writing. Fountas and Pinnell(2000)

25 Writers Notebook Gathering Seeds Interesting things we see Snippets of dialogue or conversations Quotations from music, literature, films, pop culture, etc. Setting ideas from places we have been Family stories we know Character ideas from interesting people What you Know by Heart, Katie Wood Ray

26 Reviser’s Checklist Do I like the lead, or can I find a better one? Where can I use “binoculars”? Can I insert a “snapshot”? Should I “explode a moment”? How do I “shrink time”? Do I need to build a scene? Taken from Barry Lane Reviser’s Toolbox

27 Mini Lessons that Use Literature to Develop Writing Strategies Strong leads are like a magic flashlight Zoom in “binoculars” look for details “Snapshots” use the senses to paint a picture “Thoughtshots” go inside the head “Explode a Moment” revisit/relive/stretch Create a scene, (snapshot+thoughtshot+dialogue)


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