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Writing in the Elementary Classroom

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Dismal Horrifying Rude Curt. Mistrustful Warm Sarcastic. Thoughtful Revealing Passionate ... What will be the evidence that this component was observed and was ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Writing in the Elementary Classroom


1
Writing in the Elementary Classroom
  • -Writers Workshop
  • -The writing lesson plan
  • -Six Traits 1
  • -Writing Next

2
Voice
  • Happy Ridiculous Bereaved
  • Bizarre Concerned Tentative
  • Dismal Horrifying Rude Curt
  • Mistrustful Warm Sarcastic
  • Thoughtful Revealing Passionate
  • Caring Frightful Subtle Detached
  • Critical Caring Timid Naïve
  • Introspective Clever Gracious Earnest
  • Scholarly Profound Flat Thrilled Mean

3
Article Discussions
4
The Writing Observation Framework
  • I am an elementary principal. I am doing a
    walk-through of your classroom. My observation
    today focuses on classroom climate. What will be
    the evidence that this component was observed and
    was judged to be of very high quality?

5
A Process Approach
6
A Process Approach
7
Components of Writers Workshop
8
The Writing Lesson Plan
9
Mini-lessons (Structure)
  • Supplies
  • Movement
  • Responsibilities
  • Peer editing
  • Conferencing

10
Mini-lessons (Types of Writing)
  • Descriptive-describe something through stories,
    poems, and essays
  • Expressive-close to normal speech, includes
    diaries, letters, journals, logs
  • Narrative-entertain through stories, poems, and
    plays
  • Expository-research reports and explanations of
    technical procedures
  • Persuasive-essays to argue a position or to
    persuade the reader to do or believe something

11
Mini-lessons (Story Elements)
  • Beginning, middle, end
  • Plot-conflict, climax, and resolution
  • Setting-place and time
  • Character development
  • Message
  • Role of the narrator

12
Mini-lessons (Non-fiction Elements)
  • Expository text structure
  • Model research and writing
  • Work on a single collaborative piece
  • Provide guiding questions or an outline to assist
    individual students
  • Follow steps of the writing process to complete
    the research and writing

13
Mini-lessons (Autobiographies/biographies)
  • Teach about selection of resources
  • Teach paraphrasing
  • Teach citation of references
  • Teach interviewing
  • Teach note-taking
  • Teach organizing and outlining

14
Mini-lessons (Poetry)
  • Teach sensitivity to language (exposure, sharing,
    memorizing, choral speaking)
  • Teach technical terminology of poetry
  • simile, metaphor, alliteration, personification,
    onomatopoeia, hyperbole, oxymoron

15
Mini-lessons (Letter Writing)
  • Form
  • Content

16
Mini-lessons (Tools of Writing)
  • Handwriting
  • Spelling
  • Dictionary skills
  • Grammar/sentence transformations (363),
  • Word substitutions, sentence expansions, sentence
    combining
  • Punctuation and capitalization
  • Technology applications

17
Mini-lessons (Six Traits 1)
  • Ideas
  • Organization
  • Voice
  • Word Choice
  • Sentence Fluency
  • Conventions
  • Presentation

18
The 6 1 TRAIT Model
  • It is a vocabulary teachers use to describe
    their vision of what good writing looks like-any
    kind of writing.
  • Certain characteristics make the writing work
    ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence
    fluency, conventions, and presentation.

19
The 6 1 TRAIT Model
  • Assessment drives instruction.
  • Students are taught to assess their own work
    also.
  • Students are taught right from the beginning what
    writers do to make their work strong. Goals are
    set for improvement, one trait at a time.

20
The 6 1 TRAIT Model
  • In the mid 1980s researchers from the Northwest
    Educational Laboratory (NWREL) began development
    of six traits.

21
The 6 1 TRAIT Model
  • The key to assessment is the word itself. It
    comes from the Latin verb assidire to sit
    beside. We are not ranking here. We are sitting
    beside a piece of writing and observing its
    qualities. We are finding a common language to
    talk about those qualities
  • Barry
    Lane

22
The 6 1 TRAIT Model
  • -Weaving assessment and instruction
  • -Writing is not a linear process
  • -Be crystal clear with students about what you
    are asking them to do and why
  • -Use correct terminology
  • -Use focused revision

23
Six Trait-Definitions
  • Ideas make up the content of the piece of
    writing-the heart of the message

24
Six Trait-Definitions
  • Organization is the internal structure of the
    piece, the thread of meaning, the logical pattern
    of the ideas

25
Six Trait-Definitions
  • Voice is the soul of the piece. Its what makes
    the writers style singular, as his or her
    feelings and convictions come out through the
    words.

26
Six Trait-Definitions
  • Word Choice is at its best when it includes the
    use of rich, colorful, precise language that
    moves and enlightens the reader.

27
Six Trait-Definitions
  • Sentence fluency is the flow of the language, the
    sound of word patterns-the way the writing plays
    to the ear, not just to the eye

28
Six Trait-Definitions
  • Conventions represent the pieces level of
    correctness-the extent to which the writer uses
    grammar and mechanics with precision

29
Six Trait-Definitions
  • Presentation zeros in on the form and layout-how
    pleasing the piece is to the eye

30
Six Traits Discussion
31
Writing as Part of Balanced Literacy
  • Shared writing
  • Interactive writing
  • Guided writing
  • Independent writing

32
Writing Next
  • Writing differs from reading. While readers
    form a mental representation of thoughts written
    by someone else, writers formulate their own
    thoughts, organize them, and create a written
    record of them using the conventions of spelling
    and grammar.

33
Writing Next
  • Scores on the NAEP and ACT show evidence that
    adolescents need interventions to help them
    become better writers.
  • Writing proficiency has become critical in the
    workplace.

34
Writing Next
  • Writers must use strategies to plan, evaluate,
    and revise text to accomplish a variety of goals
  • Writing is a tool for extending and deepening
    students knowledge as they learn subject matter.

35
Writing Next
  • 11 key elements to improve writing achievement in
    grades 4-12 have been identified through
    meta-analysis of experimental and
    quasi-experimental studies in a variety of
    contexts.
  • The elements are interlinked and can be
    integrated into everyday writing curricula.
  • The elements are ordered according to their
    effect size.

36
Writing Next-Element 1
  • Writing strategies
  • Self-regulated strategy development
  • Students are active collaborators in the learning
    process
  • Instruction includes six stages
  • Develop background knowledge
  • Describe it
  • Model it
  • Memorize it
  • Support it
  • Independent use

37
Writing Next-Element 2
  • Summarization
  • Explicit, systematic teaching (rule governed or
    intuitive approaches)
  • Models of good summaries
  • Fading models of good summaries

38
Writing Next-Element 3
  • Collaborative Writing
  • Work together to plan, draft, revise, and edit
  • High level(Helper)tutor, low level(Writer)
    tutee
  • Teacher monitors, prompts, and praises

39
Writing Next-Element 4
  • Specific Product Goals
  • Identify purpose of the assignment (persuasive)
  • Identify characteristics of the final product

40
Writing Next-Element 5
  • Word Processing
  • Has a consistent positive effect on writing
    quality
  • Collaborative work or under the guidance of the
    teacher
  • Produces neat and legible script
  • Allows writers to add, delete, and move text
    easily

41
Writing Next-Element 6
  • Sentence combining
  • Teaching students to combine to create
    increasingly complex sentences enhances writing
  • Use connectors like and, but, and because
  • Embed adjectives, adverbs and clauses
  • Is an alternative to traditional grammar lessons

42
Writing Next-Element 7
  • Pre-writing
  • Help students generate or organize ideas for
    writing
  • Improves the quality of their writing
  • Includes
  • Gathering information for a paper through reading
  • Developing a visual representation
  • Group and individual planning
  • Planning

43
Writing Next-Element 8
  • Inquiry Activities
  • Engage students in activities that help them
    develop ideas and content for a particular
    writing task by analyzing immediate concrete data
    through comparing, contrasting, and evaluating
    evidence)
  • Activities have clearly specified goals
  • Analyze data before writing

44
Writing Next-Element 9
  • Process writing approach
  • Involves creating extended opportunities for
    writing writing for real audiences cycles of
    planning, translating, and reviewing personal
    responsibility and ownership of writing high
    levels of student interaction supportive writing
    environments self-reflection and evaluation
    individualized attention systematic instruction
  • Teacher training is a factor in its success

45
Writing Next-Element 10
  • Study of Models
  • Analyze examples to emulate critical elements,
    patterns, and forms embodied in the models

46
Writing Next-Element 11
  • Writing for Content Area Learning
  • Writing to learn was equally effective for all
    content areas (social studies, math, and science)
  • In a writing to learn approach the teacher
    assigns writing tasks but does not provide
    explicit instruction in writing skills
  • Writing to explain
  • Writing to elaborate
  • Communicating understanding
  • Describing a change in thinking

47
Writing Next-Grammar
  • A negative effect was found for grammar
    instruction
  • Although grammar instruction is important,
    alternative procedures, such as sentence
    combining, are more effective than traditional
    approaches for improving the quality of students
    writing

48
Writing Next-Discussion
  • Writing proficiency develops over time
  • Free association of ideas
  • Growing knowledge of stylistic conventions
  • Awareness of process
  • Awareness of audience
  • Writing becomes a tool for transforming ones own
    experiences and knowledge
  • Lower level skills (handwriting, keyboarding,
    spelling, grammar, punctuation) assist in higher
    level writing strategies (planning, generating,
    and revising text)
  • Match writing intervention to the needs of
    students (assessment and diagnostic teaching)

49
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