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Written Composition Instruction

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... What are Attributes of Quality Writing Workshop? ... Writers' Workshop) composing processes (planning, drafting, revising/editing, and publishing) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Written Composition Instruction


1
Written Composition Instruction
  • TE 846
  • Learning Module 8

2
What are Attributes of Effective Writing
Instruction?
  • a predictable routine that permits each student
    to become comfortable with the writing process
    and move through the process over a sustained
    period of time at his/her own rate
  • a focus on authentic writing tasks and meaningful
    writing experiences for personal and collective
    expression, reflection, inquiry, discovery, and
    social change
  • a common language for shared expectations and
    feedback regarding writing quality (e.g., traits)
  • lessons designed to help students master craft
    elements (e.g., text structure, character
    development), writing skills (e.g., spelling,
    punctuation), and process strategies (e.g.,
    planning and revising tactics)
  • procedural supports such as conferences, planning
    forms and charts, checklists for
    revision/editing, and computer tools for removing
    transcription barriers
  • a sense of community in which (a) risks are
    supported (b) children and teachers are viewed
    as writers (c) personal ownership is expected
    and (d) collaboration is a cornerstone of the
    program
  • integration of writing instruction with reading
    instruction and content area instruction (e.g.,
    use of touchstone texts to guide genre study, use
    of common themes across the curriculum,
    maintaining learning notebooks in math and
    science classes)
  • a cadre of trained volunteers to respond to,
    encourage, coach, and celebrate childrens
    writing, which helps classroom teachers give more
    feedback and potentially individualize their
    instruction
  • resident writers and guest authors who share
    their expertise, struggles, and successes so that
    children and teachers have positive role models
    and develop a broader sense of writing as craft
  • opportunities for teachers to upgrade and expand
    their own conceptions of writing, the writing
    process, and how children learn to write,
    primarily through professional development
    activities, but also through being an active
    member of a writing community (e.g., National
    Writing Project)

3
What are Attributes of Quality Writing Workshop?
  • STUDENT WORK
  • there are frequent opportunities for students to
    regulate their writing behaviors, the writing
    environment, and the use of resources
  • daily writing occurs at school and home with
    students working on a wide range of composing
    tasks for multiple authentic audiences and
    purposes
  • students select their own writing topics or may
    modify teacher assignments, which are compatible
    with students interests
  • students work through the writing process at
    their own pace
  • students present work in progress as well as
    completed papers to other students in and out of
    the classroom to receive praise and feedback
  • students written work is prominently displayed
    in the classroom and throughout the school
  • INSTRUCTIONAL APPROACH
  • teachers intentionally adjust their instructional
    emphasis on meaning, form, and process to meet
    individual students needs
  • instruction covers a broad range of knowledge,
    skills, and strategies, including writing
    conventions, sentence and text structure, the
    functions and forms of writing, and planning and
    revising
  • teachers overtly model the writing process,
    writing strategies and skills, and positive
    attitudes toward writing during teacher-directed
    mini-lessons
  • follow-up instruction is provided to ensure
    mastery of target knowledge, skills, and
    strategies
  • ROUTINES
  • a predictable routine typically entails a
    mini-lesson, then an individual progress check,
    followed by independent writing and conferencing,
    and finally group sharing
  • regular student-teacher conferences are scheduled
    to discuss progress, establish writing goals and
    self-evaluation criteria, and provide
    individualized feedback, all in the context of
    high expectations
  • cooperative arrangements are established where
    students help one another plan, draft, revise,
    edit, and publish their written work
  • teachers arrange for periodic conferences and
    frequent communication with families to discuss
    the writing program and students progress

4
How to Teach Writing
  • Writing Process (e.g., Writers' Workshop)
  • composing processes (planning, drafting,
    revising/editing, and publishing) are overlapping
    and recursive
  • to the degree that lower-level processes (e.g.,
    text transcription, spelling) are automatized,
    more cognitive resources can be devoted to
    meaning construction
  • students should be given time every day (close to
    one hour) for sustained writing and should be
    encouraged to work on a piece over several
    sessions
  • writing journals are a staple
  • model the writing process and strategic thinking
    for students
  • establish authentic purposes and real audiences
    for writing
  • use mini-lessons, individual conferences, and
    teachable moments to teach specific skills as the
    need arises and within the context of current
    writing activities
  • a sense of community should be established by
  • arranging the environment so that minimal teacher
    direction is needed for students to engage in
    writing activities
  • de-emphasizing the role of the teacher as expert
  • ensuring that students feel that they can take
    risks
  • permit students to select their own topics, but
    model and encourage writing on more challenging
    topics or using more sophisticated text
    structures that require information gathering
  • the teacher should not be the sole audience peer
    collaboration and sharing/publishing are used to
    help students incorporate the feedback and
    writing styles of others into their writing
  • encourage students to continue to plan as they
    draft
  • students should focus on content rather than form
    when drafting
  • revising for clarity and coherence should precede
    editing for mechanics

5
  • Explicit Skills and Strategies Instruction
  • explicitly teach rhetorical knowledge
  • explicitly teach transcription skills such as
    handwriting and spelling
  • handwriting instruction should emphasize
  • correct grasp
  • paper positioning
  • letter formation and spacing
  • comparing a letter with other letters, tracing
    letters, copying letters, and writing letters
    from memory
  • judicious review and feedback once a letter form
    is acquired
  • self-monitoring and evaluation of performance
  • spelling instruction should emphasize
  • words that are already used and misspelled by
    children
  • those words most likely to be used in their
    writing
  • common orthographic patterns
  • word study techniques
  • application of spelling knowledge through analogy
  • proofing
  • external aids
  • weekly pretests and posttests of spelling lists
    that include pattern words, self-selected words,
    and frequently misspelled words

6
A Metascript of Instructional Stages in
Self-Regulated Strategy Development (SRSD)WEB
RESOURCE
  • 1. Activate Develop Background Knowledge
  • discuss the characteristics of good writing
  • teach text structure for genre to be developed
  • 2. Discuss It
  • review current writing performance based on
    assessment data
  • discuss present attitudes and beliefs about
    writing and ineffective techniques
  • introduce the strategy to be taught and discuss
    its benefits and applications

7
  • 3. Model It
  • model strategy steps and self-regulation
    procedures across varied tasks
  • discuss ways that strategy steps may need to be
    modified for varied tasks, settings, or goals
  • collaboratively develop self-talk,
    self-monitoring, and self-reinforcement
    procedures
  • 4. Memorize It
  • have students memorize strategy steps, mnemonics,
    and self-talk

8
  • 5. Support It
  • collaboratively practice using the strategy steps
    and self-regulation procedures
  • collaboratively establish challenging but
    attainable writing goals
  • gradually fade support as students gain
    competence
  • discuss generalization and maintenance assign
    homework for generalization
  • 6. Independent Performance
  • fade overt self-regulation procedures
  • embed in process writing framework

9
Components of Self-Regulation
  • Goal Setting
  • enhances attention, motivation, and effort
  • facilitates strategic behavior
  • prompts self-evaluation
  • goals should be challenging, specific, proximal,
    and, if possible, self-selected
  • goals can focus on a process or an aspect of the
    product (for product goals, quality and quantity
    goals can be established)

10
  • Self-talk (instructions or questions)
  • help orient attention to relevant information,
    organize thoughts, plan actions, and execute
    behaviors
  • help cope with anxiety, frustration, self-doubt,
    and impulsivity
  • provide self-affirmation and encouragement
  • Self-evaluation
  • comprised of self-monitoring and self-recording
  • can self-assess attention, strategy use, and
    performance
  • most effective for performance deficits

11
  • Self-reinforcement
  • requires self-evaluation in relation to a
    performance standard
  • just as powerful as external inducements
  • Environmental Management
  • arranging work environment to maximize
    productivity (e.g., seeking a quiet work space,
    having all necessary materials, playing soothing
    music)

12
Some Tips on Promoting Strategy Maintenance and
Generalization
  • Strategy instruction must be prolonged, covering
    implementation across tasks, settings, and people
  • Make the expectation for continued use in many
    contexts explicit
  • Solicit students ideas about the conditions
    under which a strategy might be deployed and what
    modifications might be necessary
  • Use other school personnel as confederates (i.e.,
    have them prompt and reinforce strategy use and
    report on students efforts have students report
    back as well)

13
  • Always relate task performance to strategy use
    (e.g., discuss performance before versus after
    strategy instruction have students evaluate
    pretest/posttest writing samples written by
    others who learned the strategy)
  • Plan instructional booster sessions
  • Have students teach the strategy to others
  • Have students create a transportable binder in
    which cue sheets or procedural facilitators are
    inserted and indexed
  • Encourage students to personalize the strategy
    after they have mastered the original steps
  • Authorize students who excel at particular
    strategies (or knowledge or skills) to be experts
    and serve as a resource for fellow students

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20
What is Revising?
  • Re-seeing goals, ideas, and text
  • Dissonance location and resolution
  • Occurs throughout the writing process
  • Metaphor of pruning and grafting

21
Why is Revising So Difficult?
  • Make inaccurate presuppositions regarding shared
    understanding
  • Focus on localized and superficial issues rather
    than discourse-level issues
  • Miss inaccuracies and confusing spots and/or do
    not know what to change when a problem is
    detected
  • Feel too wedded to text already produced
  • Difficulty managing revising along with other
    cognitive, linguistic, physical, and motivational
    operations
  • Little instruction is devoted to helping students
    revise
  • Teachers give limited helpful feedback on papers

22
How Can We Foster Effective Revising?
  • Examination of touchstone texts and comparing
    these with weak exemplars
  • Activities to develop genre and topic knowledge
  • Extensive modeling
  • Word-processing software
  • Checklists (e.g., COLA, SEARCH)
  • Peer and teacher conferencing (e.g., PQP)
  • Tactical procedures (e.g., goal setting,
    flash-drafting, CDO)
  • Snapshots and thoughtshots to explode the moment

23
Adapted from Singer Bashir, 1999
24
Adapted from Ellis Friend, 1991
25
Adapted from De La Paz Graham, 1999
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