Posts

Structure for Writing Workshop

Over the course of this year, countless times I read this: to get better at writing, I must write – definitely a big overarching idea. I get it – and every time I sit down to write I hear a little voice saying comments like: “You can do it. Just get started”; “You have something to say – so say it, and then clean it up”;   “you won’t get better at writing if you don’t put in the work”. I am hopeful that over the years our students who participate in writing workshop won’t struggle with writing the way I do.  And, what does that mean for us?  We need to structure the writing experience in authentic, kid-friendly ways that will fire up kids to want to write.  We need to give them plenty of writing time. The other big reoccurring idea: use mentor texts to show kids what accomplished authors do to produce a good piece of writing.  Jennifer Jacobsen in No More “I’m Done!”  lays out a possible approach and values using what many of you do already – ...

Red is Best

The brother I talked about last week recently went to an art class. I was impressed with what he produced – he would be the first to say that he cannot draw.  He had a great art teacher who walked the class through every step - scaffolding.  A finished canvas stays on display throughout the sessions.  And Mark would readily admit “_______ no!  I can’t draw.” Mark’s experience reminded me of how mentor texts can be used to show our students how to study and imitate author techniques. Mentor texts can help writers take risks.  Ideally a mentor text should be a passage that students can relate to and maybe even read independently. Check out the oral reading of this mentor opinion book Red Is Best by Kathy Stinson . Let me share an entry I wrote about my favorite color – I used Stinson’s approach – and I don’t think it’s “stealing” her style.  By studying Stinson’s approach, I’m learning a fun little way to give enough reasons for my color choice.  ...

WILL READING OUR EMAILS ALOUD IMPROVE OUR WRITING?

WILL READING OUR EMAILS ALOUD IMPROVE OUR WRITING? My older brother Mark reads my blog.  While Mark is not a teacher, his job requires a fair amount of high pressured written messaging. - especially in email form.  Recently he sent me an article by Sam Leith that has helped him with his writing. Mark suggested I might use ideas from the article as a blog entry.  Mark’s comments indicate that while he understands that Leith was talking about many important aspects of content in a written piece, Mark’s greatest walk away from the article was in response to Leith’s suggestion of reading aloud any important written Email message before pushing “Send”.  Pretty good advice for any of us… Mark read the article, the article spoke to him, and, because it spoke to him he heard its message. And, while Mark probably didn’t read Sam Leith’s article aloud, he does now follow the advice Leith gives – he almost always reads aloud any important Email message he needs to convey ...

Brown Bag Teacher

If I haven’t mentioned that my school’s literacy coach, Courtney, is AWESOME – it’s high time to give her a shout out. She is really on top of her game – she makes us all better educators. Recently she shared with us that she is planning to create mentor text bins for teachers to use during reading and writing. Yes – to that, Courtney!   And yes to helping all of us learn how best to use the mentor texts.   So much in the “writing” literature supports using mentor texts to help all of us examine and study just what it is accomplished authors do to produce a solid piece of writing.    This link is a young teacher’s blog – brownbagteacher - Catherine Reed teaches in a small town in Kentucky – with a small class of students; this is only her 4 th year of teaching.   She shares so many great ideas on writing in this particular posting, but her entire blog is worth cruising as it’s literally chucked full of ideas on creating organizing material...

Procedural Writing

The work of Katie Wood Ray is helping me “unearth” some of the complexities surrounding writing; she is especially good about recognizing how authors use   structure   to construct meaning.    During a recent science teacher observation, I became more aware of how teaching students the structure of   procedural writing   in writing up a science experiment is more than learning the data from the science experiment – it is also a    student learning how to write up an experiment following   procedural writing   guidelines .   What is   procedural writing ?    A procedural text instructs the reader on how to complete a specific task.    So many of us already do this type of information writing with our students.    However, an important realization is the focus on teaching students that   procedural writing   is a structure many authors use to present information – and certain informati...

7 Minute Writes

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I can think of a few times in my life when I got involved in a project – and, more or less, got lost in the execution of the project. One such time was the building of jumbo size Jenga game – (Jenga being the game of starting out with a sturdy tower of wooden blocks and players take turns removing a wooden block – one at a time – with a steady hand until the whole stack crashes down). I found a blueprint on-line and used a miter saw to carefully saw and then sand two by fours to create a fairly large Jenga tower to play with my college buddies.  I remember the intensity and the satisfaction of the experience. Are there writing teachers out there who have created similar conditions like the conditions I am describing in my Jenga project – conditions that foster passion and stick-to-it-ness for their young “authors” to create a writing piece they are committed to and proud of – and want to share?  A former colleague, Caroline Colletti recently shared such resource below – it...

See Saw

Most of us would agree that writing is complex. Katie Wood Ray, a writing educator, unravels some of the complexity by breaking writing in two ways -   common structures and way with words. Most of us understand the basics of way with words, but maybe not structure as much.   First, what is a structure?   Structure is what gives the passage a sense of wholeness; in other words, its structure that helps the passage hang together. Authors use different structures to build a passage.   One very common text structure is what Wood Ray calls sea saw – she says it this way “it’s a very predictable balance of information that moves back and forth, back and forth – when you get one side of the relationship, you come to expect the other side will follow directly”. I decided to give this sea saw structure a try.   I’m a new homeowner and recently had to call on one of the gifted tradesmen we easily take for granted; most recently I hired a plumb...