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WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012

WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012. Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course. It

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Page 1: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

WRITING To LEARN

Seminar 3June 5, 2012

Page 2: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.

It helps them find their own language for the issues of the course; they stumble into their own analogies and metaphors for academic concepts.

Theorists are fond of saying that learning a discipline means learning a discourse. That is, students don’t know a field until they can write and talk about what is in the textbook and the lectures in their own lingo, in their informal home or personal language

Page 3: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Writing and the Content-Area Teachers

“Writing is powerful means for learning because the more students manipulate content, the more likely to remember and understand the content”

Page 4: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

When students write about content area, they:

-select and organize words to represent what they have learned/read

-relate, organize, connect ideas in the text-create systematic relationships between

words, sentences, paragraphs, etc…-draw on prior knowledge, background, and

purposes for reading-build interrelationships between ideas-helps students to think about to think critically

Page 5: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

The value of writing activities:

Students can not remain passive learners when engaged in writing activities related to content

Writing activities demand participation by every student, not just those who volunteer

Writing activities quickly demonstrate whether students understand a topic

Page 6: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Some Guidelines: Writing in the classroom should be frequent

and varied Every writing does not have to be graded Writing activities can be short and non-

threatening Writing activities should have a real and

immediate audience (the audience should be more than simply the teacher)

Publish and Celebrate your students’ writings Writing does not always have to be an essay or

a summary…

Page 7: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Forms of Writing

PoemsLettersPostersBrochuresShort StoriesRecipesTelegramsTime Capsule lists

Word problemsChildren’s booksCartoonsComplaintsEditorialsAbstractsEulogiesDirections

Instructional ManualsNews articlesJokesGuess Who/What DescriptionsCommercialsScripts

Page 8: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Reading and Writing as a Constructive Process

Reading and writing are separate, but overlapping processes that provide ways for the construction of meaning.

Just like reading, writing is a process-Prewriting-Writing-Post-writing

Page 9: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Pre-reading Writing Activities:

Motivate Help to focus attention Help them draw on relevant

knowledge and experiences Set purpose for reading

Page 10: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Writing Assignments Effective writing assignments are essential (e.g., bad assignments yield bad writing)

- Set purpose- Topic or Possible Topics related to Content- Audience (who will read or hear writing)- Possible modes or formats (e.g., essay, letter, poem,

etc.)

Page 11: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Writing Assignments should include:

Length Level of polish (first draft, second,

edited, revised, etc.) Format Focus on grammar, mechanics,

spelling Method of evaluation (include rubric)

Page 12: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Writing Activities

Guided-Writing Activity Learning Logs Quickwrites

Double-Entry Journal Framed paragraphs Reader Response

Page 13: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

SQ3R (Reading/Writing Activity) Survey text: Skim reading assignment for

headings and subheadings. Question: Turn the headings into the

question (Write them down leaving space for answers)

Read: Read to find the answer to the question

Recite or Write: Discuss the response with a partner…see if you agree. Write the answer under the question

Review: Review your questions and answers

Page 14: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Learning Logs Notebooks that students keep in order to record, ideas,

questions, and reactions to what they’ve read, observed, or listened to in class

Example from a Math Class-ask student to write an entry for each unit of study

-have them respond to open-ended probes that are designed to give her information on their

knowledge and possible misconceptions. 1. Ask students to write about the ways that they used

math over the weekend.1. What have you heard about averages?2. Who uses averages and for what?3. How are averages used?

Page 15: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Quickwrites(one minute papers) Encourage students to construct meaning

and to monitor their understanding Give students 2 or 3 minutes to write about

the topic of their reading assignment (can occur after a discussion of reading as well)

Use probes and prompts to get student going: write an interesting quotation from the reading, ask for the main point, ask them to write down what they remember, etc.

Page 16: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Microthemes Short writing assignments that can be written on an

index card Ask students to summarize key ideas form a reading

assignment, demonstration, experiment, or lecture in their own words

Students feel less intimidated when they only have an index card to fill

Students must plan carefully what they will say and how they will say it because they receive only one index card

Options: Take up index cards, let students share their summaries, let them ask questions about things they are confused, share answers and questions with a neighbor while you circulate the room

Page 17: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Guided-Writing Activity1. On the first day, activate students’ prior knowledge on

the topic by brainstorming and listing ideas on an overhead or chalkboard.

2. Ask the class to organize and label the ideas collectively.

3. Then ask the students to write individually on the topic using this information

4. In preparation for the second day, have the class read the text and revise their explanatory writing

5. In class on the second day, give a follow-up multiple-choice and essay exam on the text’s key ideas

(ex. Stress)

Page 18: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Double-Entry Journal

Text“Davy Crockett loved to brag about things he could lick—from wildcats to grizzly bears.” p. 6

Responses to TextWhat does that mean? Does that mean licks animals with his tongue… that’s disgusting!

I think that bragging makes people look stupid. When people brag, people are not impressed. In face, I find it extremely annoying when people brag.

Page 19: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Dialogue Journals

Between student and teacher Between student and student

Page 20: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

RAFT

Writing that encourages creativity and helps students get started

Role of the writer- I am a new business

Audience- my customers Form- I will write a brochure Topic- I will inform my customers

what I will do for them

Page 21: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

SPAWN Special Powers- (if you had special powers to

change any event in the novel or text, what would it be and why)

Problem Solving- (if you could solve the problems in text, what would you do and how)

Alternative viewpoints- after hearing one viewpoint on a topic, take the opposite view point or try to see the issue from someone else’s perspective

What if – (what if the story took place in another place or another time)

Next- (imagine what would happen next)

Page 22: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Reader-Response Journal Entries Interaction between reader and the text Personal meaning that the reader draws from the text

(even from content area texts) Not a summary

Prompts:What aspects of the text excited you or interested you?What are your feelings and attitudes about this aspect of

the text?What experiences have you had that help other

understand why you feel this way?

Page 23: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

The Writing Process

Although the following points describe writing activity in an exemplary classroom, it should be understood that the writing, reading, speaking, and listening processes are intended to be integrated. Several elements from each process should be at work in all language arts experiences in the classroom.

Page 24: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

The Writing Process

Prewriting Drafting Revising Editing Publishing/Sharing

Page 25: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

In the classroom the following should be in evidence:

the teacher modeling the writing process and sharing his/her own written work with students

the teacher providing instruction about the recursive nature of writing and the components of a writing process(e.g., pre-writing, planning, drafting, conferencing, revising, editing, sharing, publishing)

the students engaging in daily writing for a variety of audiences and purposes and in a variety of formats

the students moving around the classroom to accomplish their individual tasks, depending upon where they are in their writing process

Page 26: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

the teacher encouraging and instructing students about how to use writing as a means of thinking, responding, and learning (e.g., jotting notes, creating idea webs) the teacher using brief mini-lessons with individuals, small groups, or the whole class as needed to help students

review or acquire the language skills and concepts in the context of their own writing

the students using a variety of available tools (e.g., dictionary, thesaurus, computer word processor, language

usage handbook, peers) to assist them during writing

Page 27: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

the teacher conferring regularly with individual students about their writing, responding with encouraging, useful suggestions and providing assistance on a regular basis

the students engaging in conferences throughout the writing process (e.g., during revising and editing)

the teacher and students displaying and publishing their writing

Page 28: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Self-Evaluation and Peer-Conferences Ask yourself some of these questions (or have a conference partner ask them after reading the writing-in-progress):

• How do I feel about what I've written so far? • What is good that I can enhance? • Is there anything about it that concerns me, does not fit, or seems

wrong? • What am I discovering as I write this piece? • What surprises me? Where is it leading? • What is my purpose? • What is the one most important thing that I am trying to convey? • How can I build this idea? Are there places that I wander away

from my key idea?

Page 29: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

• Who is my audience?

• What might my readers think as they read through this piece?

• What questions will they ask?

• What will be their response to the different parts? To the whole?

• What might I do next?

• Would it help to try another draft ... to talk to a peer ... to talk to the teacher ... to check a resource book ... To reread it aloud, silently, several times ... to read a published example of this genre ... to put it aside ... to try the idea in a new genre ... to keep on writing ...?

Page 30: WRITING To LEARN Seminar 3 June 5, 2012.  Low stakes writing helps students involve themselves more in the ideas or subject matter of a course.  It

Minilessons Determine your students’ needs for

minilessons by evaluating their writing from various formats and from talking to students bout their struggles

Devise minilessons to address the problems that you discover

Minilessons may include: grammar, literary elements, using conventions appropriately, style, organization, getting started, story structure, language use, content, etc…