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Argument Writing Units and other MAISA Units Thursday, January 26, 2012

Argument Writing Units and other MAISA Units Thursday, January 26, 2012. Day Two Facilitator: Pam Rickli, Allegan Area ESA ELA Consultant. Introductions. Please introduce yourself to a partner at your table

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Argument Writing Units and other MAISA Units Thursday, January 26, 2012

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  1. Argument Writing Units and other MAISA UnitsThursday, January 26, 2012 Day Two Facilitator: Pam Rickli, Allegan Area ESA ELA Consultant

  2. Introductions • Please introduce yourself to a partner at your table •  With your partner, please share effective advice you’ve received or given about good writing • Be ready to share one piece of advice with the group.

  3. Agenda: Part 2 -Welcome and Grounding-Immersion-Model Lesson & Writing Invitation-Conferring:  Notice and Name-Walk Through Lessons-Organize and Integrate

  4. Outcomes: Part 1 Establish baseline knowledge of Common Core State Standard and text type of the units Interact with a Michigan-created Argument Unit Have awareness of upcoming Units

  5. Anchor the Standard of Focus

  6. Text Types and Purposes 1. Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence. 2. Write informative/explanatory texts to examine and convey complex ideas and information clearly and accurately through the effective selection, organization, and analysis of content. 3. Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, well-chosen details, and well-structured event sequences.

  7. Production and distribution of Writing 4. Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience. 5. Develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, editing, rewriting, or trying a new approach. 6. Use technology, including the Internet, to produce and publish writing and to interact and collaborate with others.

  8. Research to Build and Present Knowledge 7. Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects based on focused questions, demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation. 8. Gather relevant information from multiple print and digital sources, assess the credibility and accuracy of each source, and integrate the information while avoiding plagiarism. 9. Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research. range of Writing

  9. Range of Writing 10. Write routinely over extended time frames (time for research, reflection, and revision) and shorter time frames (a single sitting or a day or two) for a range of tasks, purposes, and audiences.

  10. Opinion/Argument Writing • K-5 Opinion • 6-12 Argument

  11. Reading like a Detective & Writing like an Investigative Reporter

  12. It’s all about Evidence http://sitemaker.umich.edu/argument/home http://www.theopedproject.org/

  13. In contrast to the traditional Western concept of argument as being about disputation or combat… … Communication theorists describe an invitational argument, the kind that aims not to defeat another person or group but to invite others to enter a space of mutual regard and exploration. (Everything is an Argument, p. 5) Purposes of Argument

  14. Quote from CCSS Appendix A, p. 25 …The proper context for thinking about argument is one “in which the goal is not victory but a good decision, one in which all arguers are at risk of needing to alter their views, one in which a participant takes seriously and fairly the views different from his or her own” Such capacities are broadly important for the literate, educated person living in the diverse, information-rich environment of the twenty first century.

  15. Argument as Critical Thinking • Argument is not simply a dispute, as when people disagree with one another or yell at each other. • Argument is about making a case in support of a claim in everyday affairs – in science, in policy making, in courtrooms, and so forth.

  16. Persuasive Writing vs. Argument… • “‘In persuasive essay, you can select the most favorable evidence, appeal to emotions, and use style to persuade your readers. Your single purpose is to be convincing’ (Kinneavy and Warriner, 305) • Argument, on the other hand, is mainly about logical appeals and involves claims, evidence, warrants, backing, and rebuttals.” (Hillocks, xvii) • From Page 24 of Appendix A of ELA Common Core State Standards Document

  17. Elements of Argument Toulmin’s concept A claim Based on evidence Qualifications and rebuttals refute competing claims Argument A warrant explains how evidence supports the claim Backing supports the warrants

  18. They Say … I SayMoves that matter in Academic Writing Begins As a Result This Practice Not with an act of assertion, but an act of listening, of putting ourselves in the shoes of those who think differently from us. We advise writers to begin not with what they themselves think about their subject (“I say”) but with what others think (“They say”) Adds urgency to writing, helping it become more authentically motivated. (Graff & Berkenstein, xiii)

  19. Immersion

  20. Immersion Work: It is recommended that immersion work take place during reading, a week or more prior to beginning the writing unit of focus.  It is also suggested that text selection should include published reviews as well as student authored work.  

  21. Modeling Mini Lesson

  22. What, Why, and How of Writing Through Mini Lesson

  23. What? • Write through the mini lesson with two perspectives • Teacher eyes • Writer eyes

  24. Why write through a mini lesson? Teachers should write so they understand the process of writing from within. Excerpt from Donald Murray, A Writer Teaches Writing 2003

  25. Why? “Teachers should write, first of all, because it is fun. It is a satisfying activity that extends both the brain and the soul.  It stimulates the intellect, deepens the experience of living, and is good therapy.  Teachers should write so they understand the process of writing from within. They should know the territory intellectually and emotionally:  how you have to think to write, how you feel when writing.   Teachers of writing do not have to be great writers, but they should have frequent and recent experience in writing.  If you experience the despair, the joy, the failure, the success, the work, the fun, the drudgery, the surprise of writing you will be able to understand the composing experiences of your students and therefore help them understand how they are learning to write.” Donald Murray, A Writer Teaches Writing 2003

  26. Ink Your Think Take a moment and write a notebook response to Donald Murray’s quote

  27. Write through session 2 We’ll write through this session just as your students will Please hold your “teacher” questions until after the mini lesson has been completely modeled.

  28. Reflection Turn to a partner and respond to these prompts: What did you notice about this mini lesson as a writer? What did you notice about this mini lesson as a teacher?

  29. Debrief the Architecture of a Mini Lesson

  30. Turn and Talk • With an elbow partner, turn and talk about what you noticed regarding the flow of the minilesson segments. • Be ready to share with the whole group.

  31. Conferring Notice Name Nudge

  32. Notice • Notice what the writer is doing that you taught or what works for you as a reader.What are you trying to do as a writer in this piece?What have you done so far? • Listen!

  33. Name • Name something you noticed in a way that’s general so the writer can use this strategy in other situations.I can see that you used. . . (name the strategy) that will be useful any time you…This part where you . . . works for me as a reader. . . because....

  34. Nudge • Nudge the writer to do some part of this work even better, maybe reiterate a teaching point, maybe help him/her try another way to get to the same goal, another strategy related to the same skill. There’s a strategy writers use that may be helpful to you as you are _______.May I give you a tip? • As the conference is coming to a close... So, tell me what you are going to do now as a writer on this piece?

  35. Teleprompter

  36. Purpose of Teleprompter: • Overview the entire unit • Become familiar with the lesson plan format and translate the lesson into a teaching format

  37. On Chart Paper: • Write the session number • For the Teaching and Active Engagementportions of your lesson: • words, phrases • bulleted lists • sketches

  38. Progression of K-5 Skills for Opinion Writing

  39. Organize and Integrate

  40. Road Map to the Next Level

  41. Making it Real • With a partner, talk about your doable goals • Write your goals • Stand up and share your goals with an eye partner

  42. Happy Writing and Teaching

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