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Writer’s Workshop!

Writer’s Workshop!. By Jason McCoy. Writer’s workshop…. Allows choice in topic and form Follows through the entire writing process: planning, drafting, revision, proofreading, editing, publishing over many days Does NOT include prompts

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Writer’s Workshop!

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  1. Writer’s Workshop! By Jason McCoy

  2. Writer’s workshop…. • Allows choice in topic and form • Follows through the entire writing process: planning, drafting, revision, proofreading, editing, publishing over many days • Does NOT include prompts • Simulates the atmosphere in which real writers write and fosters children’s view of themselves as “real authors”

  3. Emphasize meaning! • “At any grade, to create willing writers you must begin the year by emphasizing meaning and deemphasizing mechanics and perfection. You want to establish in the first few weeks that the important thing about writing is what it says-not how perfectly it says it.” (Allington, Classrooms That Work)

  4. From your Guide to Big Blocks: • “If your state test requires students to write a creative narrative as part of assessment, it would only make sense that one of the focused units you teach during the year is creative narrative writing. Having creative narrative writing as one of your genres does not mean you have students responding over and over to creative narrative prompts. Instead, it means spending a considerable amount of time and instruction teaching students in this genre.”

  5. Personal Narratives or Memoirs are a great place to start: • To get reluctant writers involved these are great ways to bring in oral histories • Oral production is a necessary and often prerequisite skill to written work • It’s story-telling…. How fun is that?!

  6. In Writers’ Workshop…. • Children are usually writing on topics of their own choosing in whatever form or genre they chose. Once children have received a comfort level with writers’ workshop, begin to include some focused writing lessons. • Building on the basics required by all good writing taught in Writers’ Workshop, focus your students attention on particular topics, forms and genres.

  7. Focused “mini”-lessons through the writing process • Day1: choosing topic and planning only • Day2: moving from plan to draft • Day3: revising • Day4: proofreading • Day5: publishing • K-1 (and early 2): the entire process in one day

  8. A trick for the trade: • Monitor and approve plans before drafting begins!

  9. Conferencing • Allows us to monitor and adjust • Over-the-shoulder • Small group • A suggestion: conference, rove, conference, rove

  10. Speaking of monitoring, how do I keep track of all this • Checklist • Status-checks • Setting Expectations with deadlines

  11. What about draft-books? • These will help you manage the students as they are vary in their phase of the writing process. • We should have routines and procedures • This is what we take home and grade • This is what we use for accountability • It’s a portfolio assessment showing growth over time

  12. Draft-book standards • Skip lines (so that we may edit and they can revise) • Proofreading conventions (blue pen) • Do NOT erase, line out only • Date writing each day • Include Topic, Audience and Purpose • No blood and guts • No TV characters

  13. Audience and Purpose? • These two small, often ignored aspects of writing have a significant interaction with each other and the topic for writing. • Help transfer the idea of authenticity and provide motivation for writing. • The topic, audience and purpose will also help determine what form the writing takes.

  14. Purposes for writing: • Inform, persuade, explain, entertain, direct, request, express, share, recount, complain, thank, to vent, etc… • Our purposes for writing can be anything. We need children to understand that so that their writing can be most authentic.

  15. Audience for writing: • Is affected by our topic and purpose or vice-versus • Sometimes our audience affects our purpose and topic • I may start by identifying my audience and work from there • The audience can be very specific or general

  16. Expository: informational articles, reports, summaries, directions, procedurals, maps, posters, recipes, biographies, journals Fiction: humorous, fantasy, horror, historical, realistic, dramatic, science-fiction, plays, mysteries What Genres?

  17. What Forms? • Advertisements • Posters • Brochures • Books • Articles • Letters • Invitations • Memos • Cards

  18. What is Focused Writing instruction? • It’s our writing demonstrations • We model the writing process • We model different forms of writing • We do this daily • Each day we choose a different focus • While we want to ensure that the correct form of writing is learned, the emphasis should be kept on the message being communicated

  19. Focused writing is meta-cognition! • We want the students to see and take on the questions and thought processes that writers go through as they craft a piece of work.

  20. Publishing • It must be modeled also • Every student should be required to publish certain types of writing • Then they can choose forms

  21. What to publish? • 1st quarter: personal narrative, poem, letter • 2nd quarter: report, creative narrative, procedural • 3rd quarter: poster, brochure, advertisement • 4th quarter: invitation, card, article

  22. This planning should be determined by grade level • Consider what is developmentally appropriate for your grade-level? • Consider your curriculum • Does something fit well with your SF unit? • Does something fit well with your content areas? • Remember, the best start is with personal narratives

  23. General rules of thumb • A student should not attempt a form of writing you have not yet modeled • You must model every form of writing you expect your children to write • Once the child has completed their expected form of writing, they can then choose whatever form of writing they wish (from what you have modeled to that point) • Has you demonstrate more forms of writing, the children will have more choices • They still choose the topic, just not the form

  24. Guidelines for writing • Should follow schedule as: • Mini-lessons • Student writing with conferences • Author’s chair • Model DAILY • Teachers think aloud during mini-lessons • Topics from teacher’s personal lives • Students choose their own topics • Journal or writing folder throughout year • Varied forms of planning

  25. Other expectations • A community of writing must be built • It takes time • They will need support and lots of conversation • Conversation happens while conferencing, while sharing or in focused mini-lessons • Management is difficult but gets easier • You will love it and so will your children

  26. Guaranteed!

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