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Six Trait Writing for assessment and instruction

Six Trait Writing for assessment and instruction. Jen Madison Educational Service Unit No. 6 jmadison@esu6.org http://esu6writing.wikispaces.com. Agenda. Welcome! Introducing the Traits What Makes Writing Work? Qualities of Writing Using Rubrics and Student Papers Trait by Trait

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Six Trait Writing for assessment and instruction

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  1. Six Trait Writingfor assessment and instruction Jen Madison Educational Service Unit No. 6 jmadison@esu6.org http://esu6writing.wikispaces.com

  2. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activities

  3. What makes writing work? • Record one specific characteristic of good writing. • Musical Cards • Trade cards while the music plays. • When the music stops, partner with the person currently trading with you. • Read each card and together distribute 7 points between the two cards to represent the degree of importance and relevance toward the question: What makes good writing work?

  4. Ideas Organization Voice Word Choice Sentence Fluency Conventions Presentation The heart of the message The internal structure of the piece The feeling and conviction of the writer The precise language chosen to convey meaning The rhythm and flow of the language The mechanical correctness How the writing looks on the page THE 6+1 TRAITS

  5. Purpose of Traits • “an answer to the question: What makes writing work?” • consistent “writer’s language that opens the door to revision” (a how to for revision) • a way to • organize and clarify good writing instruction • encourage consistent assessment • empower and motivate young writers • encourage thinking skills and self-monitoring • NOT meant to replace instruction of writing process! (Spandel, Creating Writers, 2005, p. 1-2)

  6. “If we had called them the six keys to good writing, people likely would have made the instructional connection immediately. This is where the truepower of trait-based instruction lies—showing students the keys to writing well.” • Spandel, V. (2008). Creating Young Writers Trait-based Writing • Form and language • Vision of success

  7. “…the keys to writing well:” • Have a strong, clear idea. • Use details and pictures to paint a picture in year reader’s mind. • Write with authority and voice. • Organize your information so that a reader can follow it. • Use words that make sense—and that are lively as well. • Write with fluency and variety—the way good dancers dance. • Make your conventions as strong as you can so that readers can figure out your message. (Spandel, 2008, Creating Young Writers, p. 7)

  8. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activities

  9. What do you notice? • I can just see it. I feel like I’m in that car. • I love the line “her eyes were as big as her fists.” • He’s having a good time [most readers assume the writer is male]. • I know these people. • Lively! • I sympathize with Mom-- I hate mice too! • I like the pickle jar-- I can even smell the pickles. • Great images-- love Dad backing into the tree and mom in her nightgown. • You get every point of view- even the mouse’s!

  10. Boring-- it put me right to sleep. Flat, empty. Safe. She was writing just to get it done. Mechanics are pretty good. It doesn’t say anything. The organization isn’t too bad. What Redwoods? The title doesn’t go with the paper. She (he?) seems like a nice kid- I want to like it. It’s not that bad for fourth or fifth grade-- I assume that’s what it is right? What do you notice?

  11. Rubrics and Scoring Guidesa few ideas • A Developmental Continuum for Early Writing • Pre-K to K • K-2 Illustrated Beginning Writer’s Rubric • Pre-K to 2 (or until student consistently scores 5 or 6) • Education Northwest, 2010 • 6+1 Traits Condensed 5-Point 3-12 Writer’s Rubric (“One-Pager”) • 3-12 • Education Northwest, 2010 • My First Scoring Guide (Student-Friendly Scoring Guide Primary) • K-2 • Ruth Culham, http://www.culhamwriting.com/library.html • Student-Friendly Scoring Guide Grades 3-5 • Ruth Culham, http://www.culhamwriting.com/library.html

  12. Exploring the Traits Through Student Writing • Read the proficient level descriptions forideas/content • Note the words that best define the trait characteristics (the criteria) and proficiency levels. • Read the writing thoroughly: • Look for strengths • Score traits • Discuss reasons for your score(s)

  13. Holistic One overall score Intended to generalize overall effect Cannot provide specific, needs-based feedback Usually reserved for summative assessment (after instruction and practice) Analytic Each trait scored separately Provides more detailed feedback to guide instruction and monitor progress Used for most classroom practice and formative assessment (during instruction and practice) Holistic vs. Analytic Scoring

  14. Using Rubrics:One Way to Respond & Assess • Many formats and varieties • Thoughtfully select traits for assessment • informational/technical writing • creative/personal writing • Have students help create indicators • Provide student friendly versions • Engage students in activities using rubrics • Be consistent • Score certain traits

  15. Using RubricsOne Way to Respond & Assess • Always read the entire paper first • Refer to the scoring guide often • Stronger or weaker? • Score each trait separately • Remember: • 1 indicates beginning performance, not failure • top score represents strengths and proficiency, not perfection • Watch out for rater bias

  16. Objectivity Issues and Sources of Bias • Physical characteristics • Personal reaction to particular tones, content, or students • Length • Positive-negative leniency • Tendency to be too hard or too easy on everyone • Fatigue • Skimming • Sympathy • “Self-scoring” • Score the writer’s work, not your skill of putting the puzzle pieces together.

  17. Objectivity Issues and Sources of Bias • Sources of rater bias • Pet peeves, such as…. • Big LOOpy writing (with stars and hearts) • Teeny, tiny writing • Writing in ALL CAPITALS • Tons! Of exclamation (!!!) points!!!! • Mixing it’s and its • The End (like I couldn’t tell) • Total absence of paragraphs What’s one of your pet peeves?

  18. Using Rubrics • More opportunities • Create with students • School-wide • Collect anchors/samples • Subject or genre specific • Student self-assessment submitted with writing • Some traits • e.g., always ideas & conventions, randomly select one other

  19. A note about grading… • Focus on feedback • Recognizing improvements & strengths (to replicate) • Providing appropriate instruction & challenges • Translating to grades…be careful! • Be certain that the percentage you assign is appropriate for the rubric rating!

  20. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait: IDEAS • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activities

  21. IDEAS: Look for the following… • Clarity and Focus of the Content • Rich and Vivid Details • Clear Sense of Purpose • Accuracy • Fresh and Original Thinking • Quality not Quantity

  22. “Too many scoring systems reward students for including merely more arguments or examples; quantity is not quality, and we teach a bad lesson by such scoring practices.” • -Grant Wiggins

  23. Exploring the Traits Through Student Writing • Read the proficient level descriptions for the trait • Underline/highlight the words that best define the characteristics of proficient • Mark (?) descriptors requiring clarification • Read the writing thoroughly: • Look for strengths • Score each trait • Prepare to discuss reasons for your score

  24. Lesson Ideas Ideas • Take Out the Details • Take the details out of a known story. • “What’s missing? What makes the original better?” • Graphic Organizers • Make expected content explicit • Model transfer from organizer to writing • Snapshot • “I want to see it, like a photo in an album.” • What would I see if I would “zoom in” on this part? • Teach the Genre • How do writers express the main idea? • How do they support the main idea (e.g., characterization, examples, explanation, facts, logic, sensory details)? “Don’t say the old lady screamed. Bring her on and let her scream.”--Mark Twain

  25. Teaching the trait of Ideas • Talk about where ideas come from. • Model differences between generalities and good details. • Read aloud from books with striking detail or strong imagery. • Use questions to expand and clarify a main idea.

  26. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait: ORGANIZATION • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activities

  27. ORGANIZATION: What to look for… • Enticing Lead Sentence • The first sentence and introduction should be engaging. • Thoughtful Transitions • One paragraph should set the scene for the next paragraph. • Logical Sequencing • There is a systematic approach to exploring topic. • Controlled Pacing • Details are provided in the right amounts. • Satisfying Conclusion • The piece should have meaningful ending.

  28. Exploring the Traits Through Student Writing • Read the proficient level descriptions for the trait • Underline/highlight the words that best define the characteristics of proficient • Mark (?) descriptors requiring clarification • Read the writing thoroughly: • Look for strengths • Score each trait • Prepare to discuss reasons for your score

  29. Lesson Ideas Organization • Study Logical Order • Separate sentences/paragraphs from a writing • Ask student to put classify them, put them in order, and identify key phrases. • Compare Leads or Endings • Find different examples in children’s books, content text, your own (not so great) examples, brainstorm examples with students. • Which do you like best? Why? • Host a “Bad Leads Awards Ceremony.” • Teach transition and signal words appropriate for the type of writing.

  30. The shark’s jaw is located back beneath his long snout, but this does not prevent him from biting directly into the flesh. When he opens the jaw, the lower jawbone is thrust forward while the snout is drawn back and up, until it makes almost a right angle with the axis of his body. At this moment, the moth is located forward of the head and no longer beneath it. It resembles a large wolftrap, equipped with innumerable sharp and gleaming teeth. The shark plants this mechanism in the body of his victim and uses the weight of his own body in a series of frenzied convulsions, transforming the teeth of the jawbones into saws. The force of this sawing effect is such that it requires no more than an instant for the shark to tear off a splendid morsel of flesh. When the shark swims off, he has left a deep and perfectly outline hole in the body of his victim. It is terrifying and nauseating to watch. (from Jacques-Yves Cousteu, The Shark: Splendid Savage of the Sea, p. 37)

  31. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait: VOICE • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activity • Statewide Writing Assessment

  32. VOICE: Look for the following… • Expression of individuality • Reader wants to keep reading • Commitment to the topic • Suits the audience • Fits the purpose

  33. Voice Creative Writing Feelings Enthusiasm Individuality Passion Technical / Research Writing Perspective Level of Formality Level of Objectivity Voice is often the reason I read!

  34. Voice in Informational writing Confident Knowledge-driven Inspiring “The Cosmos is a very big place.” “If we were randomly inserted into the Cosmos, the chance that we would find ourselves on or near a planet would be less than one in a billion trillion trillion (1033, a one followed by 33 zeroes). In everyday life such odds are called compelling. Worlds are precious [1980, p. 5].”

  35. Exploring the Traits Through Student Writing • Read the proficient level descriptions for the trait • Underline/highlight the words that best define the characteristics of proficient • Mark (?) descriptors requiring clarification • Read the writing thoroughly: • Look for strengths • Score each trait • Prepare to discuss reasons for your score

  36. Lesson Ideas Voice • Write voice IN or OUT • Take the voice out of a passage and have students put their own in. • Bored vs. Excited? • What do these look like? (Students demonstrate kinesthetically.) • “I want to see an ‘excited’ face in my mind when I read your writing.” • Show them two sample paragraphs using the same facts. Which was written by an “excited” writer? How can you tell? • Read aloud from works that have strong voice. • Help students identify an audience.

  37. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait: WORD CHOICE • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activities

  38. Word Choice: What to look for • memorable words and phrases • accurate use of words • awareness of different ways to say things • appropriate choices for the purpose and audience • not inflated or overused

  39. Exploring the Traits Through Student Writing • Read the proficient level descriptions for the trait • Underline/highlight the words that best define the characteristics of proficient • Mark (?) descriptors requiring clarification • Read the writing thoroughly: • Look for strengths • Score each trait • Prepare to discuss reasons for your score

  40. Lesson Ideas Word Choice • Study connotation (subtleties of word variation) • Put related words on a continuum • said, whispered, barked, exclaimed, shouted, screamed, commented murmured, declared, mentioned, hollered • Apply movement to variations of verbs & discuss differences • Trash overused words & display interesting, lively, or content appropriate words • Use wall displays, bulletin boards, etc. • Brainstorm appropriate alternatives. • Show students examples of writing in your content and together analyze words. • Identify specific nouns and strong, active verbs • Identify powerful, meaningful words • Rate level of formality and objectivity

  41. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait: SENTENCE FLUENCY • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activities

  42. Sentence Fluency: What to look for • Rhythm and flow • Varied sentence structure • Length • Beginnings • Reading ease…not just punctuation

  43. Sentence Fluency Chart Analyze the mode, genre, author’s style: • How long are sentences? • How do sentences begin? • What kind of verbs are prevalent? • What kind of sentences are used? • What is the purpose of each sentence?

  44. Exploring the Traits Through Student Writing • Read the proficient level descriptions for the trait • Underline/highlight the words that best define the characteristics of proficient • Mark (?) descriptors requiring clarification • Read the writing thoroughly: • Look for strengths • Score each trait • Prepare to discuss reasons for your score

  45. Lesson Ideas Sentence Fluency • Read fluent passages out loud • “Do you like the way this sounds? • “How many different ways does this writer begin sentences?” • “Describe the lengths of the sentences. What effect does this create?” • Mentor Sentences • Collect powerful sentences to use as models of specific techniques • (prepositional phrases…a strong way to add detail) “Over bushes, under trees, between fence posts, through the tangled hedge she swoops untouched” (Davies, 2004, p. 12). • Chart expert and student writing fluency • Analyze a passage for sentence lengths, beginning variety, and other characteristics.

  46. Agenda • Welcome! • Introducing the Traits • What Makes Writing Work? • Qualities of Writing • Using Rubrics and Student Papers • Trait by Trait: CONVENTIONS • Language of the trait • Scoring student work • Teaching and learning activities

  47. Your students should ask…(beginning writers) • Did I leave spaces between words? • Does my writing go from left to right? • Did I use a title? • Did I leave margins on the sides? At the bottom? • Did I use capital letters? Why? • Did I use periods? How about question marks? • Did I do my best on spelling? • Could another person read this?

  48. Your students should ask…(more mature writers) • Have I used fragments or run-ons only for a conscious effect? • Do I have agreement (subject-verb, pronoun-antecedent, etc.) • Does my punctuation accurately guide the reader? • Have I used the correct spellings for homophones? • Their/there/they’re • Is the format appropriate? (Does it meet the expectations of the audience?) • Have I cited sources appropriately?

  49. Exploring the Traits Through Student Writing • Read the proficient level descriptions for the trait • Underline/highlight the words that best define the characteristics of proficient • Mark (?) descriptors requiring clarification

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