Launching the Writing Workshop
Launching the Writing Workshop. Grades 3-5. Chelsea Belcher EDRE. Starting the Writing Workshop. Build your student’s identities as writers by praising stories they’ve already told Build your student’s enthusiasm for writing and explain writers workshop
Launching the Writing Workshop
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Presentation Transcript
Launching the Writing Workshop Grades 3-5 Chelsea Belcher EDRE
Starting the Writing Workshop • Build your student’s identities as writers by praising stories they’ve already told • Build your student’s enthusiasm for writing and explain writers workshop • Name a teaching point explicitly- Today we will learn about… TEACH: Invite children to become writers, and you’ll teach a strategy for generating personal narratives
Mini-Lesson • Think of a person who matters to you, then list clear small moments you remember with him or her. Choose one to sketch and then write the story that explains it.
Mom • Dad • Trevor
List 2-3 little moments in your head • When I brought Trevor home • When Trevor heard his first storm • When Trevor saw fireworks for the first time • Draw a snapshot of when that moment started • Now draw what happened next. • Now, using tiny details- share your story with your neighbor • Begin writing your story
Generating More Writing • Remind students that writers use many strategies to write • Give examples of a writer using that strategy • Have students try that strategy TEACH: Teach students that writers sometimes think of a meaningful place, list small moments related to it, then select one and write about it.
Qualities of Good Writing • Detailed • Always be explicit • Seeds- Not watermelon ideas • Peer workshops/groups • Celebrate TEACH: Teach students that good writing should be focused, detailed, and structured. Good writers tell their stories in scenes rather than in summaries.
The Writer’s Job in a Conference • YOU are the best model • Structure • Study • Avoid asking about topic- focus on writing • Self- evaluation TEACH: Introduce students to the structure of a writing convergent and teach them ways writers talk about their writing
Questions you may be asked • What are you working on as a writer? • What kind of writing are you making? • What are you doing to make this piece of writing work? • What do you think of what you’ve done so far? • What will you do next? • How will you go about doing that?
Building Stories Step-by-Step • Cyclical process • Summarizing v. Storytelling TEACH: Teach students that wtiters unfold stories bit by bit rather than summerizing
Choosing Seed Ideas • Seed ideas can come from anywhere • Leave it as a seed or let it grow TEACH: Teach students that writers reread their notebooks, selecting and committing themselves to an idea they develop into a finished piece of writing
Revising Leads/Endings • Motivate students in the beginning stages • Writing for your audience • Making those decisions TEACH: Teach students that writers deliberately craft the lead and ending of their stories.
Taking Charge of Our Writing Work • They are the writer which means they are the creator. TEACH: Emphasize to students that writers make decisions abut their own work, including when to finish pieces and to start new ones.
Timelines TEACH: Teach students that writers can use timelines to plan and structure narratives
Mini-Lesson • Timelines as tools for developing stories
Stretching Our Writing • Where can students elaborate • Summarizing v. Storytelling TEACH: Teach students that writers replay life events to write in ways that let readers feel the experience by writing whole paragraphs from single key events.
Mini-Lesson • Writing in passages of thought
Developing the Heart of a Story • Give students time • Include in conferences TEACH: Teach students that writers revise by asking, “What’s the most important(or my favorite) part of this story?” and developing that section.
Publishing • CELEBRATE! TEACH: Students should celebrate being a community of flourishing writers and share the writing with the public.
Remember • Start as early as possible • Don’t get discouraged • Leave last years students in last years memories • Your students are WRITERS and they can’t wait to share their story with YOU!
THE END NOW BEGIN WRITING!