2014 EKU Writing Project Summer Institute Demonstration by Dr. Gill Hunter with thanks and apologies to Carol Jago.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Agenda, Homework, and Warm-up
Advertisements

WRITING AN EXPOSITORY PARAGRAPH/ESSAY.  What is exposition?  Exposition is a detailed description of something  An expository essay is a detailed description.
Reflection: TOPIC: Are people naturally “good” or are they forced to be “good” by social rules and legal institutions? INTRODUCE EVIDENCE: Why do you believe.
Standards ELACC8RI1: Students will be able to use close reading strategies to identify the main idea in selected articles. ELACCW9b1: Students will be.
Chapter 5 Journal Writing Prepared by M.F. Cullen-Reavill.
Grade 5: Module 1: Unit 2: Lesson 16
Speech Structure: Unions as Agents of Change— Part 2
Skimming Scanning & Note-Taking
Body Paragraphs: The Evidence Sandwich Start with a topic sentence that supports your thesis or a sub-question for your inquiry question. Introduce your.
Moodle using surveys and glossaries By Kris (feel free to decorate while I set up….I’ll get you started)
Dr. MaLinda Hill Advanced English C1-A Designing Essays, Research Papers, Business Reports and Reflective Statements.
Writing Boot Camp! Pt. 1 Introductions, Thesis Statements, and Topic Sentences AY! This is General C with PART 1 of your GOSH DANG Writing Bootcamp. Today.
Final Assessment Roots and Water. M.L.O To prepare for and plan your essay.
Writing a Persuasive Essay
Socratic Seminar #1 UNIVERSAL CONCEPT: ETHNIC STUDIES
Writing Literary Analysis Papers
After Reading KEY TRAITS Writing Workshop Persuasive Essay...continued 1.IDEAS 2. ORGANIZATION Presents a thesis statement taking a position on a clearly.
4 th Grade Writing Assessment Pretest September 2013 Posttest May 2014.
Quickwrite: Choose ONE
“The Sun Goes Down on Summer” By: Steve Lawhead
Writing a Persuasive Essay
What’s Next? Life After High School
DAY 5 INTRO TO ALG. AND THE SEAHAWKS WON! TURN IN YOUR BLUE SURVEYS TO THE “PLACE WHERE YOU TURN STUFF IF”/INBOX SET UP YOUR JOURNAL BE READY TO SHOW.
Creating a Well Written Essay “Charlie” issues addressed.
WRITING CONTENT TO RECOGNIZE AND INCLUDE IN YOUR OWN WRITING ANALYZING AN ESSAY.
Breaking Down the Prompt
REG III 2/27 3 rd & 4 th Day 37. 2/27 Title: Best Friend How did you and your best friend meet? Tell the story of what happened.
Reality TV A mini-unit designed to introduce text-based argument drafting i3 College Ready Writers Program National Writing Project 2014.
DBQs What do I do?. Understand the Question Read the historical context carefully to understand what it’s all about. Read the DBQ question. In almost.
My Personal Reading Procedure. Critical Thinking  What is critical thinking???  Thinking about things beyond what is written there.  Thinking of things.
Close Reading Lesson “How the brain reacts” by Marcel just & tim Hayer
Essay Writing.
CLOSE READING & ANNOTATING WHAT IT IS AND HOW TO DO IT.
Reflection: TOPIC: Are people naturally “good” or are they forced to be “good” by social rules and legal institutions? INTRODUCE EVIDENCE: Why do you believe.
Writing a Thesis for a Literary Analysis Grade 11 English.
Activity 9 1. Take out a sheet of paper, and write down three people you feel are intellectuals.
TKAM Philosophical Debate Task 1: Quote Analysis Task 2: Philosophical Debate Task 3: Reflection.
Introduction to Literature Circles! January/February 2013 English III Mrs. Casey.
Module 2A: Unit 1: Lesson 13 Writing an Argumentative Essay: Introducing the Writing Prompt and Model Essay.
Strategic Reading Step 2 SCAN. Review from yesterday Preview- practice with Hamlet Oedipal Complex.
METACOGNITION MAN Super-Powerful Reading Strategies!
Thesis Statement-Examples
Please get your journal and performance assessment book
The Writing Process Language Arts.
Informative vs Argumentative. What do you think? What is the root word in informative? What is the root word in argumentative?
1 AVID’s mission is to close the achievement gap by preparing all students for college readiness and success in a global society. Philosophical Chairs.
Essay Prompt WHAT is a major theme developed in your novel, and HOW is that theme developed throughout the piece of writing? (in discussing the HOW, you.
CLOSE READING STEPS TO HELP YOU UNDERSTAND WHAT YOU READ…..
Critical Essay Writing
Lisa Johnson Lincoln County Middle School Language Arts.
Socratic Seminar By participating in Scholars will practice academic behavior and language that will be expected in a 21 st century classroom & worksplace.
Give ‘Em What They Want & Show ‘Em Where You Got It.
Slide 1 Project 1 Lab 8 T&N3311 PJ1 Information & Communications Technology HD in Telecommunications and Networking Content of this lesson  Final tutorial.
1 The importance of Team Working and Personal Attributes.
Marking and Feedback CPD Action research – Concluding Session.
Module 1: Unit 2: Lesson 16 End of Unit 2 Assessment, Part 1b: Writing Introduction and Conclusion.
“A change of heart about animals” By jeremy Rifkin
My level of thinking and learning is… TASK: Prestructural I’m not sure about … Unistructural I have one relevant idea about … Multistructural I have several.
Reading Log #1 - Predictions
Exploring Problems, Making Claims
Today we are… Test Prepping for Sect. 1 Part B Your homework is… ■Finish the Team Paper --(DUE tomorrow p.m.) ■Have one person from your group.
 1. optional (check to see if your college requires it)  2. Test Length: 50 min  3. Nature of Prompt: Analyze an argument  4. Prompt is virtually.
Common Core: Close Reading Informational Text Professional Development Session Presenters: Chelsea Armann Adrienne Van Gorden.
Paraphrasing Class #8 February 14, 2013.
Activity 2.10: unpacking EA2 preparing for argument writing
Critical Analysis.
The art of persuasive writing
Connecting Evidence to a Claim was developed by Jean Wolph.
Friday 5/24/19 Bell Ringer: What are strategies you use to help you when you are writing?
Presentation transcript:

2014 EKU Writing Project Summer Institute Demonstration by Dr. Gill Hunter with thanks and apologies to Carol Jago

“Working” (because I’m absolutely stealing recycling from Carol Jago)

Write for a few minutes: What role does work play in your life? What role does it play in the lives of the people you know or have known well?

work: [wз:k] n. 1.something that is or was done; what a person does or did; an act, deed, proceeding, business; 2.something to be done, or something to do; what a person (or thing) has or had to do; occupation, employment, business, task, function

How does work seem to have affected the people in this picture?

Read the poem to yourself. When everyone has finished, someone at your table read the poem aloud. (Everyone at your table has the same poem; each table has a different poem – I’ll give you the other two at the end of the Demo.) Don’t talk about the poem. Now that you have read and heard the poem, choose a line that strikes you and write about it. You can focus on work, but you are also free to go in any direction you wish. Write to make sense, think about, explore, appreciate, wonder, support, question…. Share what you have written, just as we do in Writing into the Day. Finally, talk with your table groups about the role of work in the poem. How does the poet define it? What does he/she say about it? What ideas especially resonate with you? Add margin notes to your copy of the poem or add to your writing as you wish.

Start reading “Blue Collar Brilliance.” You might not finish it, but you’ll get a strong sense of Mike Rose’s argument and the way he develops his ideas. In fact, as you read, determine, paragraph by paragraph, how Rose constructs his argument and provides evidence to support his claim. Highlight and make notes in your margins to capture these thoughts. We’ll gather together in about 15 minutes to talk about his argument and ideas, including the way he organizes and develops them and the purpose he seems to have in writing.

Now you’re ready to write: Summarize the key ideas about work found in the readings (the painting, the poem, the essay) and analyze and evaluate those claims, explaining why you agree or disagree with them. Use relevant material from those readings, class discussion, or your own work experiences (and/or research) to support your analysis.

End-of-Demo debriefing: What topics, like “Working,” can you envision to be relevant, complex, empowering, and thought- provoking to your students? As you list a topic, include readings and resources that come to mind as connected to the topic. Follow Jago’s model of pulling from a variety of text types. Make notes for yourself; talk in your table groups. In a few minutes we’ll pool ideas together by listing them on the board.

Be sure to get a copy of “Writing is Taught, Not Caught” and the other poems.