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Writing and Composition

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Presentation on theme: "Writing and Composition"— Presentation transcript:

1 Writing and Composition
TE 301 1

2 How Children Learn to Write
Through discovery—creating their own strategies for writing Moving developmentally from strategy to strategy By others around them providing meaningful examples From each other as they figure out how to write Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

3 Writing Development Writing develops over time
Six common stages to writing: Writing through drawing Writing through scribbling Writing through letterlike forms Writing through familiar units of letter strings Writing through estimated spelling Writing through conventional spelling

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5 Writing Through Drawing
One of the first ways that children express their thoughts and ideas on paper

6 Writing Through Scribbling
Writing (squiggly lines) starts to differ from drawing (circles and scribbles) Writing may follow a structure (looks like a letter, list or story)

7 Writing Through Letterlike Forms and Letter Strings
Letters and letterlike forms start to appear Writing may include strings of letters put together (that don’t necessarily form words)

8 Writing Through Estimated Spelling
Writing includes more letters (more conventionally formed) Use knowledge of sounds to help in writing

9 Writing Through Conventional Spelling
With time and exposure to print in books and in the environment, children will begin to spelling more conventionally Not expected until formal school entry

10 Concepts in Emergent Writing
recurring principle: writing consists of the same moves repeated over and over again generative principle: writing created by employing the same small set of letters combined in different ways sign concept: a graphic display representing text flexibility concept: letters can be varied to produce new letters directionality: arrangement of print on a page negative space: the space left between words Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon. These are some ways in which kids conceptualize what it means to write, with the last two points being ways that educators think conceptually about kids’ writing

11 Using Names to Learn to Write
First piece of writing for most children is their own names Name teaches the child a repertory of letters Generative principle allows the child to use a limited set of letters to fill a page Flexibility principle allows the child to use a limited set of letters and embellish them to become new letters Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

12 Strategies for Early Writing
Tracing-writing over the letters someone else has written Copying-using the letters someone else has written as a prompt to write one’s own letters Generating-creating one’s own letters without prompting Inventory principle—tendency to make lists of letters or words kids can write Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon. These are strategies the KIDS use, not teachers

13 Concepts for more Practiced Writing
invented spelling: early spellings children produce on their own Example: mskedas (mosquitos) letter-name strategy: using a letter to spell a sound if the name of the letter closely resembles the sound Example: lade (lady) incorrect use of digraphs: using one letter to spell a digraph, or sound produced by two letters Example: ihovr (each other) Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon. It’s important to look at these not just as errors, but as sources of information. For example: Can hear and represent blends, understands that vowels can say their name, probably spells just like it sounds when she says it and needs instruction on how sounds map onto print in ways other than an exact match. to make the A long, add an e at the end. Vowels at the ends of words often say their names…

14 Concepts for more Practiced Writing, cont’d.
invented spelling of long vowels: lack markers to indicate longness Example: nam (name) invented spelling of short vowels: use of letter- name strategy in place of short vowel Example: veset (visit) or mod (mud) vowel omissions: lack of vowels in syllables Example: letl (little) or sopr (supper) transitional spelling: words may look like English words but are spelled incorrectly Example: dayses (daises) Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

15 Strategies for Scaffolding Emergent and Early Writing
Ask the child what he would like to write Repeat what the child says Draw one line for each word using a highlighter or pen. Have the child write one “word” per line Read and reread the message together as necessary, practicing one-to-one match

16 Examples of Some Spelling “Rules”
Vowel + consonant: when a vowel is followed by a consonant that vowel has a short pronunciation (e.g., mat) Vowel + consonant + e, i, or y: when a vowel is followed by a consonant, followed by any one of these three vowels, the vowel has a long pronunciation Temple, C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

17 Stages of Spelling Development:
Prephonemic-stringing of letters together without attempting to represent speech sounds in any systematic way. Early phonemic-spelling in which letters are used to represent sounds, but letters are often written for only one or two sounds in a word. Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

18 Stages of Spelling Development, cont’d.
Letter-name-letters are chosen to represent phonemes based on the similarities between the sound of the letter-names and the respective phonemes. Transitional-words look like English, yet are often spelled incorrectly. Correct-majority of words are spelled correctly. Temple,C. Nathan, R., Temple F, & Burris, N.A. (1993). The beginnings of writing. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

19 Craft Sense of who the audience is Word choice
Mirroring mentor texts in format, which varies by genre Creating more complex sentences Rhythm and rhyme (especially in poetry) Using metaphors, similes, foreshadowing, and other devices Writing develops in more ways than just spelling and conventions like spacing an directionality. Beyond physically being able to get something on the page and being able to make that something legible to someone else, writers work on craft.

20 Three Modes of Writing Expressive mode: free flow of ideas and feelings, closest to self Poetic mode: considered more of an art medium Transactional mode: attempts to persuade or advise others Britton, J. (1970). Language and learning. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books.

21 Is Composition Different from Writing?
Children can compose before they write. They like to dictate their stories to others. Children “plagiarize.” That is, they often pull bits and pieces from the works of others into their own works. A challenge for kids is to think about the interest of themselves as authors, their audience, their topic, and their purpose for writing. Composing means to create some type of text (oral, written, or visual)

22 Revising and Editing Revising- changing the content of the piece (word choice, storyline, voice, etc.) Editing- fixing the mechanics of the piece (spelling, punctuation, etc.)


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