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Intermediate Grades - Writing Workshop Donna Marie Wagner EDRG 5370 September 2014
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Differences in Writing Workshops ▪ Organization-Core LIteracy programs meet for reading with each small group and use the same groups for writing. ▪ Older students can work more independently and much of their writing occurs outside the actual group meetings.
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Working - typically students write in response to a prompt daily or to the whole class reading. ▪ This writing should include details. – Before Writing- After a group reads about a topic or a portion of a novel, discussion takes place and each child can write about their experience with the topic or related understanding of the topic. ▪ For example: I am teaching one class the novel, Last Book in the Universe by Rodman Philbrick. The story has a brother and his half sister each with a different disease. The boy has Epliepsy and the girl has Leukemia. I might ask them to research these diseases and then write a personal narrative about how they would feel if they had one of them and how their life might be different.
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Before Writing Students use an outline to write about their experiences. In my classroom we use thinking maps such as a bubble map. They will answer the questions who, what, where, why and when about each of the five sub-topics.
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Before Writing Cont’d -For each sub-topic they will create a new bubble map to help them plan (outline) their ideas for their writing.
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Using their bubble maps they will then create an outline for writing
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During Writing- Students use their outline to write about their experience. For struggling students this exercise could be done as partners. Remind students that this is a draft and there will be time for revision. Peer Editing – with your table buddy Editing with teacher after revision
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Encouragement is the key!
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After Writing
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Working in small groups…. ▪ Assumes that others can work independently. ▪ Work with partners ▪ Work in small groups However….. Most often ▪ Intermediate grade students are expected to be reading and writing in preparation for their own group meetings as the teacher is working with one group at a time.
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Writing Workshop “Teachers often associate workshops with one-on-one conferences, but they can also work with small groups of children who are on the same phase of the writing process.”
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Writing Workshop Teacher Checklist 1.Organizing – “In a writing workshop, a “state of the class time” typically follows a mini-lesson. At this time students can inform the teacher about what aspect of the writing process they will focus on that day.” 2.Working – writing workshops are when a teacher is guiding students through the process. “A writing conference is a short conversation between at least two people about a student’s writing.” IT IS NOT A MINI-LESSON. It is not planned and you may not even know what you will say. 3.In a conference – Take off your instructor’s hat and put on your coach’s cap.
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What the Pros have discovered. ▪ “ Gere and Abbott (1985) said, “The success of the approach was dependent on the interaction of writers with teachers and peers during conferences and small group work.” ▪ “Calkins (1986) said, “Our first job in a conference, then, is to be a person not just a teacher. It is to enjoy, care and to respond.”
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Before – During & After Writing After: Remember – You are focusing on the process as well as the product. Remember that you are improving the writing only as a means to improve the writer and tell your students – “ This represents our best efforts at this time of the year.” or “You may still find some errors but we’ve made great improvements.” Before: If you notice a student struggling to get started – communicate through a simple conversation- ask questions and listen intently so you will know how to guide that student. During: In some cases with struggling students you may have to take dictation, offer a recording device for them to orally express themselves or do a share writing for brainstorming.
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