writer's workshop - archdiocese, 8.14

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Setting Up and Maintaining A Writer’s Workshop Archdiocese of Milwaukee Summer Literacy Institute August 6, 2014 Winnie R. Huebsch, Ph.D. Educational Consultant

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Page 1: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Beginnings: Setting Up and Maintaining A

Writer’s WorkshopArchdiocese of MilwaukeeSummer Literacy Institute

August 6, 2014Winnie R. Huebsch,

Ph.D.Educational Consultant

Page 2: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Why Do We Write?First things first….

Technology is changing things….in this new literacy environment, is writing still important? Why or why not? Let’s discuss. Turn to a partner and talk. Then we will share.

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Impact of Technology• What were some points in your

discussions? How is technology impacting writing?

• Good points…• Negatives…

Page 4: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Value of Writing• Writing influences the way we

think• Writing forces us to confront

issues, to define and redefine our own feelings and positions, and enables us to express ourselves to others in more effective ways.

Page 5: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Writing Enriches Personal Growth

• Writing enables us to reflect deeply on our own experiences, to examine critically our most basic assumptions, and to be in touch with our innermost selves. In a way, writing is a self-discovery process of ourselves and of society.

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Writing has ValueWriting is portable and

permanent. It makes your thinking visible.

Page 7: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Let’s be Honest…• Truthfully, many of us no longer

write frequently. It is a skill that requires practice and many of us no longer engage in it frequently.

• Therefore, it can be hard to teach for some of us!

Page 8: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Accepting the Challenge

• Implementing a Writer’s Workshop can be daunting…so, – Start slowly– Be very prepared– Accept that challenges will occur– Involve your students

Page 9: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Why Writer’s Workshop??

• It is a wonderful way to organize and manage a class!

• It works better than other management systems.

Page 10: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

So, Start SlowlyStep 1: “Storying”

• The first step is oral. • Storying is one way to help hesitant

students become better writers. • Spend the first 2-3 weeks of school

‘storying’, before writing in notebooks.

• ‘Storying’ also builds a community of writers!

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Page 12: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Begin by modeling ‘Storying’

Suggestions:

•Tell a story from a memory. (A time I was sad, afraid, excited, embarrassed.)

•Use a read aloud to start a conversation. (For Example: You might read a book about sledding or playing in the snow, and then tell about a similar experience you remember.)

•Read from your own writer's notebook (if you are a writer yourself)

Page 13: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Begin by modeling ‘Storying’

• Describe someone special or something interesting.

• Do a "quick draw" and then tell the story inside the picture

• Tell about something you love and why.

• Tell about something you really dislike(people fighting, the sound of fingernails on the chalkboard) and why.

• Have students bring in photographs from home and tell about the event or people

Page 14: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Begin by modeling ‘Storying’

• After you have told your story, give everyone else in the class the chance to tell a related story.

• Do this over several days.

• Talk to them about the importance of good manners: listening to others, taking turns, responding correctly,.

Page 15: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Example of Storying:‘A/B Partner Talk‘

• This time, students might remember to add the detail their partner asked them about. Each student should share with 3 partners.

• This process helps children develop their stories orally and teaches them how to revise by adding detail and editing information..

Page 16: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Example of Storying:‘A/B Partner Talk‘

• Each partner gets 2 minutes to tell his story. Partner A tells a story on a topic. Partner B listens and then asks any questions after the story. Partner B then tells his story. Partner A listens and asks questions.

• Then, the students turn to a new partner. They repeat the same process.

Page 17: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Focus on the Talk• The intentional focus on oral

language will help your students build confidence and a repertoire of ideas.

• Develop an class idea list on a chart in your room. The ideas should be general so that they can apply to many students.

Page 18: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Focus on the Talk• Students can have a writing

folder with ideas for writing included on the inside cover.

Page 19: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Build Anticipation

• ‘Storying’ usually lasts about 20-30 minutes, which will be your whole Writing Workshop block for the first few weeks.

• Students will begin to get excited about writing as they realize they have something to write about.

Page 20: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Suggestions for “Anticipation”

• Set a date to begin writing. Mark it on the calendar and begin talking about it with excitement.

• Begin a writer's notebook of your own and show it to the class.

• Have students personalize their notebooks. Decorate the covers - use pictures, drawings, wrapping paper, etc. Or, cover them with clear contact paper to protect them.

Page 21: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

One last note on storying…

• Consider using storying throughout the year. “Storying” can be helpful in getting students motivated again after a long break, such as winter break, or after you complete a genre study.

• During these times, you will probably only want to spend about a week ‘storying’. During that week, you could use your mini-lesson time to story with your students, and then use the remainder of the time to write and share.

Source: Fletcher, R. A Writer's Notebook, Unlocking the Writer Within You,

Page 22: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Schedule for A Writer’s Workshop

Suggested times:1. Mini Lesson(5-10 min.)

2. Status of the Class (2 min.)

3. Writing and Conferencing(20-40 min.)

4. Sharing (5-10 min.)

Page 23: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Materials for the Workshop

Suggestions:• blank paper in a variety of sizes, lined and

unlined• materials for covers (construction paper,

wallpaper, cardboard)• markers, colored pencils, pens, pencils,

crayons• tape,  glue, scissors, stapler• stationary, envelopes, stamps, catalogues• phone books for mailing letters and cards• paper clips, erasers,  correction tape• dictionaries, encyclopedias, atlases,

thesauruses

Page 24: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Mini Lessons• The mini-lesson is our forum for making a

suggestion to the whole class...raising a concern, exploring an issue, modeling a technique, reinforcing a strategy. First our students are engaged in their own important work. Then we ask ourselves, "What is the one thing I can suggest or demonstrate that might help most?"

• Calkin, L. (1994). The Art of Teaching Writing, pp 193-5.

Page 25: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Mini- Lesson• Time – 5-10 minutes

• A short lesson focused on a single topic for which students might need help. There is no need to do a mini-lesson daily. 2-3 times a week is appropriate.

Page 26: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Mini Lessons• The writing workshop mini-lesson

is the whole-class teaching time, which often lasts 5-10 minutes.

• The teaching must be explicit and concise.

Page 27: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Mini Lessons• Choose only one focus for the

lesson. This could be a content focus or a conventions focus. Be careful, though. We often over-focus on conventions!!!.

• Remember, It is the content that is the heart of the text.

Page 28: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Mini-Lesson Suggestions

• Teacher DemonstrationOften a teacher will demonstrate writing an entry in front of the children on a chart or overhead. This works well if you can actually put the overhead projector on the floor and gather the children close to you. The teacher uses this demonstrated writing like a think aloud.

• Your Own Writer’s NotebookReading from your own writer's notebook is a great way to let your students see you as a writer. You can show them how you have worked through different issues in your own writing, strategies that you have tried, and a variety of genres you have tried.

Page 29: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Mini-Lesson Suggestions

• Student WritingStudents learn best from each other. Get the child's permission before sharing his writing in a mini lesson. Use student writing to show what kids did well, not what they did wrong.

• Common core content standards on writing for your grade level.

Page 30: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Mini Lessons• “Sometimes the mini-lesson will be

designed to create a warm glow around the workshop. The easiest way to do this is to read aloud from wonderful literature... a story, a poem... and to do so without turning the reading into a lesson. Instead, we simply read aloud . . . and then immediately, and with no discussion, we write and write and write.”

Calkins, L. The Art of Teaching Writing, p. 194,

Page 31: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Advantages of the ‘Mini Lesson’

Approach• Students practice their skills in an

authentic way.• Time is not wasted giving tests• They develop greater confidence and

independence.• Less time is spent correcting papers.• Kids like it!

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Status of the Class• Time: 2-5 minutes

• A quick way of finding out what each student is working on.

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Steps in the Writing Process

• Brainstorm• Draft• Revise• Edit • Final Draft• Publish

Page 34: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Status of the Class• Have a poster with library pockets for each

student. In each pocket place 3 cards, – Red=Work in progress, – Yellow=Illustrating, – Green= Publishing.

• Each student may have any of these 3 colors in their pocket depending what they are working on.

• Students should place the color in front to indicate the stage they are in during their writing.

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Writing/Conferencing1. The teacher listens carefully to what the

student says about his writing and asks questions to clarify and deepen his understanding of the student's work.

2. Teacher makes a decision based on the conversation with the student, and then explicitly teaches one thing that will help him.

• Source: Anderson, C. (2000). How's It Going? Heinemann.

Page 36: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Teaching During Conferencing

• Teacher confers one-on-one or with small groups. In grades 1-5, the teacher confers with 3-5 children per day.

• Help with ideas to write about or motivation. Help the students revise and edit their stories.

• Help them determine when they are ready to move forward. Do this for about 20-30 minutes.

Page 37: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

How to Conference• Some students work on publishing

and others on illustrating; a few students will work on stories.

• The students get their folders so you can review what they are working on.

• Conference with each child to brainstorm on writing ideas.

Page 38: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

How to Conference• Students may have 5-6 stories in

their folder before picking one to publish.

• Not everything we write needs to be published.

• Being able to visit with several students a day allows you to keep each on track and move them forward in the writing process.

Page 39: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

How to Conference• The conferring time is often

referred to as the heart of the workshop. It is a time for the teacher to: (1) affirm what the child is doing well and (2) teach/reteach a skill or strategy within his/her own writing.

• Be careful to teach the writer, not this piece of writing. Teach the child one strategy he/she will be able to use on many other pieces of writing in the future.

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Why do “Sharing”?1. It gives children a real audience for

which to write.

2. It provides children with immediate feedback from the teacher and other students.

3. This will eventually help the child to self-revise because he will begin to predict what others will ask about the writing.

Page 41: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Sharing• Sharing usually takes about 10 minutes.

• If you run short of time, do not skip the sharing time. Instead, either save the sharing time for later in the day or use a simplified method for sharing, such as having everyone turn to a partner and read what they have written.

• Students need feedback from the teacher and from the larger group.

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Sharing

Page 43: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Sharing• About 3 children share per day. In primary

grades, the most common form of sharing is in the Author's Chair.

• The class offers feedback consisting of positive reinforcement (e.g., "What I like most about your writing is...) and wonderings (e.g., "What does your dog look like?).

• The teacher needs to model both kinds of feedback for several weeks in younger grades.

Page 44: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Creative Publishing Ideas

• A newspaper for the school or an article for a local newspaper

• A picture book or chapter book, • A "How-To" or teaching book for the

school or class library• A letter to send to a friend, family

member, or an important person• A biography or autobiography• A guided reading book for other

students

Page 45: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Creative Publishing Ideas• A poster to decorate the room for a holiday party

• A song for you or others to sing

• A list of directions or rules for parts of the school

• A flyer or brochure

• A scrapbook for your family (e.g., family vacation, memories from growing up, etc.)

• An alphabet book

• A framed word portrait or poem to hang on the wall

Page 46: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Creative Publishing Ideas

• A skit or play to be performed for or by other classes

• A comic strip for the school office, your doctor's office, etc.

• A"Get Well" card or poem for a sick friend

• A calendar with your best poems or other pieces on each month

• A collection of memories placed in a time capsule

Page 47: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

The Process of Publishing

When you feel students are ready to publish a piece, teach them the following steps:

• Read your writing out loud to at least 2 other people. You might ask one or more of the following questions:

– Does my writing makes sense?

– Are there any parts that aren't clear?

– Does my writing leave you with any unanswered questions?

– Did my words paint a picture in your mind?

• Check your own work with a revising/editing checklist.• Have a conference with your teacher to see what one new thing she can

teach you about being a writer. • Try the strategy that your teacher suggests to you in the conference. Then,

turn the writing in so your teacher can make the final edits.• Go to the publishing center and choose the materials (paper, crayons, etc.)

that you want to use in publishing this piece. Be sure to make the corrections that your teacher has written on your practice copy.

Page 48: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Spelling Suggestions for students

1. Read the writing backwards, from the end to the beginning. This will make you less likely to read what you meant to say.

2. Identify words you think may be misspelled and look to other resources for help.

3. Use Environmental print (displays in the room, word wall, etc.) Literature A friend The dictionary Charts displayed containing spelling patterns

Page 49: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Spelling Suggestions4. Use a computerized spell check.

5. Try to spell the word a variety of ways and ask yourself which way looks right.

6. Ask yourself, "Is this word similar in meaning to other words I can spell?" Do I know parts of the word. (Ex. courage - courageous)

Page 50: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Editing Checklist - primary

Name: _____________________ Date: __________

1. Does it make sense?

2. Did you leave spaces between your words?

3. Did you use capital letters to begin sentences?

4. Did you use ending punctuation marks?

5. Did you check the spelling?

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Editing Checklist 2 –grades 3-5

Name: _____________________ Date: __________

1. Did you reread it carefully, checking for places where readers might be confused?

2. Did you check the spelling using a variety of sources?

3. Did you use correct punctuation? (ending, quotation marks, commas)

4. Have you tried to take out extra words that don't add much?

5. Did you reread it carefully, paying close attention to choice of words? (strong verbs, descriptive language, etc.)

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Editing Checklist 3 Name: _____________________ Date: __________

1. Did you use appropriate punctuation? (ending marks, commas, quotation marks, etc.)

2. Did you use capital letters appropriately?

3. Did you give enough information so the reader won't be left with questions?

4. Did you use several sources to check your spelling?

5. Does your writing flow in an organized way? 6. Did you indent and use margins when using paragraphs?

7. Did you use details and descriptions?

8. Did you write an effective beginning and ending?

Page 53: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

Editing Wall• Introduce one convention at a time:• (Demonstration) Introduce the convention during

a mini lesson and then remind students of the convention for several days.

• (Shared/Guided) Ask students to use the convention when writing. When conferencing, check to see if they are using the convention correctly.

• (Independent) Once most of the students in the class are using the convention correctly, place the convention on the editing wall and that it is now their responsibility to use the convention from now on.

Page 54: Writer's Workshop - Archdiocese, 8.14

References• Writer’s Workshop: A guide to getting started in the real world.

PowerPoint Presentation. • Springfield Public School District 186

http://www.springfield.k12.il.us/resources/languagearts/instruction/?mod=105

• Fletcher, R. A Writer's Notebook, Unlocking the Writer Within You, • Jeanne Morris [email protected].

Maple Elementary, Fontana, CA • Writers workshop: Teaching that makes sense.

http://www.teachersfirst.com/lessons/writers/index.html• http://www.ttms.org/PDFs/05%20Writers%20Workshop

%20v001%20(Full).pdf• learn.tsinghua.edu.cn/cod_go.jsp?cod_id...

• .