- Mentor texts
- Expose students to variety of nonfiction available
- Addresses the issue of audience, purpose, and form
- Tap into natural curiosity
- Allows students to start with a keen interest or curiosity and narrow down research to an essential question
- FQR and KWL charts help them learn how to organize
- Students can move away from "writing for the teacher" and realize they have the opportunity to have a more wide-ranging audience
LLED 4120 Writing Notebook
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Value of Nonfiction
Poetry Characteristics
POETRY BOOKS
Red Sings from Treetops: A Year in Colors
Red Sings from Treetops: A Year in Colors
- Overall theme of seasons and colors
- Descriptive language
- Imagery
- Personification
- Onomatopoeia
- Structure of words accompanies the content
Mathematicals
- Rhythm
- Concrete
- Phrases rather than complete sentences
What a Day it Was at School!
- Anthology of sorts
- Humorous
- Rhymes
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Worksheets and Publishing in the Writing Workshop
- Worksheets can function as starting points for work in the writing workshop and provide students with inspiration
- Evaluation is tied to publication
- Deadlines are important (different lengths of writing)
- Our students are lucky because most of their work will get published and accepted
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Managing Predictable Distractions in the Writing Workshop
Focus Lesson: Listening for Inspiration
- Focus on how the character pays such close attention to the world around her. Such a behavior is a habit of good writers
- Take students on a "listening walk" and encourage them to listen carefully to the sounds around them (try to add onomatopoeia)
- Presence
- Space
- Supplies
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Writing Process: Conferring, Sharing, Assessment / Evaluation
- Prewriting
- Drafting
- Revising (Adding more information, Rearranging information in a logical order, Removing, Replacing)
- Editing (Self or Peer) for capitalization, spelling, punctuation, grammar, sentence structure
- Publishing
Allow the writing process to become semi-public (through sharing and evaluation) and reflective (through conferences and assessments).
How to Make Assessments More Kid-Friendly
- Uses the words "You" (Ex: "Your point of view is convincing...") or "I" (I spelled all grade level words correctly"
Thursday, September 6, 2012
4th Grade CCGPS for Writing
5 Ways About Thinking and Learning in a Writing Workshop:
What genres are required?
- poetry
- drama
- nonfiction (informational)
- narratives
- subject-based works
Any connections from reading to writing?
- books written in a journal format might inspire kids to write like the character of their favorite book (ex: Diary of a Wimpy Kid)
- taking the audience and situation into consideration while writing
What types of skills must students master?
- compare/contrast
- appropriate use of punctuation
- how to add in describing words
- use of reading material to support a claim they make in their writing
Lesson Plans
- ELACC4RL7: Have a student share a story and have another student write about it
- ELACC4W9: Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research
- Environment
- Demonstration
- Direct Instruction
- Inquiry
- Potential of the World
What genres are required?
- poetry
- drama
- nonfiction (informational)
- narratives
- subject-based works
Any connections from reading to writing?
- books written in a journal format might inspire kids to write like the character of their favorite book (ex: Diary of a Wimpy Kid)
- taking the audience and situation into consideration while writing
What types of skills must students master?
- compare/contrast
- appropriate use of punctuation
- how to add in describing words
- use of reading material to support a claim they make in their writing
Lesson Plans
- ELACC4RL7: Have a student share a story and have another student write about it
- ELACC4W9: Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research
Characteristics of a Memoir
- Story of a specific, important memory
- What the author feels (deeply personal)
- Describes a particular place
- Emotionally tied
- More of a memory than a sequential time frame
- Longer span of time
- Author's perspective
- What the author feels (deeply personal)
- Describes a particular place
- Emotionally tied
- More of a memory than a sequential time frame
- Longer span of time
- Author's perspective
**Difference between memoir and personal narrative is that a memoir allows for reflection (you have thoughts and appreciation for it)
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