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Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007

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Page 1: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Conferring With WritersPart II

March 28, 2007

Page 2: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

“’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that young writers work best when they feel a sense of ownership – personal investment – in their writing. We want them to care about their writing, to have a this-really-matters-to-me feeling as they write.”

Page 3: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

If you write it, so will they…

Last time we wrote one of the stories of our lives.

Share those stories with your students as models of writing.

When you confer with students use your own experiences as a writer.

Page 4: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

“Even if writing isn’t your strongest suit, you can use your writing as a model for your students. At the same time, you send a powerful message: we’re all writers. We’re in this together.”-Ralph Fletcher

Page 5: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Reflections

Presentation last month gave an overview of the parts of a writing conference.

How many of you returned to classrooms and tried the format of research, decide, teach, and link?

Where are you now in your writing workshop development?

Page 6: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Tips for making your conferences more successful Get the student involved If you are out of ideas, just tell the student

what the reading does for you Don’t make the conference a power

struggle Know your tastes, and make sure they

don’t play too big a part in your conference

Page 7: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Strategies to try

In a mini-lesson, ask students to reread their writing and put an asterisk next to the place in their text where the writing works well. Ask them to put a circle in the margin next to the place where the writing needs more work. Later, when you confer, you can go straight to the place the student has marked.

Read the writer’s writing aloud to them and offer a perspective for what the writing does for you as a reader. Do not tell them what to fix, but offer the perspective of a reader and allow them to hear their own writing read aloud. (I love the part where you…Later, when you said…I got a bit confused because…)

Page 8: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Conferring Ideas for K-1

Adding details to a drawing Adding words to a drawing Using the “two finger rule” Adding a second page (or more) Including a beginning, middle, and end

Page 9: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Conferring Ideas for 2nd – 4th

Focusing in on the most important part Breaking a large topic into manageable

“chunks” Cutting and taping to add information Anticipating readers’ questions Sharpening a lead

Page 10: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

What about skills?

Editing and grammar skills have to be a part of any writing program, but how do you incorporate them into writing workshop?

In your grade level tables, we are going to do just that!

Page 11: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Grade Level Work

Sit with others at your grade level Make a list of writing errors you see your

students make Include errors in grammar, punctuation,

content, and organization of the writing

Page 12: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Which of the errors require a whole class mini-lesson?

Which ones could you just work on with a few students?

Page 13: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Planning and Organizing

When looking at student writing, consider: Is this a mistake that just this student keeps making? Is this a mistake that a small group of my students

continually make? Is this a mistake that many of my students are

making? Is this a mistake that I need to focus on in the

curriculum at my grade level?

Page 14: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Many ways to group and teach

One to One conferences for those skills that only a few kids need and they seem to need it individually

Guided writing group for those skills that a small group of your students seem to continually miss.

Whole group mini-lesson for those skills that many of your students are missing

Page 15: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Keys to Success

Have students apply the editing skill in their own writing, not only on isolated skill exercises.

Work on skills that are grade appropriate and in your GLEs and Curriculum

Page 16: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

How does it really work?

Sit down with your grade level expectations and your curriculum.

Make a list in a single column on a blank sheet of paper of the language skills that are important for your grade level and a part of your curriculum. Copy one checklist for each student.

Page 17: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Continued…

Four times a year, sit down with your student’s writing folders and the checklist for each student. Also record informally throughout the year.

Put a yes in the box if the skill is demonstrated by the student in the writing samples, an S if it is demonstrated inconsistently, and leave the box blank if you don’t see it.

Page 18: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

When curriculum comes straight out of a textbook, we have the assurance that we’ve covered the necessary material. But this assurance is misleading, if not false. Yes, you can test these skills in isolation, but that doesn’t tell you very much. It’s like coaching soccer – sure the kids can trap the ball and kick a goal during practice drills, but can they do it in the game itself? You don’t know until you see the kids actually play.

-- Ralph Fletcher

Page 19: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Grade Level Work

In your grade level tables, look at your GLEs and curriculum.

Make your language checklist of the skills that you need to assess in students at your grade level.

Create a grid that you can use next year to incorporate language instruction into writing workshop.

Page 20: Conferring With Writers Part II March 28, 2007. “ ’Choice leads to voice,’ literacy consultant John Poeton says when talking about writing. We know that

Ultimately, our teaching must be guided by our students. Listen to them. Watch them write. Try to figure out what blocks their writing fluency. Watch where the class energy falters or soars. Be flexible enough to revise your own teaching to respond to the needs of these novice writers.

--Ralph Fletcher