Showing posts with label writing workshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing workshop. Show all posts

Sunday

Volume Tally Sheet

 

This is a tool we are using for students to use at the end of workshop time. We think it should only take a few minutes for students or writing partners to reread their writing and tally. Because we are working on writing volume we expect to see an increase of writing each day. Students could use a different color for each day. 



Click here to download the Volume Tally sheet

If you have any suggestions, I would love to hear them! 

Happy May!

Melissa 


Wednesday

How To Writing Teacher Toolkit

 A few people asked me to share my toolkit for kindergarten HOW TO WRITING. I would suggest creating a tool that works for you. I have played around with different ways to create a toolkit and the plastic binder works best for me.  

I'm going to share some of the pieces in my toolkit that I used with two kindergarten classrooms. Our work with the students focused on oral rehearsal, drafting text and shared writing. 

Shared writing is when the students orally rehearse the text and the teacher writes the words. 

❤️ Many of the tips for my toolkit have come from TC institutes I have attended over the years and Jessica Sauer who is an amazing staff developers at the Reading and Writing Project!

Anchor Charts & Checklists
At the beginning of my toolkit I have the anchor charts from the Teacher's College units, rubrics, and the checklists. The anchor charts help me see what the students will learn in this unit. If possible, it's great to do some shared writing before the units starts. Also, it is helpful to have some blank booklets. 

anchor charts 
checklists
 
Books on Deck

We learned from many TC workshops to have kids make book covers for BOOKS ON DECK. The students make the covers and store them in their folders. So, when they finish a book they will always have one on deck. I decided to bring my own BOOKS ON DECK covers to let the students decide what How To Topic we would write about. I made sure that all the possible topics were familiar with the students. ALSO, this is a great way to share some possible topics kids could write about.  
 
When I modeled this in a kindergarten classroom, we saw an uptick in topics related to the school day. Before my visit, many kids were making How to draw a rainbow, How to draw a heart etc., Modeling school topics made their text school HOW to books much more engaging. (we did shared writing in this classroom after the first bend of teaching)

Shared Writing 
The pieces on the right side were made during shared writing that can be used for conferring or small group. 

Below are some guided reading books 
(procedural text) I used for oral language rehearsal 



During small group time students created the text(orally rehearsed) and the teacher did the writing. Pages were photocopied for book bins. On different days we would reread and add more writing. 
Below is a photo copy version of the book used for shared reading. 


We learned HOW TO SNAP WORDS

I am OBSESSED with these small Post-its. I had students practice sentences using these words. We would put the little Post-its on pages.  For this shared writing text, I made the illustrations and the students used the pictures to orally rehearse the text. 




Pieces of Text made by the teacher for Small Group Instruction 

Spot the Difference??? What do we notice? 


The small group "marks up" the text. Students take out their writing and add to their illustrations. 


A tool we used for Elaboration (modeled during shared writing). 

Teacher made text to use for small group. 


Same text... different purpose

If there is something that you love in your teacher toolkit, I would love to hear from you! 


Happy How To's!
Melissa ❤️






























Go, Love, and Do

I went to a TC Zoom workshop in the fall and heard Lizzie Hertz TC staff provider talk about a way to support students with generating topics for writing workshop. If you ever get the chance to hear Lizzie talk, I would strongly recommend it. Lizzie is a dynamic presenter💕. 

Kids can get writing ideas by thinking about 

  1. Go
  2. Love
  3. Do










Places I go 
People or things I love 
Things I do 

If I am writing a HOW To book can I get an idea from a place I go, love, or do?
I could write a HOW to Go to school book.
I could write a HOW to take care of my dog.
I could write a HOW to do ballet book.

If I am writing an ALL ABOUT book can I get an idea from a place I go, love, or do? 
I could write an ALL ABOUT school book. 
I could write an ALL ABOUT dogs. 
I could write an ALL ABOUT reading book. 

If I am writing a NARRATIVE book can I get an idea from a place I go, love, or do? 

I could write a book about a TIME when I went to the beach. 
I could write a book about a TIME when I took my dog for a walk. 
I could write a book about a TIME when I read a great book. 

Pictures From Home


 I had students bring in two photos of a place they go, love, and do. The kids LOVED sharing these photos with one another. 

When students feel stuck on what to write, they can visit the board. 

(Due to privacy issues the picture is far away)













Nonfiction Teaching Books Template 


Some of my students were struggling with finding topics for their ALL ABOUT books so I created this template as a scaffold. 
  • Pick one picture from the GO, LOVE, DO board. 
  • Working with a partner come up with possible subtopics. 
  • Tell them across your fingers.
  • Put this sheet in your writing folder.  

ALL About Books


Click here for the GO DO LOVE sheet

Tip: Have students draw a picture of something they are passionate about or something they are an expert in. 


All About Books
Fun Things to Do in the Summer 
Camping
Trip to New York
Playing Baseball 
Going to the beach













Tuesday

Making Your Teaching Stick

Years ago, a dear friend of mine, Susan, gifted me with a little book called Making Your Teaching Stick by Shanna Schwartz. Unbeknownst to me, this book would begin my love affair with Teacher College, especially Shanna Schwartz. Attending professional development at Teacher College  inspired me to leave the classroom and become a literacy specialist. I wanted to support teachers with workshop teaching.  However, I miss having my own classroom, especially when I go into kindergarten rooms! Although I am a firm believer in workshop teaching, I think there are a lot  of different approaches to teaching our kids. 

 

The most important approach is the one the that works for you and your students!  Like many teachers all over the world, the spring semester of teaching was challenging. I spent hours upon hours, with no materials provided, making asynchronous videos for grade-one teachers. My Screencastify account has over seventy or eighty videos. I will no longer allow any teacher in my building to tell me they can’t teach a TC lesson in less than ten minutes because it is absolutely possible!  

 

I can show them how it is done and support them as they too turn their unit of studies  into learning lessons that STICK!

Okay, now we are heading into a new school year. Next week, I am meeting with all grade level teachers to make plans for the upcoming school year. Massachusetts has a delayed start,  so students will not be starting school until the end of September. Since many of us are heading into uncharted waters with remote learning, I thought it would be helpful to remind myself and the teachers in my building of Shanna’s stickiness principles.  


 

 Funny enough, I am reading an adult book on learning called Limitless by Jim Kwik and many of his suggestions for adult learning are very similar.  

  I think we can all relate to teaching a class something and the next time you return to it (like the VERY NEXT DAY next day), the class is looking at you like, “What are you talking about?” So, the question is, how can I teach my class something that they will remember and then apply One thing we have to remember is that learning is not linear. A teacher can teach something and kids will forget it or not know how to apply it yet. Shanna reminds readers that teachers should expect many stops and starts from students in their learning. 

 

This means that a child will learn something and then seem to forget it.  

 Below are the stickiness principles:

 • In order for teaching to stick, children have to be ready to learn. 
 

 • Children learn best when they are engaged and active participants. 
 

 • Children need something to remind them of what they learned. Children benefit from the physical representation of the new learning.  

• Repetition is an important ingredient to reaching students because they learn through repetition and they love it. 
 

 

So now the question is how can we bring these four principles together for remote learning?  Over the next few weeks, I’ll explore each principle in depth and think about the implications for remote learning.  

 

Ironically, I just found out that I will be teaching in a classroom, so not only be talking about this in theory, but I will be using these principles in my classroom and truly putting them to the test!  

Have a terrific week! 

Friday

storytelling in first grade

during the summer we blogged about storytelling in the classroom.
jessica kicked off the school year introducing her storytelling string.
each day she shared a story with her first graders. {the class loved this}
jessica asked her class...

her class got to make their own storytelling strings. this was a simple activity using index cards and string.
jessica read the story...
happy storytelling!

jessica & melissa & laura 

Tuesday

using the checklist at writing time

we loved this tiny tip we got from staff developer rebecca cronin at teacher college.

what happens when you give a six year old a checklist?
they check everything on the list .  

 before kids get the checklist to use for their writing, the classroom teacher could be using the checklist during interactive read aloud.

the little strips could be glued in the book with restickable glue.


we read the book emily's balloon a few times... today we are going to check to see if komako sakai did some of the things we are working on at writing time. did komako begin the character's name with a capital letter... yup! did komako end the sentence with punctuation? 



did Komako bring her character's to life by action, detail and talk? 

we can't wait to use the checklist during different parts of the reading and writing day. we know it will help our students when they go to use it independently. 

happy tuesday tip!

jessica & melissa & laura 

Monday

monthly magical reads

ask me by bernard waber

teeny tale:
   
this book tells the story of a daughter and a father exploring the world while asking each other things that they like.  the illustrations are magical. this book makes you feel like your are listening in on a conversation between a grown-up and a child. there is a pattern to the text and it has a  unique organization. one person will ask a question ask me what I like


this book touches on the inquisitiveness  nature of being young and exploring the world with a loved one. ASK ME brought us back to many of our childhood memories from holding a balloon, lying in leaves and digging in sandboxes.



tiny tips:
illustration study for writing workshop/ do the colors change color depending on who is talking?
 
students could make predictions about the story (before reading)
students could tell a story about something they like  
read this story and have students bring in a treasure tell (something they like very much that fits in their hand) 
during interactive writing or shared writing write a book about thing we like (we like playing in the park, we like swinging on the monkey bars etc.,)
the things we like book could become your shared reading text
create a classroom bulletin board of favorite things
students could create their own ASK ME book ( Ask Me:  Do you like_________. )
  I like cake? Do you like cake?
the classroom teacher could take students on an ASK ME walk having students pose wonder questions
 
student's could stop and jot or stop and draw(on post-its) things they like from the walk or wonder questions.


topics: the world has many wonders, love 


why we 💜 this book...

we think this is the perfect book for writing workshop. children often struggle with finding a topic to write about, this book will give students endless possibilities. we love that the amount of text is limited making it easy to read again and again.



happy monday!
melissa & jessica & laura

 

Wednesday

launching writing workshop with storytelling



we know the first month of school is filled with excitement and joy for a new year. this blog post is going to focus on possible mini-lessons for launching writing workshop in the primary classroom. our hope is that you can start thinking about some of these lessons before the start of the school year.

you're probably thinking… the start of writing workshop I need to introduce my students to all the tools they need such as markers, crayons, colored pencils, folders etc., we often think that too. 



in most years presenting tools and procedures is our number one goal. this year, we hope to make storytelling the heart of september. we know that it’s powerful for students to tell their stories; we believe in the saying if you can’t say it you can’t write it.

but in our zest to get things going; we often push full steam ahead and go straight to getting kids to write. this year is going to be different. this year we are going to let them become storytellers.

what would happen if we we gave our kids lots of opportunity to storytell and coached kids on what makes a good storyteller? will storytelling make their stories stronger? we think so.

 

we can start by setting aside time in the day to model storytelling. the ordinary happens in our classrooms could be the stories we sell and tell. we tell the story of the bumble bee in the classroom and how we captured and released it. we tell and sell the story of when there was mystery glitter in everyone's locker and how we tried to solve the mystery. students will quickly learn that stories are all around us. we could also launch reading and writing partnerships through this unit. 

one possible idea is to take turn telling stories (a few times) and eventually the teacher could do shared writing and interactive writing(from the stories told).


Below is a list of possible fall mini-lessons:

IDEAS FOR STORYTELLING

    •teacher models storytelling (all the time)
    •read books about storytelling 
(interactive read aloud time)
    •read books that are similar to the books you will expect them to write soon

    •taking turns telling stories in a large group (pulling names from a jar)

    •storytelling stories with three fingers

    •what happened first, next and last
 (tap blank papers)
    •storytelling with a partner

    •storytelling with a small group 

    •telling stories about what we know 

    •telling stories about what we care about (which are often ordinary things)

    •have a chair called the storytelling stool and students can sit on it to tell a story

    •find opportunities to tell stories about things happening during the day

    •use oral stories shared for interactive writing or shared writing 

    •introducing a storytelling string

    •have students tell stories about a strong feeling

    •parts of a story (beginning, middle, end)

    •showing parts of your story instead of telling your story 


    •telling stories about things we are passionate about things/ people/ foods/ animals 
    watch a storyteller (inquiry)
    •name and notice what they are doing successfully
    create a storytelling anchor chart (storytellers begin with a bold beginning)
 




kids love to hear stories and they love to tell stories. 


if you have to wait five minutes before art… tell a story
when kids come in from recess… tell a story.  

and remember the more you model and the more examples they hear, then the children will begin to see storytelling not as a school task, but rather a part of getting to know one another. they will see their teacher and classmates as a community of friends with stories to share and celebrate. 

we hope you will join us this september and create a culture of storytelling and sharing which in turn will extend into their writing. 

may your days be filled with stories to share!
melissa & jessica & laura