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Explore the 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks and discover why they are essential for K-7 students. Learn implementation options, what goes into an Idea Notebook, early literacy and writing concepts, and considerations for early childhood writing.
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Idea Notebooks Presented by: Lila Jorge Patricia Krivac Stacey Shubitz Thursday, June 8th, 2006 Professional Development Day
The 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks • WHO • Students K-7 • Faculty • Administration
The 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks • WHAT: • A place to find & collect new ideas
The 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks • WHEN (pick what works for you): • Morning lineup/sitting in auditorium • On the way to assemblies • Transitional times/early finishers (in class) • Recess during inclement weather • Waiting for after school to begin • In the morning, evenings, weekends, vacations
The 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks • WHERE (pick what works for you): • Classrooms • Hallways • Auditorium • Cafeteria • Playground/Yard • Field Trips • Subway or bus • At home
The 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks • WHY: • “We can’t give children rich lives, but we can give them the lens to appreciate the richness that is already there in their lives. Notebooks validate a child’s existence.” --Lucy Calkins, Living Between the Lines, 35
The 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks • WHY: • To provide a place for students to practice writing. • Generate texts • Find ideas --Aimee Buckner, Notebook Know-How, 5
The 5 W’s of Idea Notebooks • WHY: • To give children a place where writing matters to them. • To develop a love of writing. • To find excitement in the act of collecting ideas that hold meaning to them.
Implementation: Option A • Teachers will model how to use the Idea Notebook during the first week of school. • During Writer’s Workshop • Students will carry their Idea Notebook to and from school beginning the first week of school.
Implementation: Option B • Teachers will spend about two weeks “talking-up” the Idea Notebook. • Modeling how to use the Idea Notebook. • Countdown the days until the kids receive their Idea Notebooks. • Launch the Idea Notebook with some fanfare in your classroom.
What Goes In An Idea Notebook? • Observations of people or situations • Overheard conversations • Sketches • Snatches of talk • Longer entries • Once kids feel comfortable using their Idea Notebook.
Early Literacy and Writing Concepts According to the National Council of Teachers of English: • 1. Young children possess knowledge about written language and a variety of forms of writing—stories, lists, signs—from an early age; quality instruction in the primary grades reflects children’s experience and knowledge. • 2. All families engage with literacy and literacy-related experiences.
Writing Concepts (cont.) • 3. Writing develops in non-linear ways and takes multiple forms as it becomes more conventional. • 4. The “language arts” develop in concert. Drawing supports writing, writing supports reading; opportunity to use multiple expressions of language increases language learning and ability • 5. Writing is a social activity; writing instruction should be embedded in social contexts.
Writing Concepts • 6. Language learning proceeds best when children use language for meaningful purposes. • 7. Experience with a particular kind of writing is the best indicator of performance; extensive reading and writing within a particular genre or domain increases successful performance. • 8. Writing is effectively used as a tool for thinking and learning throughout the curriculum.
Writing Concepts • 9. Students’ writing and language use reflects the communities in which they participate. • 10. Control of a written and spoken discourse supports personal/political power. • 11. The intent of education is to increase and broaden our use of multiple social discourses, as well as to understand the implications of their use.
Considerations for Early Childhood Writing • Children need to know that writing is a social process that brings people closer. • Writing has many purposes and forms. *** • Oral stories drawn from their own lives is quintessential in the writing process. • Students need to think of themselves as authors. • Teachers need to model all the many ways we use writing.
Differentiation • Sketching and labeling are the two best ways to get them started. • Give the students time to share their notes or write to a partner/teacher. • Capture students’ stories during centers, as students unpack/pack, return from trips or vacation and create conversations on these moments.
What does it look like? • Faculty/Administration: • Continue to use your Blueline Notebook (aka: your Writer’s Notebook) for this purpose. • Grab an Idea Notebook, like the one your kids will use, and carry that around if you prefer! • Students: • That’s up to you. • You’ll get to choose from a few small notebooks; whichever one suits you and your students’ needs best.
So the kids are writing in little notebooks… now what? • Idea Notebooks should be semi-private. • Encourage your kids to share their entries with a writing partner or the class. • Give students time to transfer Idea Notebook jottings into their Writer’s Notebook so they can develop good jottings/sketches into seed ideas.
Next Steps • Select an Idea Notebook. • Develop short lessons to model the way to create entries in an Idea Notebook. • Decide how you’ll promote the use of the Idea Notebook with your students.
Questions/Comments • Does this mean kids can’t carry books with them like they used to? • Will there be Writing Certificates (similar to Reading Certificates)? • How do I prevent my students from using their Idea Notebook for writing notes to friends? Tearing out pages? • How do I assess the Idea Notebook? • Should time be allotted during the school day for students to write in their Idea Notebook or should this be done on-the-go? • Do I have to carry a Writer’s Notebook with me everywhere I go? • What happens if a student loses his/her Idea Notebook? • What do I do if my students run out of pages in their Idea Notebook? • Anything else that’s on your mind…
A final word about goals… • We are striving to become a community of writers at P.S. 171. • If we show the kids that their writing matters, then we’ll be on our way to building a thriving community of writers this fall.