250 likes | 430 Views
English SOL Institute Elementary Writing Strand Genre Study: Learning to Read like Writers. Kelly Worland Piantedosi kworland@umd.edu. Elementary Writing. Key Points in Writing.
E N D
English SOL Institute • Elementary Writing Strand • Genre Study: • Learning to Read like Writers Kelly Worland Piantedosi kworland@umd.edu
Elementary Writing Key Points in Writing • Writing to convey a concise message begins in Kindergarten and moves through grade 3 when students will write a short report • Student use of graphic organizers begins at grade 1 • Beginning in grade 4, students write multi-paragraph essays
Elementary Writing Key Points in Writing • Persuasive writing begins in 5th grade • Students in grades 3-5 should have practice writing on demand, for shorter time frames, and over extended periods of time
Today’s objectives . . . • Identify goals for writing instruction and development • Identify common pitfalls for struggling writers • Identify strategies and solutions using genre study and student-centered practices
How are we doing? Where would we like to improve? What needs to change? *average pass rates for Region 4
Let’s take a look at some sample essays in your handouts . . . What are the differences between a non-proficient and proficient/advanced writer according to SOL scores?
What are the primary challenges for lower performing students? • Lack of central idea • Lack of specific details and elaboration • Lack of focus
What are teachers’ typical solution to these types of problems? • Graphic organizers • Mini-lessons focused on telling students the components of a well-written essay and teacher-modeled writing. • Tell students to add more details • Tell students to cut out sentences that don’t match their central idea
Why don’t these approaches work for struggling writers? Novice writers often engage in a knowledge-telling process when they write. Experienced writers use a knowledge-transforming strategy to shape their knowledge for a specific purpose and audience. Figure 1. Bereiter and Scardamalia’s knowledge-telling model (1987).
What does knowledge-telling look like in practice? Figure 2. An example of a hierarchical attribute list from Donovan, 2001.
Traditional Approach to Writing Instruction:Let’s examine a sample lesson
Sample Lesson • Systems - Those Mighty, Mighty Ants! • By Mary Perrin • Ants are amazing insects. They live in colonies. Each colony is a system of ants that work together and • depend on one another in order to live. Each colony has worker ants, soldier ants, and one or two queen • ants. Their tiny bodies are made to allow them to do different jobs. Each job is important. The colony would • not do very well if a job did not get done. Every ant does its part. The worker ants must move the quickest. • The worker ants are responsible for many jobs. Worker ants do not live very long. They collect food for the • colony, they look after the queen's eggs, and they work hard to protect the nest. • The nest is sometimes called an ant hill. An ant hill is a pile of dirt or sand that sits on top of the ground. • Ants can also make their nest underground, beneath rocks, and inside old trees, too. Like other insects, ants • have six legs. Ants use their strong legs to help them move quickly around the nest. Ants also have three • main body parts. They are called the head, thorax, and abdomen. These three body parts allow ants to carry • large amounts of weight. Ants can lift twenty times their body weight. For example, if your body weighs fifty • pounds, you would be able to lift one thousand pounds all by yourself. That requires a lot of strength. Ants • also have two stomachs. They have an extra stomach to store food for the other members of the colony. • The next time you see an ant on the sidewalk or climbing around on a leaf, remember that the little ant is • doing its very important job. When all the ants do their special jobs, they create something wonderful: an ant • hill complete with a nursery for larvae (baby ants), a dump where they put their waste, and even a kitchen • where they store all their food. Ants may be tiny, but they are mighty!
Genre Study or teaching our kids to Read Like Writers • Start by teaching kids to develop: • A clear and authentic purpose for writing • Persuade • Inform • Entertain/Engage • Combination • An awareness of audience
How do we teach this? • Guiding principle of the genre study approach: • Tell me and I'll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I'll understand. • ~Chinese proverb
Genre Study Approach Step by Step • Establish author’s purpose. • Provide examples and non-examples of one component of each genre of writing at a time . • Ask students to identify which example of writing they prefer and why to gain an awareness of audience. • Name the strategy the author used to make that example interesting to their reader. • Ask the students to try that strategy in their own writing. • Teach kids to reread, revise, and rewrite throughout the drafting process. REVISION SHOULD BE ON-GOING!
References • Bereiter, C., & Scardamalia, M. (1987). The psychology of written composition. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. • Donovan, C. A. (2001). Children’s development and control of written story and informational genres: Insights from one elementary school. Research in the Teaching of English, 35, 395-447. • Lattimer, H. (2003). Thinking through genre: Units of study in reading and writing • workshops, 4-12. Portland, ME: Stenhouse. • Wood Ray, K. (2006). Study Driven. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann
Contact Information • Kelly Worland Piantedosi • kworland@umd.edu
Disclaimer Reference within this presentation to any specific commercial or non-commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer or otherwise does not constitute or imply an endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the Virginia Department of Education.