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The Importance of Modeling: Teachers as Writers Presented by Stacie Noisey. July 28, 2011 IWP Summer Leadership Institute. Inspiring…. continuous learners. responsible, caring citizens. In a global community. Enduring Understanding.
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The Importance of Modeling: Teachers as WritersPresented by Stacie Noisey July 28, 2011 IWP Summer Leadership Institute Inspiring… continuous learners responsible, caring citizens In a global community
Enduring Understanding • The act of modeling sends powerful messages about a teacher’s beliefs and practices.
Essential Questions How does modeling the writing process help students as writers? Continuous learners
Today’s TargetsParticipants will be able to: • Explain the importance of modeling the writing process • Describe key aspects of model the writing process • Identify ways to increase modeling their classrooms
Introductions • Six word memoir: In six words introduce yourself to the group. Include as much information as you can.
Ties to the Common Core • College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards for Writing • Production and Distribution of Writing • 5. Develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, editing, rewriting, or trying a new approach. ALL K-5 strand 5 standards begin with the stem: • With guidance and support from adults…
Practice What You Preach • “In regular practice and behavior, the teacher is a model of thoroughness, or self-evaluation, or courtesy, or whatever else is expected of students.” ( Saphier, Haley-Speca, Gower,2008)
Activator • Think, Pair, Share • How do you use modeling think alouds in the writing class?
Who Says Modeling Is a Good Idea? • Beth Davey, is credited in 1983, for an article in Journal of Reading which shows how the think aloud technique of modeling can be used to teach reading comprehension strategies. • Other researchers published similar work on using the think aloud model for reading instruction e.g. Clark, 1984; Meichenbaum, 1985. • In 1983, Donald H. Graves writes about modeling in Writing: Teachers and children at work. • In 1986, Lucy Calkins includes modeling as a protocol during the mini-lesson in her text, The Art of Writing. • Nancy Atwell joined the ranks in 1987 with In the Middle, in which the idea of modeling is integral throughout the writing process.
The Importance of Modeling • Writing instruction has to come during the writing process, not after. • You must show students your process • Make your thinking visible • You don’t need to be perfect • (Kittle, 2008)
Gradual Release of Responsibility • Instruction should be scaffolded to meet the students’ needs. • GRR allows students multiple attempts before they go solo. • Good instruction takes time. *See rubric on purpose and modeling.
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY “I do it” Focus Lesson Guided Instruction “We do it” “You do it together” Collaborative “You do it alone” Independent STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY A Structure for Instruction that Works (c) Fisher & Frey, 2006
Modeling and Purpose • Purpose is intentional and based on formative assessments • Lessons contain guided, collaborative, and independent tasks • Students can explain the purpose in their own words (student friendly targets) • Teacher provides an authentic model • Students use strategies that were modeled
Modeling Think Aloud • Internal dialogue made external • Asking yourself questions • Weighing alternatives and using criteria to choose • False starts and self-correcting • Persistence *See handout for step-by-step directions. ( Saphier, Haley-Speca, Gower,2008)
Model All Phases of the Writing Process • During the pre-writing process teachers can use think aloud to model the strategies writers use to get the process started by brainstorming ideas or demonstrating use of a writer’s notebook.
Model All Phases of the Writing Process • During the drafting process, teachers can model by drafting in front of the students
Model All Phases of the Writing Process • During the revision process, teachers can model how to ask questions and think about audience, purpose and craft.
Model All Phases of the Writing Process • During the editing process, teachers can model how to use mechanics and conventions to help readers understand the message
Summarizer • Give One, Get One, Move On • On a sheet of paper write ideas from today’s presentation that you learned, inspired you, or validated your practice. • Stand up and move around. • Compare notes with other participants. • Add one of their ideas to your paper and share one of your ideas with them. • Move on to the next person and do the same thing.
Professional Literature:Modeled Writing • Atwell, N. (1987). In the Middle. New Hampshire: Heinemann. • Calkins, L. (1986). The Art of Teaching Writing. New Hampshire: Heinemann. • Davey, B. (1983). Think-aloud: Modeling the cognitive processes of reading comprehension. Journal of Reading, 27(1), 44-47. • Fisher,D. & Frey, N. (2007). Scaffolded Writing Instruction: Teaching with a gradual-release framework. New York: Scholastic. • Graves, D. (1983). Writing: Teachers and children at work. New Hampshire: Heinemann. • McCarrier, A., Pinnell, G. S., & Fountas,I. (2000). Interactive Writing. New Hampshire: Heinemann. • Routman, R. (2005). Writing Essentials. New Hampshire: Heinemann. • Saphier, J. Haley-Speca, M.A., & Gower, R. (2008). The Skillful Teacher, 6th ed. Massachusetts: Research for Better Teaching.