nikki jones and diana fedderman department of k-12 curriculum

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PREPARING FOR THE FCAT WRITES 2.0 Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

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Page 1: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

PREPARING FOR THE FCAT WRITES 2.0

Nikki Jones and Diana FeddermanDepartment of K-12 Curriculum

Page 2: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

THE FUTURE OF FCAT WRITES

Florida is transitioning from FCAT Writes (assessing NGSSS) to PARCC (assessing Common Core State Standards) in 3 years.

To prepare students for the rigorous writing tasks within PARCC, the DOE will institute changes to FCAT Writes each year.

Changes for next year include new purpose- specific rubrics utilizing the language of Common Core.

Page 3: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

FCAT WRITES 2.0 CHANGES

Responses will continue to be scored holistically as draft writing, but scoring will be more stringent. Responses earning scores of 4 or 5 must generally follow the conventions of sentence structure, mechanics, usage, punctuation, and spelling. To earn a score of 6, sentence structure must be varied, and few, if any, errors will occur in mechanics, usage, punctuation, and spelling.

Page 4: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

FCAT WRITES 2.0 CHANGES: CONVENTIONS

Spelling (of grade level appropriate vocabulary)

Complete sentences (other than purposeful fragments)

Subject-verb agreement Capitals End punctuation Basic comma usage

Page 5: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

FCAT WRITES 2.0 CHANGES

Scoring will include increased attention to the quality of details, requiring use of relevant, logical, and plausible support, rather than contrived statistical claims or unsubstantiated generalities. The quality of the support depends on word choice, specificity, depth, relevance, and thoroughness. Responses earning high scores must include specific and relevant supporting details that clarify the meaning, i.e., the point of the paragraph or the central theme of the response. Rote memorization or overuse of compositional techniques, such as rhetorical questions, implausible statistics, or pretentious language, is not the expectation for quality writing at any grade level.

Page 7: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

FCAT WRITES 2.0 CHANGES: FOLDER

Each student will receive two papers: planning sheet and a writing folder.

This year, students will sign a pledge located on the back top of planning sheet.

Page 8: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

ADMINISTRATIVE PRACTICES

Check EDW to ensure accuracy of data. Palm Beach Writes Summary-RTSCW0147 Palm Beach Writes – RTSCW0146

Read a sampling of essays to monitor student progress.

Identify students that need additional support.

Structure and align pull-outs and tutorials that support classroom instruction.

Ensure communication occurs between teachers, coaches, and outside support.

Visit classrooms to monitor writing instructional practices.

Page 9: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

PALM BEACH WRITES SUMMARY- EDW REPORT RTSCW0147

Page 10: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

PALM BEACH WRITES – EDW REPORT RTSCW0146

Page 11: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

FCAT WRITES 2.0 CHANGES

FCAT Writes 2.0 Calibration sets are available on the DOE website as well as Learning Village.

Though previous years’ anchor sets remain available, please use with caution as they reflect the scoring standards for FCAT Writes.

Page 12: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

INSTRUCTIONAL PRACTICES

Students write EVERY DAY (weekly timed and daily untimed).

Teachers read students’ writing EVERY DAY. Determine areas of individual needs Look for trends or patterns across the class

Teach strategic minilessons based on needs.

Utilize calibration guides (scoring/examples and non-examples).

Pull children together for small group with one teaching point.

Confer with individual students.

Provide prescriptive feedback, document, and monitor progress.

Page 13: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

CLASS ANALYSIS

Page 14: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

INDIVIDUAL STUDENT ANALYSIS

Document the feedback you provide to each student.

Teaching point Compliment Next steps

Use the notes for future planning and instruction.

Provide students with a written reminder of the compliment and teaching point.

Page 15: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

Have students create two column page in the back of their notebooks or portfolios to record the date and the teaching point.

They should periodically refer back to these points to check that they are applying them to their writing.

STUDENT’S CONFERENCE NOTES

Page 16: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

PREPARING FOR THE TEST!

Page 17: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

USING STRATEGIES TO GENERATE IDEAS Read your notebook and your folder or

portfolio of work. This will remind you of what you have already written about.

There may be a story or essay idea,

entry, or draft that sparks an idea for your prompt topic.

Think how topics can be angled for narrative or expository prompts.

Page 18: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

UNFAMILIAR TOPICS

Borrow another person’s experience Use an experience seen on TV or in a

movie Use an experience from a book

Page 19: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

USING STRATEGIES TO PLAN Plan for every piece. Decide on and

stick to a planning tool. Work between your plan and draft,

marking off on your plan as you draft.

Page 20: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

RECALLING SUPPORT STRATEGIES

Narrative Expository

Page 21: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

NARRATIVE- BEFORE

I was in gym class and we had to climb the rope. I didn’t want to do it

because I was scared. It was my turn. The coach said I had to do it. I walked up to the rope and started climbing. When I reached the top I

was happy that I made it. I slid down.

Summary of Events

Page 22: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

LAYERS OF SUPPORT-NARRATIVE

The coach said, “It’s your turn, Suzie.” I don’t want to do this, I thought. I slowly walked across the gym floor. My heart was beating like a drum in my chest, and a look of worry spread across my face as my eyes looked up at the top of the rope on the ceiling. I dipped my hands in chalk and blew off the extra. I placed one hand on the rope and then the other. I just stood there. I felt like everyone was watching. “Hook your legs around the rope,” coach said. I pulled on the rope and swung my legs around. I let go with one hand and grabbed higher as I gripped the rope with my knees.

Over and over I pulled my body up and gripped the rope with my arms as I slid my legs up, swinging wildly. I moved higher and higher. ”I’m doing it!” I thought. Step by step, inch by inch. “Suzie, touch the ceiling!” my friend Jane yelled. I looked up. Sure enough there was the ceiling right above my head. I reached out my hand and touched the ceiling. When I looked down all my classmates looked like little ants. A grin spread out on my face and I pumped a fist in the air in celebration. “Yes, I did it!” I screamed.

Dialogue Show Don’t Tell

Tiny Actions

Internal Thoughts

Similes

Page 23: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

EXPOSITORY - BEFORE

I like to go to school because it’s fun. I have a great time at school. At

school we do a lot of very awesome and fun things. The teacher always

teaches us good things. I also have a fun time at recess. School is a very

fun place to be.

Limited Support

Page 24: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

LAYERS OF SUPPORT-EXPOSITORY

Bare

Extended

I like to go to school because it is fun, especially when the teacher lets us play games at recess. We play kickball, tag, and hula hoops. We run and jump and talk with our friends and get to know them. We usually go out for recess after lunch, but sometimes in the morning after math.

Yesterday, we played Mrs. Jones class in kickball and I scored the run that would give us a 6-4 victory.It’s a known fact that students need exercise to stay focused in school.

reason

explanation

Layered

Support Strategi

es

Reason Explanation Evidence Anecdotes Facts Lists

Page 25: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

USING STRATEGIES TO DRAFT

Get to the heart (the most important part) and expand it with skills and strategies from your writer’s toolbox.

Pause and reread once in awhile. Check to be sure your story or essay: is easy to read (spelling, punctuation,

capitalization, grammar, paragraphing)

is well supported (relevant and specific details, precise word choice)

Page 26: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

USING STRATEGIES TO REVISE AND EDIT Give it a final read:

Revising for meaning by: Adding, deleting, and changing words

and information

Editing for conventions by: Correcting spelling Adding or revising punctuation Correcting capitalization

Page 27: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

ACCOUNTABILITY Hold students accountable by having them to:

Try out a variety of strategies (types and layers of support, leads, endings, transitions)

Check the spelling of high frequency words

Phonetically spell higher level vocabulary words

Correct the use of grammar, punctuation, and capitalization (checklist, personal word walls, etc.)

Write everyday and self-monitor what they are working

on: date each page and list the strategy they were working on refer back to conference notes

Page 28: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

RESOURCES Learning Village Test-Taking unit Tutorial Links Calibration Guides (Narrative & Expository)

Professional Development Area-based Training, Lead Teacher Meetings, Writing Coach and

Contact Training, and School-based Training

Topics Already Covered this Year: FCAT Writing Updates Scoring and Analyzing Writing Working with Struggling and Advanced Writers Common Core State Standards for K and 1st

Convention Instruction Features of Narrative Features of Expository and other Nonfiction Genres Test-taking Skills and Strategies

Page 29: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

SCHOOL-WIDE WRITING PLAN

Using grade specific standards and The Continuum of Literacy Learning, each grade level identifies:

What genres they will take through the entire writing process?

What craft techniques they will teach? What conventions they will teach?

Each grade level sends a representative to a K-5 cross grade level meeting to:

ensure all genres have been taught build upon skills and strategies year-to-year to prevent

re-teaching add in any content not specified in the standards or

continuum

Page 30: Nikki Jones and Diana Fedderman Department of K-12 Curriculum

QUESTIONS OR CONCERNS

Nikki JonesK-5

Office: [email protected]

Diana Fedderman6-12

Office: [email protected]