using writers’ workshop to strengthen writing skills & enhance reading comprehension k-4 your...

37
Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in Education

Upload: suzanna-mathews

Post on 25-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Using Writers’

Workshop to Strengthen

Writing Skills & Enhance Reading

ComprehensionK-4

Your Workshop Facilitator

Dr. Dea Conrad-CurryYour Partner in

Education

Page 2: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Today’s Goals• Practice organizational strategies

for implementation of successful writing workshops– Time– Space– Materials

• Customize assessment rubrics according to CCSS expectations

• Identify a text exemplar as a “kick-off” for the writing workshop

• Determine three topics for upcoming mini-lessons

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education

2

Page 3: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

LAUNCHING THE WRITING WORKSHOP

UNIT 1

3

Page 4: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Create a Space• Physical: writing station, desk pods • Writing: tools, storage, placement

Generate Ideas

Invite to Write

• Get a picture in my head• Tell before I write

• Using pictures• Using words (dictated or written)

Showcase & Share• Student reads their writing to whole group• Partners read their writing to one another• Teacher showcases specific aspect of

student work© 2012-2013 Partner in Education

4

Page 5: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

COMPONENTS OF THE WRITING WORSKHOP

KINDER FIRST SECOND THIRD FOURTH

READ ALOUD 5-7 minutes

5-7 minutes

5-7 minutes

7minutes

7 minutes

MINI-LESSON 5 minutes

5 minutes

5 minutes

INDEPENDENT WRITING

15 minutes

15 minutes

20 minutes

20 minutes

20 minutes

SHARING 5 minutes 5 minutes 5 minutes 5 minutes 5 minutes

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education

5

Page 6: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

CREATE A SPACE• COME TO THE WRITING SPACE• AVAILABILITY OF TOOLS

– Assorted pens – Assorted markers– Assorted papers

• DISTRIBUTION OF STORAGE MATERIALS• Folders

– prepared with red and green dots– Prepared with reminders of word sounds– Prepared with reminders of what to do when…

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education

6

Page 7: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

GENERATE & REHEARSE IDEAS

Small Moments: Personal Narrative

Show videotape from Resources DVDThink of a teaching moment you have had this yearPicture the moment in your headTell it to a partner

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education

7

Page 8: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

INVITE TO WRITEImportance of Visualization

Narrative Text

• Allows for meaning making between the author and the reader

• Engages reader in the text as the words become a motion picture of the mind

• Personalize text meaning

Informational Text

• Identity and extend patterns

• Work through process relationships

• Formulate cause and effect relationships

• Anticipate and prepare for hands-on activity

• Distinguish components of part and whole

Source: Miller, Cathy Puett. (2004). Opening the door: Teaching students to use visualization to improve comprehension. Education World. Retrieved 5 May 2008. http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/profdev/profdev094.shtml

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education

8

Page 9: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Realizing1. Realize that visualization helps writers use prior knowledge to link to readers.

2. Realize that writers use his/her imagination to visualize and then makes an effort to communicate these images to readers.

Understanding3. Understand that throughout the writing process, writers consider how readers will visualize.

4. Understand that words connect the emotion, senses, and experiences of writers to readers.

Applying5. Applying visualization promotes using text (reader) as a catalyst to build new thinking and ideas (writer).

6. Applying visualization brings together writer’s purpose with the intended audience, readers.

Three Stages of VisualizationRealizing—Understanding—Applying

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education 9

Page 10: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Types of Visualization• Sensory visualization or imaging

– Typically related to descriptive narrative text • Fiction • Nonfiction

• Concept visualization– Relationships between ideas or events

• In time• In space• Comparisons• How something is accomplished

– Geometric manipulation

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education 10

Page 11: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

BEGIN WITH ASSESSMENT

:

GATHERING BASELINE

DATAIf I don’t see what they already know, I will never know what they could have done…

Page 12: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

ASSESSMENT OF WRITING

AND THE WRITING PROCESS

• Assessing not only the written product but writing process.

• Incorporating district level expectations into CCSS

Page 13: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

13Source: Lucy Calkins Resources for Teaching Writing CD.

Page 14: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Source: State of Delaware Department of Education. Assessment Tools. http://www.doe.k12.de.us/aab/English_Language_Arts/ela_assessment_tools.shtml 14

Page 15: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Source: State of Delaware Department of Education. Assessment Tools. http://www.doe.k12.de.us/aab/English_Language_Arts/ela_assessment_tools.shtml 15

Page 16: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Source: State of Delaware Department of Education. Assessment Tools. http://www.doe.k12.de.us/aab/English_Language_Arts/ela_assessment_tools.shtml

16

Page 17: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Source: State of Delaware Department of Education. Assessment Tools. http://www.doe.k12.de.us/aab/English_Language_Arts/ela_assessment_tools.shtml 17

Page 18: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Source: State of Delaware Department of Education. Assessment Tools. http://www.doe.k12.de.us/aab/English_Language_Arts/ela_assessment_tools.shtml 18

Page 19: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

19

TEXT TYPES & PURPOSES: NARRATIVE

GRADE K GRADE 1 GRADE 2

3. Use a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing to narrate a single event or several loosely linked events, tell about the events in the order in which they occurred, and provide a reaction to what happened.

3. Write narratives in which they recount two or more appropriately sequenced events, include some details regarding what happened, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide some sense of closure.

3. Write narratives in which they recount a well elaborated event or short sequence of events, include details to describe actions, thoughts, and feelings, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide a sense of closure.

GRADE 3 GRADE 4 GRADE 5

3. Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, descriptive details, and clear event sequences.

a. Establish a situation and introduce a narrator and/or characters; organize an event sequence that unfolds naturally.

b. Use dialogue and descriptions of actions, thoughts, and feelings to develop experiences and events or show the response of characters to situations.

c. Use temporal words and phrases to signal event order.

d. Provide a sense of closure.

a. Orient the reader by establishing a situation and introducing a narrator and/or characters; organize an event sequence that unfolds naturally.

b. Use dialogue and description to develop experiences and events or show responses of characters to situations.

c. Use a variety of transitional words and phrases to manage sequence of events.

d. Use concrete words, phrases, & sensory details to convey experiences & events precisely.

e. Provide conclusion that follows from narrated experiences or events.

a. Orient the reader by establishing a situation and introducing a narrator and/or characters; organize an event sequence that unfolds naturally.

b. Use narrative techniques, such as dialogue, description, and pacing, to develop experiences and events or show responses of characters to situations.

c. Use a variety of transitional words, phrases, and clauses to manage the sequence of events.

d. Use concrete words, phrases and sensory details to convey experiences & events precisely.

e. Provide conclusion that follows from the narrated experiences or events.

Page 20: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

20

LANGUAGE STANDARDS

CONVENTIONS OF STANDARD ENGLISH

GRADE K GRADE 1 GRADE 2

1. Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking.a. Print many upper- and lowercase letters.b. Use frequently occurring nouns and verbs.c. Form regular plural nouns orally by adding /s/ or /es/ (e.g., dog, dogs; wish, wishes).d. Understand and use question words (interrogatives) (e.g., who, what, where, when, why, how).e. Use the most frequently occurring prepositions (e.g., to, from, in, out, on, off, for, of, by, with).f. Produce and expand complete sentences in shared language activities.

1. Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking.a. Print all upper- and lowercase letters.b. Use common, proper, and possessive nouns.c. Use singular and plural nouns with matching verbs in basic sentences (e.g., He hops; We hop).d. Use personal, possessive, and indefinite pronouns (e.g., I, me, my; they, them, their, anyone, everything).e. Use verbs to convey a sense of past, present, and future (e.g., Yesterday I walked; Today I walk; Tomorrow I will walk).f. Use frequently occurring adjectives.

1. Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writingor speaking.a. Use collective nouns (e.g., group).b. Form and use frequently occurring irregular plural nouns (e.g., feet, children, teeth, mice, fish).c. Use reflexive pronouns (e.g., myself, ourselves).d. Form and use the past tense of frequently occurring irregular verbs (e.g., sat, hid, told).e. Use adjectives and adverbs, and choose between them depending on what is to be modified.f. Produce, expand, and rearrange complete simple and compound sentences (e.g., The boy watched the movie; The little boy watched the movie; The action movie was watched by the little boy).

GRADE 1 continuedg. Use frequently occurring conjunctions (e.g., and, but, or, so, because).h. Use determiners (e.g., articles, demonstratives).i. Use frequently occurring prepositions (e.g., during, beyond, toward).j. Produce and expand complete simple and compound declarative, interrogative, imperative, and exclamatory sentences

in response to prompts.

Page 21: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

21

LANGUAGE STANDARDS

CONVENTIONS OF STANDARD ENGLISH

GRADE 3 GRADE 4 GRADE 5

1. Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking.a. Explain the function of nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs in general and their functions in particular sentences.b. Form and use regular and irregular plural nouns.c. Use abstract nouns (e.g., childhood).d. Form and use regular and irregular verbs.e. Form and use the simple (e.g., I walked; I walk; I will walk) verb tenses.f. Ensure subject-verb and pronoun-antecedent agreement.*g. Form and use comparative and superlative adjectives and adverbs, and choose between them depending on what is to be modified.h. Use coordinating and subordinating conjunctions.i. Produce simple, compound, and complex sentences.

1. Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking.a. Use relative pronouns (who, whose, whom, which, that) and relative adverbs (where, when, why).b. Form and use the progressive (e.g., I was walking; I am walking; I will be walking) verb tenses.c. Use modal auxiliaries (e.g., can, may, must) to convey various conditions.d. Order adjectives within sentences according to conventional patterns (e.g., a small red bag rather than a red small bag).e. Form and use prepositional phrases.f. Produce complete sentences, recognizing and correcting inappropriate fragments and run-ons.*g. Correctly use frequently confused words (e.g., to, too, two; there, their).*

1. Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writingor speaking.a. Explain the function of conjunctions, prepositions, and interjections in general and their function in particular sentences.b. Form and use the perfect (e.g., I had walked; I have walked; I will have walked) verb tenses.c. Use verb tense to convey various times, sequences, states, and conditions.d. Recognize and correct inappropriate shifts in verb tense.*e. Use correlative conjunctions (e.g., either/or, neither/nor).

Page 22: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

22Source: Lucy Calkins Resources for Teaching Writing CD.

Page 23: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Preparing a Mini-lesson

• Tapping into a text exemplar

• Sources for CCSS exemplars

• Aligning instruction to rubric expectations

Page 24: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Wilder, Laura Ingalls. Little House in the Big Woods. Illustrated by Garth Williams. New York:

HarperCollins, 2007.(1932).From “Two Big Bears”

The Story of Pa and the Bear in the Way

When I went to town yesterday with the furs I found it hard walking in the soft snow. It took me a long time to get to town, and other men with furs had come in earlier to do their trading. The storekeeper was busy, and I had to wait until he could look at my furs.

Then we had to bargain about the price of each one, and then I had to pick out the things I wanted to take in trade.

So it was nearly sundown before I could start home.

I tried to hurry, but the walking was hard and I was tired, so I had not gone far before night came. And I was alone in the Big Woods without my gun.

There were still six miles to walk, and I came along as fast as I could. The night grew darker and darker, and I wished for my gun, because I knew that some of the bears had come out of their winter dens. I had seen their tracks when I went to town in the morning.

Source: Common Core State Standards, Appendix B. (2010). Read-Aloud Stories K-1. p. 20-21. 24

Page 25: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Bears are hungry and cross at this time of year; you know they have been sleeping in their dens all winter long with nothing to eat, and that makes them thin and angry when they wake up. I did not want to meet one.

I hurried along as quick as I could in the dark. By and by the stars gave a little light. It was still black as pitch where the woods were thick, but in the open places I could see, dimly. I could see the snowy road ahead a little way, and I could see the dark woods standing all around me. I was glad when I came into an open place where the stars gave me this faint light.

All the time I was watching, as well as I could, for bears. I was listening for the sounds they make when they go carelessly through the bushes.

Then I came again into an open place, and there, right in the middle of my road, I saw a big black bear.

25

Page 26: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Baum, L. Frank. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Illustrated by W. W. Denslow. New York:

HarperCollins, 2000. (1900). From Chapter 1: “The Cyclone”

Dorothy lived in the midst of the great Kansas prairies, with Uncle Henry, who was a farmer, and Aunt Em, who was the farmer’s wife. Their house was small, for the lumber to build it had to be carried by wagon many miles. There were four walls, a floor and a roof, which made one room; and this room contained a rusty looking cookstove, a cupboard for the dishes, a table, three or four chairs, and the beds. Uncle Henry and Aunt Em had a big bed in one corner, and Dorothy a little bed in another corner. There was no garret at all, and no cellar—except a small hole dug in the ground, called a cyclone cellar, where the family could go in case one of those great whirlwinds arose, mighty enough to crush any building in its path. It was reached by a trap door in the middle of the floor, from which a ladder led down into the small, dark hole.

When Dorothy stood in the doorway and looked around, she could see nothing but the great gray prairie on every side. Not a tree nor a house broke the broad sweep of flat country that reached to the edge of the sky in all directions. The sun had baked the plowed land into a gray mass, with little cracks running through it. Even the grass was not green, for the sun had burned the tops of the long blades until they were the same gray color to be seen everywhere. Once the house had been painted, but the sun blistered the paint and the rains washed it away, and now the house was as dull and gray as everything else.Source: Common Core State Standards, Appendix B. (2010). Read Aloud Stories Grades K-1. p. 20. 26

Page 27: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

When Aunt Em came there to live she was a young, pretty wife. The sun and wind had changed her, too. They had taken the sparkle from her eyes and left them a sober gray; they had taken the red from her cheeks and lips, and they were gray also. She was thin and gaunt, and never smiled now. When Dorothy, who was an orphan, first came to her, Aunt Em had been so startled by the child’s laughter that she would scream and press her hand upon her heart whenever Dorothy’s merry voice reached her ears; and she still looked at the little girl with wonder that she could find anything to laugh at.

Uncle Henry never laughed. He worked hard from morning till night and did not know what joy was. He was gray also, from his long beard to his rough boots, and he looked stern and solemn, and rarely spoke.

It was Toto that made Dorothy laugh, and saved her from growing as gray as her other surroundings. Toto was not gray; he was a little black dog, with long silky hair and small black eyes that twinkled merrily on either side of his funny, wee nose. Toto played all day long, and Dorothy played with him, and loved him dearly.

Today, however, they were not playing. Uncle Henry sat upon the doorstep and looked anxiously at the sky, which was even grayer than usual. Dorothy stood in the door with Toto in her arms, and looked at the sky too. Aunt Em was washing the dishes.

27

Page 28: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

How are photographers and

writers alike?Look at an image.• Imagine what is outside of the printed

margins.– What is to the left or right of the image?– What is above the image?– What is going on in the atmosphere?– What causes the image to be shown as

it is?• Describe what you see in your mind’s eye.• Tell the story the photographer captured in

your own words.– Do we all see the same thing?– Are there similarities about what we

see?– Why? © 2012-2013 Partner in

Education28

Page 29: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education 29

• Generate a list of as many ideas pertaining toa prompt—no idea is a bad idea

• Aim for 12- 15 ideasas students becomemore proficient with theprocess

• Keep in mind sometopics may limit orextend the possibilities

• Set a time limit forthe thought process—1minute to 1 ½ minutes

Productive Thinking: 3-Part Activity

• Turn to a neighbor& share ideas

• Since the goal is 12-15, steal good ideasfrom your partner’s list

• Continue tocome up with moreideas, even those thatwere not on the originallists

• Set a time limit forthe sharing process: 2 minutes

• Designate thespokesperson of thepartner (or threesome)

• Each group choosesthrough consensus oneidea to share with theentire class

• Shared idea should show the best thinking: uniqueness counts

• Continue to stealideas as groups share,always aiming tolengthen the list

In my Head With a Partner Whole ClassStep 2Step 1 Step 3

Page 30: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

What I see in my head

What I feel, hear, smell or taste

Details and words the author used to

make me see or feel

WRITER’S CRAFT

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education 30

Page 31: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

What I see in my head

What I feel, hear, smell or

taste

Details and words the author used to make me see or feel

WRITER’S CRAFT

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education 31

Page 32: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

I read… I imagine sight, sound, taste, touch, smell, emotion

Author’s message

WRITER’S CRAFT

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education 32

Page 33: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

The Precise Nature of LanguageDirections: Place two words that are opposites at the top and bottom of the continuum. Along the continuum line, write

words that better describe each point along the way. The first one is done for you.

Sad

____________________ __________

__________ __________ __________

Happy

NAME _______________________ TEXT _________________ PAGE __________ DATE __________

blissful

sunny

cheerful

joyful

pleased

cheerless

heartsick

glum

content

blue

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education 33

Page 34: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Understanding the Precise Nature of Language

There many different words that express the distance between two emotions. Enter today’s date into your writing notebook and copy the continuum

on the left beneath the date. On the continuum, place

as many words on that continuum to describe varying degrees of bravery.

Now choose one of those words that reminds you of an

experience you have had or can imagine.

Beneath the continuum, begin writing about your experience without using the word you chose. Use sentences that will help the reader picture what you want them to see or feel.

Trade writing notebooks with a peer. Read one another’s sentences and try to match the situationyou described with a word written on your

continuum.

Discuss and compare your thinking. Reflect on your

conversation.

Fear

Valor

© 2012-2013 Partner in Education

34

Page 35: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

WORKSHOP EVALUATION:WHAT AREAS

OF THE TEACHING

PERFORMANCE RUBRIC HAVE I LEARNED MORE

ABOUT…About what do I

need more information &

ideas?

Page 36: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Writing Workshop Professional Development Continuum

Novice Developing/Intermediate Master/AdvancedWriting workshop is held at least four times a week.

Writing workshop is held at least four times a week.

Writing workshop is held at least four times a week. 

A mini-lesson should be taught every day. A mini-lesson should be taught every day. A mini-lesson should be taught every day.

During every workshop students write 30 minutes.

During every workshop students write for at least 30-40 minutes.

During every workshop students write for at least 30-40 minutes.

Each student has a writing partner and have frequent opportunities for classroom shares.

Students have frequent opportunities for partner talk during mini-lessons, mid-workshop interruptions and classroom shares.

Writing partners draw on a growing repertoire of “Ways Partners Can Help Each Other.” Talk is aimed to reintroduce the writer to vital questions, ‘What is this piece really about?’ and ‘What do you want your reader to feel?’

The volume of writing in writer’s notebooks increases steadily over time. Teacher will monitor and track pages produced per unit. Entries and labeled and dated every day.

Teachers and students will monitor and track pages produced per unit. Entries are labeled and dated every day.

Teachers and students will monitor and track pages produced per unit. Students set goals for themselves around volume.

Students produce at least one published piece per unit. Unit of Study lasts 4-5 weeks.*

Students engage in on-demand writing, a formal published piece, and a post-unit on-demand. Unit of study lasts 5 weeks.*

Students engage in on-demand writing, revision of the on-demand, unit publication, a second essay, and possibly a final on-demand. Unit of study lasts 6 weeks.*

Planning should be done in a writer’s notebook and application of mini-lessons are evident.

Students frequently refer to previously written entries to build upon their writing repertoire or to inform their work. Notebook should contain a range of applied strategies across genres.

Students use writer’s notebooks to mine for new ideas, self-assess, and set goals. Notebook should contain a range of applied strategies across genres. 

36

Page 37: Using Writers’ Workshop to Strengthen Writing Skills & Enhance Reading Comprehension K-4 Your Workshop Facilitator Dr. Dea Conrad-Curry Your Partner in

Beginner/Novice Developing/Intermediate Master/AdvancedStudents write at least one elaborated entry a day or a series of short entries. There should not be days in writing workshop when writers produce nothing but a list of topics.

Students write at least one elaborated entry a day such as writing long on a topic, a seriesof entries, or intentional strategy work.

Students write at least one elaborated entry a day such as writing long on a topic, a series of entries, or intentional strategy work.

Teacher administers on-demand assessment before a unit to determine collective strengths and weaknesses.

Teachers use on-demands to determine collective strengths and weaknesses and have students self-assess and revise.

Teachers use on-demands to establish predictable problems and design small group experiences within the unit.

Teaching points from the mini-lessons are complied onto charts and posted in the classroom.

There are 4-5 charts posted at any one time as a way for the teacher to keep previous teaching at play within the classroom.

There are 4-5 charts posted at any one time as a way for the teacher to keep previous teaching at play within the classroom.

Teacher will model the writing process and utilize mentor texts in every unit.

Teachers work on their own writing across the sequence of the unit, writing a few lines, not much more within a mini-lesson.

Teachers work on their own writing across the sequence of the unit, and write a collective class piece with students.

Teacher generally holds a few conferences with students within one day’s workshop, studying the writer’s work over time to notice how the writer is progressing.

Teacher generally begins the writing conference by learning what the writer has been working on as a writer, how the writer has been changing, what the writer has tried to do, and what strategies the writer has used.

Teacher has a deep repertoire of strategies to respond to student needs during the writing conference, to shape mid-workshop interruptions, and looks for patterns across the class to design small group experiences

37