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Good Beginnings, Endings

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... as a model for ... dedicated teacher in helping kids become good writers. ... Creative spelling is OK for the first draft. Circle words that may be ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Good Beginnings, Endings


1
Good Beginnings, Endings Stuff in Between
  • This workshop will assist you with ideas,
    strategies, and techniques that will help
    students craft better writing.
  • The Writing Workshop Resource Manual will be a
    great resource for you and your students

2
Explicit instruction
  • Explicit Instruction helps all students those
    with and without learning disabilities
  • Instruction should be explicit about
  • Process planning, revising, and helping kids
    learn to monitor what theyre doing
  • Goals why kids are being asked to do the
    writing assignment and what they intend to give
    the reader

3
Encouraging young writers
  • Model the process. The work that goes into
    writing planning, drafting, revising, and
    editing all goes on inside the mind. Make it
    visible to students
  • Help make handwriting, spelling, and sentence
    construction routine (automatized, so students
    dont have to stop and think of each word)
  • Provide grammar and vocabulary instruction

4
Extra attention to the fundamentals pays off
  • As a students spelling improves and their
    writing improves, there is a carryover effect
    in
  • improved sentence construction
  • increased amount of writing
  • increased quality of the writing

5
Mechanics versus content
  • Often interrelated. For example, if you struggle
    writing the words youre going to produce less
    content
  • If a kid struggles with mechanics, provide
    focused instruction in letter formation and
    spelling to help kids move past that point. Look
    for alternatives to help the student keep up
    (e.g., word processing software, speech synthesis
    software)
  • If a kid struggles with content, sometimes its a
    structure issue or a knowledge issue.
    Instruction should center on how to get ideas and
    ways to organize ideas

6
Other effective strategies
  • Explicitly teach children how to form sentences
  • Use reading as a model for writing
  • Have kids do research and ask questions to get
    ideas for writing
  • But nothing beats a well-prepared,
    knowledgeable, dedicated teacher in helping kids
    become good writers.

7
How to model sentence formation
  • Take small, kernel sentences
  • Show how to make those into more complex
    sentences
  • Have kids work with you to do the same thing,
    then work with each other
  • Have them apply the practice in their own writing

8
The Writing Workshop Resource Manual
  • Lets take a look inside to preview some helpful
    ideas, strategies, and techniques that will
    assist your writing instruction in your classroom
    or instructional setting

9
Chicopee Writing RubricThird Grade Proficient
  • Topic is clearly stated
  • Minimum of three details in body paragraph
  • Details support topic
  • All sentences on topic
  • 5 paragraphs with introduction, body, conclusion
  • Ideas are logical and sequential
  • Appropriate use of transitions
  • Correct paragraphing
  • Consistent use of complete sentences
  • Evidence of compound/complex sentences
  • Sentence variety type and length
  • Precise and varied word choice noun, pronoun,
    verb, adjective, and adverb
  • Words support topic
  • Sensory words
  • Writers purpose is clear

10
Writing Conventions Proficient
  • Capitalization
  • End punctuation
  • Commas for dates, series, phrases
  • Correctly spelled grade level words
  • Correct use of verb tense and plurals

11
Prewriting
  • First step to a well developed composition is
    organizing your thoughts in the prewriting step
    which helps the writer
  • Stay focused on the subject
  • Think sequentially
  • Form strategies for beginning, middle, and end
  • Come up with all options before writing
  • Write descriptively
  • Consider the audience and purpose of their
    writing

12
Some Prewriting Strategies
  • Brainstorming
  • Making a list
  • Webbing
  • Sequencing with a storyboard
  • Graphic organizers
  • Transition timeline
  • First, next, after
  • Memory Chart
  • Who, What, When, Where, Why?

13
Webbing
Detail
Detail
Detail
Detail
Main idea for 2nd detail paragraph
Main idea for 1st detail paragraph
TOPIC
Important words from the prompt
Detail
Detail
Main idea for 3rd detail paragraph
Detail
Detail
Detail
14
Bold Beginnings
  • Lets the reader know what the topic is
  • In narrative, you let the reader know you are
    going to tell a story.
  • In expository, the beginning makes an important
    statement that can be explained and supported
    with reason and details

15
Bold Beginnings
  • An introductory paragraph
  • Includes the main idea/ topic sentence, as well
    as a sentence for each detail paragraph. (from
    bubbles in web)
  • Concluding sentence should restate main idea
    and/or add an emotion word.
  • A good introductory paragraph acts as a guide for
    the rest of the composition!!

16
Bold Beginnings
  • Hook Sentence/Grabber Sentence
  • Catches the readers attention
  • Pulls the reader into the essay and makes the
    reader want to read more!
  • Its appropriate for the purpose and audience
    being written for.
  • (Binder p. 75-89)

17
ACTIVITY
  • Hooking your reader!! Winning a prize!
  • A Day at the Beach
  • What are some tacky beginnings?

18
Marvelous Middle
  • 3 detail paragraphs
  • Paint a picture for the reader with specific
    details that are organized and stay on focus.
  • Have students utilize the prewriting strategies
    to stay organized.

19
Marvelous Middles
  • Ingredients for a good composition
  • Details! Details! Details!
  • Stay on topic
  • Sequential/logical order
  • Emotion words
  • Dialogue (limited!)
  • Sensory Words
  • Sentence variety and length
  • Voice

20
Marvelous Middles
  • Show, dont tell
  • Means to describe something to the reader instead
    of telling them something too obvious. It paints
    a picture in the readers mind.

21
Marvelous Middles
  • The boy was very frightened.
  • The boy screeched in terror and threw his hands
    up to protect himself. Even though his legs felt
    like they had turned to jelly, he jumped to his
    feet and ran screaming all the way.

22
ACTIVITY
  • Show, dont tell
  • Rewrite one of the following sentences!
  • The girl was happy to see her mom.
  • He was mad they didnt win.
  • The garden is pretty.
  • That ride was fun.

23
Marvelous Middles
  • Vivid vocabulary
  • Strong verbs
  • Adjectives/adverbs
  • Specific nouns
  • Figurative language
  • Similes
  • Metaphors
  • Idioms
  • Onomatopoeia

24
Marvelous Middles
  • Conventions
  • Punctuation
  • Capitalization
  • Spelling
  • Creative spelling is OK for the first draft.
    Circle words that may be misspelled.
  • Grammar

25
Marvelous Middles
  • Each detail paragraph should have a hook
    sentence/main idea sentence.
  • Paragraph details come from the web, or
    prewriting.
  • Concluding sentence should restate the paragraph
    topic or use a feeling word to make it more
    personal. The concluding sentence helps lend to
    the VOICE of the essay.

26
Excellent Endings
  • The concluding paragraph
  • Restates the topic that is in the introductory
    paragraph.
  • Summarizes the points in the body of the essay.
  • Brings the essay to an end.
  • Gives the reader something to think about.
  • Wrap it up!
  • What do you want the reader to remember?

27
Excellent Endings
  • Here are some ideas for excellent endings
  • End with advice to the reader
  • End with a quote
  • End with a question
  • End by rewording the beginning

28
Revising
  • Students clarify their writing and make it more
    interesting to the reader. They may make changes
    in content, word choice, sentence structure and
    organization.

29
Revising
  • Helpful Hints
  • Skipping lines on first draft makes it easier for
    students to make corrections.
  • Have students use colored pencils in revising.
  • Students should read their first draft aloud,
    either to themselves or a classmate.
  • Make a revision checklist available, so students
    know what they are looking for when revising.
  • Make word lists, thesauruses, and dictionaries
    available.

30
Editing
  • Students review their writing to correct errors
    in conventions
  • Punctuation, spelling (circled words),
    capitalization, indenting, and grammar.
  • Model and practice skills in small groups and
    center activities
  • Differentiate instruction
  • Provide editing checklist

31
ACTIVITY
  • Write an excellent ending! Win a prize!
  • Have you ever been so frightened that you
    couldnt talk or move? Thats what happened to
    me last Thursday. It was the scariest day of my
    life.
  • I had just arrived home after school. I
    was surprised to see the front door wide open. I
    called for mom, but no answer. I ran through
    every room in the house calling for her. I
    couldnt find her anywhere. Thats when I got
    really scared. What had happened to my mother?
    Imagine my relief when she walked into the house.
  • (ADD AN ENDING!)

32
Final Thoughts
  • Give explicit instruction to demonstrate writing
    process and skills.
  • Allow students time to practice writing.
  • Write across the curriculum.
  • MAKE WRITING FUN!
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