Title: Introducing 6 Traits into Our Writing
1Introducing 6 Traits into Our Writing
- Helping to Make Our Writing More Complete
2Isnt reading student writing fun?
- Thomas Jefferson, a Virgin, and Benjamin Franklin
were singers of the Declaration of Independence.
Franklin discovered electricity by rubbing cats
backwards and declared, A horse divided against
itself cannot stand alone. Franklin died and is
still dead.
3What about these gems?
- Miguel Cervantes wrote Donkey Hote. The next
great author was John Milton. Milton wrote
Paradise Lost. Then his wife died. And he wrote
Paradise Regained. - Voltaire invented electricity. Gravity was
invented by him. It is chiefly noticeable in the
autumn when the apples are falling off the trees. - Louis Pasteur discovered a cure for rabbis.
- Charles Darwin was a naturalist who wrote the
Organ of Species. - Madman Curie discovered radio.
- Karl Marx became one of the Marx brothers.
4The Dreaded Writing Assessment.
- What are the Keys to Higher Writing Scores????????
5Key to Higher Writing Scores..
- Write daily.
- Integrate writing with content areas.
- Require students to do more than one draft.
- Model writing.
- Save student work in portfolio or folder.
- Strive for school-wide continuity of instruction.
- Follow a checklist for best practices.
6What are the 6 Traits?
7What are the 61 Traits?
- Voice
- Word Choice
- Conventions
- Sentence Fluency
- Organization
- Ideas
- Presentation
3.
1.
2.
5.
4.
6.
8Ideas
- Start with the ice cream.
- Whats a sundae without the ice cream?
- The main idea or topic sentence is essential and
begins the piece. - All other add-ons or toppings enhance the ice
cream (main idea).
9Organization
- Hold it all together with the dish.
- The dish (organization) makes the ice cream
(ideas) easier to grasp and prevents it from
melting away.
10Word Choice
- Something more to go on that sundae?
- Bananas, candies or chopped nuts also enhance the
sundae. - There are many types of add-ons (word choice) to
compliment your sundae (main idea).
11Voice
- Hot fudge, strawberries, pineapple, enhance the
ice cream. - Toppings add individuality to the ice cream (main
idea). We dont all like the same things on our
sundaes, do we? - Without toppings, ice cream is just too blah!
12Sentence Fluency
- Will there be anything else to go on your sundae?
- How about some whipped cream to help the toppings
flow along?
13Conventions Presentation
- Whats a sundae without a cherry to top it off?
- Polish up your dessert and add the finishing
touch. - Its all in the presentation looks CAN fool the
stomach! - And now grab a spoon and enjoy!
14Ideas and Content
- Classroom Bank or List
- Journal Page
- Realia
- Literature Experience
- What else?
- http//www.madison.k12.wi.us/tnl/langarts/pdf/6tra
its/ideas.pdf
15A Closer Look at Word Choice
- Use powerful words that paint a mental picture
for the reader. - Add descriptive adjectives to enhance nouns.
- The lumpy brown toad hopped quickly through the
squishy gooey mud. - Verbs should be strong action words.
- The cows stampeded through the field.
- The cows sauntered through the field.
16What else?
- Try to use specific, rather than general nouns.
- The car zoomed down the street. The 1957 Chevy
zoomed down the street. - Use language that is comfortable, not flowery
or stuffy. - I shall not follow you.
- Avoid slang and cliches.
- He was fixin to finish his homework.
17Lets Give it a Try!
- The toad ______through the mud..
- The ______ toad ________through the _________mud.
- The _______ ________ toad __________ ________
through the _________ _________ mud. - For more ideas, see Connies Write On Sentence
Stretchers. http//jc-schools.net/write/stretching
_files/frame.htm
18And Theres More
- Avoid repetition.
- She liked to dance and she liked to skate and she
liked to sing. - Make sure to use words correctly.
- There driving to theyre house and will arrive
their by noon. - Unless you are Hemmingway or Hawthorne, be
concise.
19Sample Strategies for Teaching Word Choice
- Use cartoon bubbles.
- Peer edits circle 5 words in your partners
paper that could be stronger. - During teacher read-alouds point out concrete
examples of strong language. (Toad) Post word
lists around the room. Use specific parts of
speech.
- Encourage use of a Thesaurus. (How many words for
blue are there?) - Encourage students to use senses to describe an
object. Use colored pencils to underline sensory
words.
adapted from http//6traits.cyberspace.net/strat
6.html
20Lets Give it a Try!
21Using our common senses.
- The old man grumbled a bit as he wiped his teary
eye with the back of his gnarled hand. He could
taste the salt as he rubbed his parched lips. He
glanced at his silent wife standing a short
distance away. She too was old, but he still saw
in her wrinkled face the pretty young girl he had
married. She still smelled like freshly mowed
spring grass.
22Using our common senses.
- The old man grumbled a bit as he wiped his teary
eye with the back of his gnarled hand. He could
taste the salt as he rubbed his parched lips. He
glanced at his silent wife standing a short
distance away. She too was old, but he still saw
in her wrinkled face the pretty young girl he had
married. She still smelled like freshly mowed
spring grass.
Key sound touch taste sight smell
23Making Word Posters
pretty good so a lot said
terrifying ear-splitting squishy scrumptious copio
us
Encourage your students to add to the
lists. http//jc-schools.net/write/Shining-Words_f
iles/frame.htm http//www.madison.k12.wi.us/tnl/la
ngarts/pdf/6traits/word_choice.pdf
24Teacher Read Alouds for Teaching Word Choice
- Maniac Magee, Spinelli
- The BFG, Dahl
- A Wrinkle in Time. LEngle
- Anne of Green Gables, Montgomery
- Lizards for Lunch, Storad
- Half a Moon and One Whole Star, Dragonwagon
- Toad, Ruth Brown
25Now Lets Examine Sentence Fluency
- Let your writing develop an easy flow or rhythm.
- Aim to make your writing ache to be read aloud.
- He moved like a slow-motion instant replay.
(Christopher Myers) - Use complete sentences.
- Slept soundly in the crib.
- The baby slept soundly in the crib.
26What else should a good writer do?
- Vary sentence lengths.
- He wore a red shirt. He had on brown slacks. His
jacket was wrinkled. - He wore a wrinkled jacket over a red shirt with
brown slacks. - Vary sentence beginnings.
- I like to sing. I like to play
- the piano.
- I like to sing. Playing the piano
- is my favorite pastime.
27Anything else?
- Try different sentence structures.
- The cow jumped over the moon. The dish ran away
with the spoon. - The cow jumped over the moon. Did you see the
dish run away with that spoon? What an incredible
sight! - http//jc-schools.net/write/I-Trouble.ppt
- http//www.madison.k12.wi.us/tnl/langarts/pdf/6tra
its/sentence_fluency.pdf
28Ideas to Teach Sentence Fluency
- Read examples of good fluency and poor fluency.
- Stress to students that sentences need to flow.
Avoid choppy sentences. - Make sure students know the difference between a
phrase and a sentence. - Have students tell their story into a tape
player. Writing is a way of speaking on paper.
29How about a little Faulkner?
- Frenchman's Bend was a section of rich
river-bottom country lying twenty miles southeast
of Jefferson. Hill-cradled and remote, definite
yet without boundaries, straddling into two
counties and owning allegiance to neither, it had
been the original grant and site of a tremendous
pre-Civil War plantation, the ruins of which the
gutted shell of an enormous house with its fallen
stables and slave quarters and overgrown gardens
and brick terraces and promenadeswere still
known as the Old Frenchman's place, although the
original boundaries now existed only on old faded
records in the Chancery Clerk's office in the
county courthouse in Jefferson, and even some of
the once-fertile fields had long since reverted
to the cane-and-cypress jungle from which their
first master had hewn them.
The Hamlet, William Faulkner
30Teacher Read Alouds to Model Sentence Fluency
- Sarah, Plain and Tall, MacLachlan
- The Van Gogh Café, Rylant
- Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe, Lewis
- Stealing Freedom, Carbone
31Moving on to Voice
- Always write from your heart and share your
feelings with the reader. - Avoid using you.
- Try not to sound like an encyclopedia.
32Tell me more.
- Invest yourself in what you write. Proudly take
ownership. - Connect with your audience.
- Give the reader a glimpse at the person behind
the pen.
33Strategies to Teach Voice
- Rewrite a popular story from a different
characters point of view. (The Real Story of the
Three Little Pigs). - Read stories with vivid images. Have students
close their eyes and draw what they see. - Read segments of dialogue and have students guess
who is speaking. (Charlottes Web) - Do some Author Studies to compare voice. What is
the voice behind Stephen King? - http//www.madison.k12.wi.us/tnl/langarts/pdf/6tra
its/voice.pdf
34Teacher Read Alouds for Voice
- Bridge to Terabithia, Paterson
- Tuck Everlasting, Babbitt
- Ramona Forever, Cleary
- Charlottes Web, White
- Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing, Blume
- Treasure Island, Stevenson
35Bringing new voices into the classroom..
- Solomom had three hundred wives and seven hundred
porcupines. - Socrates was a famous Greek teacher who went
around giving people advice. They killed him.
Socrates died from an overdose of wedlock. After
that his career suffered a dramatic decline. - Ancient Egypt was inhabited by mummies and they
all wrote in hydraulics. They lived in the Sarah
Dessert. The climate of Sarah is such that
inhabitants have to live elsewhere.
36For more information
- Kims Korner for Teacher Talk
- http//www.angelfire.com/ks/teachme/ideasdescripto
rs. - html
- 6 Traits Homepage
- http//6traits.cyberspaces.net/
- 6 1 Trait Writing
- http//www.nwrel.org/assessment/
- 6 Trait Lesson Plans
- http//www.kent.k12.wa.us/staff/LindaJancola/6Trai
t/lessons.htmWord20Choice
- A GREAT Site!!
- http//www.madison.k12.wi.us/tnl/langarts/sixtrtcr
smtrl.htm