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Focused Revision for

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by Walter Dean Myers, Selected Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks and Koala Lou by Mem Fox. CONVENTIONS: Math Appeal by Gregg Tang, Miss Alanieus by Debra Frasier and Speak ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Focused Revision for


1
Six Trait Writing
  • Focused Revision for
  • Student Success

2
MPS Comprehensive Literacy Framework
3
MPS Comprehensive Literacy Framework Area -
Writing Context - School Audience - Teachers
4
MPS Comprehensive Literacy
Framework Area Writing / Context School
/Audience - Teachers
I. Curriculum Alignment (Carr Harris, 2001
Marzano, 2000) A. WI State Standards / MPS
Learning Targets 1. Create or produce writing
to communicate with different audiences for a
variety of purposes. 2. Plan, revise, edit and
publish clear and effective writing. 3.
Understand the function of various forms,
structures, and punctuation marks of standard
American English and use them appropriately
in written communication. B. Curriculum and
Instruction C. Assessment 1. Formative 2.
Summative II. Process (Graves, 2003 Murray,
1999 Elbow, 2000) A. Prewriting B.
Drafting C. Revising D. Editing E. Publishing
F. Reflecting III. Developmental Stages (Teale
Sulzby, 1986) A. Pre-emergent B. Emergent C.
Early D. Developing E. Established IV.
Components of Writing (Dietrich, 1974 Spandel,
2001) A. Ideas B. Organization C. Voice D.
Word Choice E. Sentence Fluency and Variety F.
Conventions V. Approaches (Hill, Mallow
Patterson, 1999) A. Shared Writing B. Modeled
Writing C. Interactive Writing D. Guided
Writing E. Writers Workshop F. Independent
Writing
5

Six Trait Writing Enhances What Effective
Teachers, Schools and Districts are Already Doing
  • Currently
  • Students earn holistic scores (0-4) from the
    most writing assessments. These scores derive
    from summative rubrics and can provide teachers,
    parents, schools and members of the community
    with a snapshot of student performance. Holistic
    scoring provides an overall rating of student
    writing.

6
Holistic (summative) scoring alone does not
  • improve a student's ability
  • to write.

7
Students need more than an overall score to
improve.
  • We must be able to analyze their writing and
    break it down into strengths and weaknesses (look
    at it analytically as well as holistically).
  • Teachers must break down the components of traits
    such as organization into teachable elements
    (e.g. leads, sequencing, pacing, transitions and
    conclusions).
  • Students must understand what makes good writing
    work, how to accurately assess it and how to
    employ purposeful revision and editing strategies
    to enhance their own work (life-long learning).

8
Writing by nature is holistic. An analytic
approach simply makes revision manageable.
  • (from Creating Writers
  • by Vicki Spandel)

9
I always did well on essay tests. Just put
everything you know on there, maybe youll hit
it. And then you get the paper back from the
teacher and shes written just one word across
the top of the page, vague. I thought vague
was kind of vague. Id write underneath it
unclear, and send it back. Shed return it to
me, ambiguous. Id send it back to her,
cloudy. Were still corresponding to this day
hazy muddy Jerry Seinfeld (Sein
Language Bantam Books 1993)
10
To improve, students must
  • Know what good work looks like
  • Compare their work to the standard
  • Understand how to close the gaps
  • --Royce Sadler (Australian Researcher)

11
Studies show that most teachers
spend a superhuman number of hours scoring
writing. To help students improve, it would help
to have a common vocabulary that everyone was
familiar with students, teachers,
parents--everyone.
12
The research foundation of Six Trait Writing is
formative assessment.
  • Formative Assessment FOR Learning
  • Summative Assessment OF Learning

13
According to Dr. Rick Stiggins of the Assessment
Training Institute, there are seven specific ways
to use Assessment FOR Learning
14
Specific Ways to Use Assessment FOR Learning
STRATEGY 1 PROVIDE A CLEAR VISION OF THE
LEARNING TARGET TO THE LEARNER STRATEGY 2 USE
MODELS OF STRONG AND WEAK WORK
15
Specific Ways to Use Assessment FOR Learning
STRATEGY 3 OFFER REGULAR EFFECTIVE
FEEDBACK (MEANINGFUL, ACCURATE, TIMELY,
SPECIFIC) STRATEGY 4 TEACH STUDENTS TO
SELF-ASSESS AND SET GOALS
16
Specific Ways to Use Assessment FOR Learning
STRATEGY 5 DESIGN LESSONS TO FOCUS ON ONE
ASPECT OF QUALITY AT A TIME STRATEGY 6 TEACH
STUDENTS FOCUSED REVISION
17
Specific Ways to Use Assessment FOR Learning
STRATEGY 7 ENGAGE STUDENTS IN SELF-REFLECTION,
KEEPING TRACK OF THEIR LEARNING, AND SHARING
18
The Six Trait Model for Writing Instruction and
Assessment has an easy-to-understand, practical
vocabulary that can be adapted to fit
kindergarten through 12th grade (and beyond) in a
variety of modes and genres of writing.

19
This model has the potential to improve teaching
and learning.
  • Paul Diederichs 1974 article (Measuring Growth
    in English. Urbana, IL NCTE.) reported English
    teachers averaged 130 papers and 8 minutes spent
    on each for a total of 18 hours per assignment.
  • Teachers who use the Six Trait Model have
    acknowledged improvement in
  • their own confidence in the accuracy of their
    scoring
  • their tools for explaining grades to student
    writers
  • their ability to make revision suggestions

20
Five very clear categories (which have come
be known as traits) emerged
  • 1. Ideas
  • This was the biggest one with sub-points of
    richness, soundness, clarity, development and
    relevance to the writers purpose and topic.
  • 2. Mechanics
  • This was the second biggest usage, sentence
    structure, punctuation, and spelling.
  • 3. Organization
  • The third biggest the internal structure,
    sequencing/pattern of ideas
  • 4. Wording/ phrasing
  • The fourth biggest rich, colorful precise
    language graceful flow of language.
  • 5. Flavor
  • The smallest significant category style,
    individuality, originality, interest, and
    sincerity.

21
Based on Diederich's research and the work of
teachers across the country, Vicki Spandel, NWREL
and others created the rubrics most often used
today with these six traits.
  • Ideas and Content
  • Organization
  • Voice
  • Word Choice
  • Sentence Fluency
  • Conventions

22
In the Six Trait Model each trait has a number of
descriptors for good writing. These
descriptors came out of Diederichs study
with modifications from classroom teachers.
  • Ideas
  • clear
  • controlling idea
  • focused/ narrowed
  • sufficient information
  • insightful
  • original
  • interesting details
  • complete
  • Organization
  • inviting opening/lead
  • obvious direction/ logical progression
  • effective sequencing
  • connected-ness
  • smooth transitions
  • good pacing
  • strong sense of conclusion

23
  • Word Choice
  • appropriate to audience purpose
  • active, energetic verbs
  • precise, concrete nouns
  • new twists on everyday words
  • minimal redundancy
  • accuracy of expression
  • paints vivid pictures
  • creative, memorable word
  • combinations
  • Voice
  • obvious person
  • behind the words
  • writer is committed/
  • involved with topic
  • reaches out/ connects
  • to audience
  • energetic, lively
  • consistent tone
  • definite point of view

24
  • Conventions
  • correct spelling
  • correct/effective punctuation
  • appropriate grammar/ usage
  • correct capitalization
  • designed to make reading easy
  • Sentence Fluency
  • graceful, easy to read aloud
  • natural, pleasant rhythm
  • structure enhances meaning
  • effective, smooth phrasing
  • effective use of conjunctions transitions
  • variety in length, type structure of sentences

25
There are clear connections between these
traits and our MPS Writing Rubric
  • 4 ADVANCED / EXCEEDING
  • Ideas clearly communicated
  • Ideas well organized and elaborated
  • Authors personality imprinted on the writing
    task (voice)
  • Effective word choice enriched vocabulary
  • Sentence fluency and variety
  • Minimal errors in capitalization, punctuation,
    grammar, usage, and spelling conventions do not
    interfere with fluency or comprehension

26
The Six Trait approach to teaching and
assessing writing can help the teacher
27
Professional development in the form of
workshops, courses, books, videotapes, etc. is
available from a variety of sources.
  • Barry Lane The Revisers Toolbox
  • Vicki Spandel Creating Writers and Creating
    Young Writers
  • Ruth Culham 6 1 Traits of Writing The
    Complete Guide
  • Houghton Mifflin Write Traits Kits
  • Plus dozens of websites, resource and support
    materials and a variety of training opportunities
    across the country

28
Teachers who use the traits often use one,
all, or any combination of the following steps
  • 1. Introduce a trait by talking about the
    concept.
  • 2. Provide an example through interesting
    literature.
  • 3. Engage in hands-on activities to help students
    understand what the trait is and how to improve
    it, using targeted revision and editing
    strategies.
  • 4. Guide them through the analysis of anonymous
    sample papers.
  • 5. Provide plenty of modeling and practice.

29
Teachers can choose examples of writing according
to what trait students are learning and what
subject they are learning.
  • IDEAS Bud, Not Buddy by
  • Christopher Paul Curtis, Where the Wild Things
    Are by Maurice Sendak and In a Sunburned Country
    by Bill Bryson
  • ORGANIZATION What Jamie Saw by Carolyn Coman,
    Amos and Boris by William Steig and The Five
    People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom
  • VOICE The House on Mango Street by Sandra
    Cisneros, Cosmos by Carl Sagan and The Best
    Christmas Pageant Ever by Barbara Robinson
  • WORD CHOICE Avas Man by Rick Bragg, Come On
    Rain! By Jon J. Muth and The Twits by Roald Dahl
  • SENTENCE FLUENCY Slam! by Walter Dean Myers,
    Selected Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks and Koala Lou
    by Mem Fox
  • CONVENTIONS Math Appeal by Gregg Tang, Miss
    Alanieus by Debra Frasier and Speak by Laurie
    Anderson

30
To Summarize. . .
31
Six Trait Writing
32
Six Trait Writing
33
What you can do now
34
1. Empower students with the knowledge,
reasoning, and skills needed to help them improve
their own writing 2. Learn the elements of each
trait 3. Learn how to help students use
strategies to revise each element (not work on
your organization but how might you enhance the
conclusion and bring your writing to a satisfying
end?
35
When you teach me, teach me one thing at a
time. -Albert Einstein
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