Title: LAUNCHING NOTEBOOKS AND WRITING WORKSHOP
1LAUNCHING NOTEBOOKS AND WRITING WORKSHOP
- Upper Grade Professional Development
- P.S. 171
- Presentation by Stacey Shubitz
- Friday, September 1st, 2006
2Idea Notebooks
- A portable writers notebook is used to record
wonderings, observations, overheard
conversations, sketches, etc. - Students need a pen or pencil to carry along with
their notebook. - Author Lester Laminack calls his Idea Notebook a
Spy Notebook. He never leaves home without his
secret weapon (pen) and something to write about. - Cute idea for younger kids might not work in
5th, 6th and 7th grades.
3We Want Kids To Know Four Major Things About
Collecting Entries In Their Writers Notebooks
- Within the personal narrative unit
- Process
- Qualities of Good Writing
- Volume
- Conventions
- This slide, and the four that follow, are adapted
from a presentation at T.C. by Grace Chough,
8/17/06.
4How Writers Fit Notebooks Into The Writing Process
Adapted from the work of Randy Bomer, A Time For
Meaning.
5Process Goals
- How to get started (on an entry)
- What to do when you get stuck.
- How to go from one entry to the next (entry).
- NO CLOSED NOTEBOOKS!
6Qualities of Good Writing Goals
- Focus
- Entries are easy to follow
- Appropriate use of
- Dialogue
- Sensory description
- Knowing the difference between a summary and a
detailed retelling - Crafting strong leads and endings
- Development of the internal story
- Show, not tell.
- Stories have a structure (rising action ? climax
? resolution)
7Volume Goals
- About 2 entries/day.
- Approximately 12 entries/week.
- If students are publishing 1 ½ pages of writing,
then you should expect their entries to be about
1 page long.
8Conventions Goals(within notebook entries)
- Ending Punctuation
- Making appropriate choices about when to use
periods, exclamation points and question marks. - Paragraphing
- Whenever theres a new person introduced, a new
person talking or theres a move to a different
place.
9We cant ask our students to do what we wont do,
so
- Now its your turn to try it.
- By the end of this session youll have five
entries in your writers notebook. - All of these entries are directly related to five
minilessons you might teach during the first two
weeks of school. - Your entries could be used as demonstration texts
for your students.
10Observation of the Room Strategy
- Read the room right now.
- Write a quick entry about what youre noticing,
how you feel about being back at school today, an
overheard conversation or anything else you wish
to record about whats happening in here this
morning. - You will not have to share this entry with
anyone! - This is the type of Idea Notebook entry youll
want your kids to write.
11Meaningful Place Strategy
- Think of a meaningful place.
- It could be anything from the kitchen table in
the home where you grew up to your favorite beach
in Florida. - List small moments related to that place.
- Write about one of those small moments in your
writers notebook.
12Look at a Photograph Strategy
- Study the photograph.
- Think about
- Who or what is pictured?
- Where was the picture taken?
- When was the picture taken?
- Why did you choose this photo to bring in today?
- Write about the small moment related to the
photograph.
13Think of a Person Strategy
- Think about a person who is important to you
(living or deceased). - List as many small moments as you can about that
person. - Write about one of those small moments with
him/her.
14Look at an Object Strategy
- Examine the object closely.
- When did you get it?
- Where did you buy or acquire it from?
- Who gave it to you?
- Why is it important?
- List everything!
- Write a small moment entry related to this object.
15QA
- Questions
- Comments
- Concerns
16Conferring During September
- The following slides serve as additional support
for conferences you might hold during the first
month of school.
17Sample Questions for the Research Stage of your
R-D-T Conference
Chart adapted from Atwell (1987) and Anderson
(2002). Conference questions generated by
Matthews Shubitz (2006).
18A Hierarchy of What Matters Most When Conferring
During This Unit of Study
Adapted from the work of Jen Serravallo (2006).
19Conferring MenuSample Writing Conference
Teaching Points
Teaching points created by Matthews Shubitz
(2006).
20Management Tipsto establish during the first
weeks of school
- Always work towards independence.
- Dont be afraid to use Workshop time to teach
management. - What to do when youre done with an entry.
- My job/your job in a conference.
- Make sure youre building stamina.
- Use mid-workshop interruptions to give students a
break. - Can be compliments that reflect independence.
- Create word walls and portable spelling lists
(for WW folders) to help students with their
spelling. - Self-Assignment Boxes (see next slide)
- Compliment Conferences
- Quick conferences that consist of 1-2 research
questions, then give the student a paragraph
worth of speech as a compliment. Then, move on! - Teach-Only Conference
- Drop a teaching point to kids as you work the
room. - Example Oh, dont forget to do
_______________. - Build-in time to move around the room to see
whats going on in-between conferences. - Adapted from a presentation at T.C. by Jen
Serravallo, 8/18/06.
21Self-Assignment Boxes in Writers Notebooks
- EXAMPLE 1
- Pick another entry from my notebook and rewrite
it in tiny little steps.
- EXAMPLE 2
- Write a scene where I show the internal and
external story.
22Closing Quotations
- Walk through life like a writer. --Lucy
Calkins - Tell the truth about your life and whats really
going on. --Georgia Heard - We know the truth of ordinary life events.
Everything doesnt end with happily ever
after. --Georgia Heard - Careful control in craft makes for artful
writing. --Lester Laminack