Title: Welcome to
1Welcome toMoving Forward in the Teaching of
Writing
August 5, 2008 Presentation by Melody Munger and
Karen Hamlin Oregon Writing Project
2Lets see who is in the room
I am the one who I am the teacher who. . . I
am the administrator who. . . I am the writer
who. . . Im the reader who. . .
3Goals of the session
- To look at the call for intensive writing as
part of a comprehensive literacy program for
adolescents - To examine the characteristics of quality school
writing programs - To give you a chance to reflect on what this
might mean for your teaching and curriculum - To connect you with colleagues through the Oregon
writing project sites who can think with you and
your staff about whats next in the teaching of
writing
4But first, a word about the National Writing
Project
- and the Oregon writing project sites in
particular
5National Writing Project Sites
6Oregon Sites
Site List
Oregon WP at Eastern Oregon University Eastern
Oregon University, La Grande http//www.eou.edu/ow
p Oregon WP at Lewis and Clark College Lewis and
Clark College, Portland http//www.lclark.edu/dept
/nwi/owp.html Oregon WP at Southern Oregon
University Southern Oregon University,
Ashland http//www.souwritingproject.org Oregon
WP at the University of Oregon University of
Oregon, Eugene http//owp.uoregon.edu Oregon WP
at Willamette University Willamette University,
Salem http//www.willamette.org/owp
7What goes on at a writing project site?
- Invitational Summer Institute
- Advanced institutes on special topics,
conferences, continuity meetings,
teacher-research and study groups - Professional development offerings for schools
and districts
8Well come back to the NWP and the Oregon writing
project sites at the end.
9The American public wants more attention paid to
strong preparation in writing.
10Recent examples
- Commission on Writing
- http//www.writingcommission.org
- National Panel on Second Language Learners
- http//www.cal.org/natl-lit-panel/reports/Executi
ve_Summary.pdf - New SAT and ACT tests with writing samples
http//www.collegeboard.com/student/testing/sat/ab
out/sat/writing.html - http//www.act.org/aap/writing/index.html
- Emerging interest in students as writers in a
digital world
11And our own survey of public opinion demonstrates
that the American public wants more attention
paid to writing
- Nearly 7 in 10 Americans (69) believe writing
should be taught across all subjects and grade
levels - The majority of Americans agree that learning to
write well helps students perform in all subjects
and improves students standardized test scores - Helping teachers teach writing is a priority for
most Americans
A goal of the NWP is to place a writing project
site within reach of every teacher in the
country. There are currently nearly 200 writing
project sites which serve over 135,000 teachers
per year.
http//www.writingproject.org/cs/nwpp/print/nwpr/2
300 http//www.writingproject.org/cs/nwpp/print/nw
pr/922
12The National Commission on Writing A Ticket to
Work or a Ticket Out
- A survey of 120 major American corporations
employing nearly 8 million people concludes that
in todays workplace writing is a threshold
skill for hiring and promotion among salaried
employees. Survey results indicate that writing
is a ticket to professional opportunity, while
poorly written job applications are a figurative
kiss of death. Estimates based on the survey
returns reveal that employers spend billions
annually correcting writing deficiencies. (p. 3)
13National Governors Association SurveyWriting A
Powerful Message from State Government
- Despite the high value that state employers
place on writing skills . . . of state employees
compared to the general workforce, about 30
percent of professional employees fail to meet
state writing expectations.
14Comments from post-secondary stakeholders
- Employees in the military write all the time if
you count up the bits in the stream of e-mail,
memos, reports, etc. They have to be clear,
direct, unambiguous. And the thinking behind
them has to be very, very careful. One thing the
military will teach you is that lives really do
ride on what you write and how you write it.
15Postsecondary Expectations for Writing
- Kinds of writing recent high school graduates are
expected to do in the workplace and military - Emails and memos (e.g., announcements, agendas
and programs, recommendations) - Letters (e.g., application letters, letters of
complaint, thank you letters, letters of request,
customer service responses) - Reports (e.g., sales reports, meeting minutes,
accident/injury reports, performance reports,
maintenance reports) - Proposals (e.g., detailed project plans for
proposals for problem solving, work plans to
organize tasks) - Manuals (e.g., employee policies or instructions)
- Summaries (e.g., trip, interview and meeting
summaries) - Other (e.g., advertisements, news releases,
newsletters, brochures/flyers, job descriptions)
16This move toward texts at work in the world is
behind the renewed attention to
- Audience and purpose
- Genre as a focus of direct teaching
- Subject-specific writing and writing in the
disciplines - Writing in the context of problem/project-based
learning - Writing connected to service learning, community
outreach, youth leadership - Publishing and digital dissemination projects
17Lets take a look at an example from the most
recent NAEP
- Find the handout showing the newspaper article
Studies Show Students Need To Sleep Late Night
Owls Versus Early Birds - Take a few minutes to study this actual NAEP
prompt. Then, talk with your neighbor about how
you would approach this task if you were the
writer and had to respond to the task in 25
minutes the time frame for a NAEP response.
18Actual NAEP prompt used in 2005 NAEP Writing
Assessment
- Prompt Imagine that the article shown on the
next slide appeared in your local newspaper. Read
the article carefully, then write a letter to
your principal arguing for or against the
proposition that classes at your school should
begin and end much later in the day. Be sure to
give detailed reasons to support your argument
and make it convincing.
19Studies Show Students Need to Sleep LateNight
Owls Versus Early Birds
The Journal of Medicine announced today the
results of several recent studies on the sleep
patterns of teenagers and adults. These studies
show that adults and teenagers often have
different kinds of sleep patterns because they
are at different stages in the human growth
cycle. The study on teenagers sleep patterns
showed that changes in teenagers growth hormones
are related to sleeping patterns. In general,
teenagers energy levels are at their lowest in
the morning, between 9 a.m. and 12 noon. To make
the most of students attention span and ability
to learn, the study showed that most teenagers
need to stay up late at night and to sleep late
in the morning. They called this pattern the
night owl syndrome.
Studies of adults (over 30 years of age) showed
the opposite sleep pattern. On average, adults
energy levels were at their lowest at night
between 9 p.m. and 12 midnight and at their
highest between 6 and 9 a.m. In addition, a study
of adults of different ages revealed that as
adults get older they seem to wake up earlier in
the morning. Thus, adults need to go to sleep
earlier in the evening. Researchers called this
sleep pattern the early bird syndrome. Research
ers claim that these studies should be reviewed
by all school systems and appropriate changes
should be made to the daily school schedule.
20Comments from post-secondary stakeholders
- Sure, we want our employees to write clearly and
correctly. Thats the bottom line in being
understood. But the real concern is with getting
a clear, concise analysis of a problem or a
situation with thoughtful recommendations about
what can be done. Its all about leading to
action for us.
21If you were to do the prompt for real, (not for a
test) you would need to
- Look carefully at the research
- Study the sociological and cultural implications
- Conduct focus-groups with stakeholders in the
community - Examine the financial impacts
- Come to a reasoned and defensible recommendation
- Write numerous texts to explain and argue for
the position to be delivered in varying occasions
and to diverse audiences
22Whats next?
- Making it real!
- The attention to writing, and to adolescent
literacy more generally, connects to the interest
in reforming our schools to be more engaging,
demanding, significant places for young people to
do meaningful work.
23So, if we are to make this an ambitious moment,
what does that mean for us as teachers and
administrators?
24Recommendations from Because Writing Matters
- Teach writing and use writing to learn strategies
frequently, beginning in the early grades. - Integrate the teaching of literacy skills
(reading and writing. - Assign diverse writing tasks and use multiple
strategies. - Have students write for authentic purposes and in
ways that engage them in problem-solving,
reflecting, analyzing, and/or imagining. - Teach writing skills of how to organize thoughts,
develop ideas and revise for clarity. - Teach writing as a process.
- As a school, develop common expectations for good
writing and fair and authentic writing
assessments that are aligned with high standards
and reflect student progress beyond single-text
evaluations. - Provide professional development opportunities in
teaching writing so that all teachers and
administrators value, understand, and practice
writing themselves. -
25Can the mandates of "No Child Left Behind" and
the National Commission on Writing's
recommendations be reconciled?
- Professional development requirements in
Title II of "No Child Left Behind" might point
the way to a solution - Provides for teacher mentoring
- team teaching
- reduced class schedules
- Opportunities to develop innovative strategies
for intensive professional development
National Commission on Writing Writing a
School Reform p. 21
26 OWP Inservice in Oregon schools.
Teacher consultants come on-site to learn about
school needs. Consultants design programs
specifically to meet site needs. Average programs
are 10 hours in length. Presenters are
experienced classroom teachers (following the
teachers teaching teachers model). Presenters
all have Writing Project training and
experience. All sessions include writing and
demonstration lessons.
27Oregon Sites
Site List
Oregon WP at Eastern Oregon University Eastern
Oregon University, La Grande http//www.eou.edu/ow
p Oregon WP at Lewis and Clark College Lewis and
Clark College, Portland http//www.lclark.edu/dept
/nwi/owp.html Oregon WP at Southern Oregon
University Southern Oregon University,
Ashland http//www.souwritingproject.org Oregon
WP at the University of Oregon University of
Oregon, Eugene http//owp.uoregon.edu Oregon WP
at Willamette University Willamette University,
Salem http//www.willamette.org/owp
28For more information, visit www.willamette.edu/soe
/owp.
August 5, 2008 Karen Hamlin and Melody
Munger Oregon Writing Project Willamette
University School of Education 900 State
St. Salem, OR 97301