Title: Dialogue Journals
1Dialogue Journals
2What is a Dialogue Journal?
- New channel of communication
- Context for language and literacy development
- Written conversation between child and adult
3What Dialogue Journals offer
- Teaches value and enjoyment of reading
- More time for teachers to communicate with
students - Develop writing skills
- Students can share and address personal issues
- Teacher can observe and comment on students
thinking
4How Dialogue Journals Work
- The teacher is a participant in a conversation
with the student rather than an evaluator who
corrects the students writing. - The teacher demonstrates correct English when
responding to the entry.
5First Documented Use of Dialogue Journal
Sixth grade students in Californianative and
nonnative English speakers
6Logistics
- Materials- notebooks or computer disks
- Frequency of writing- done regularly based on
number of students, length of class, schedules,
and needs - Length of writing- set a minimum in the beginning
(EX three sentences), and then allow the student
to choose the length
7Logistics cont.
- Writing Instructions and Topics- allow students
to pick any topic and let them know their writing
wont be corrected - Journal partners- the partner may be a teacher,
aides, classmates, or students from another class
8Benefits
- Extending contact time with students and getting
to know them in a way that may not be possible
otherwise - Management of classes with students of varying
language, ability, interest levels-
individualized instruction, feedback of
understanding - Optimal language learning conditions- teacher
models input of English skills for reading and
writing
9Drawback
Time The teacher must find time to read and write
the journals in addition to other classroom tasks.
10When can dialogue journals be used?
Due to the fact that childrens needs are
incorporated into the process As early as
kindergarten (The Reading Teacher, Nov. 1999,
v53, i13, p.200)
11Suggestion
In order to make this a worthwhile activity,
allow the students to see you, the teacher,
writing in your own journal.