Talking, Drawing, Writing

Talking, Drawing, Writing

Author: Martha Horn

Publisher: Stenhouse Publishers

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 274

ISBN-13: 1571104569

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"The book's lessons are organized by topic and include oral storytelling, drawing, writing words, assessment, introducing booklets, and moving writers forward. Based on the authors' work in urban kindergarten and first-grade classes, the essence and structure of many of the lessons lend themselves to adaptation through fifth grade."--Jacket.


About the Authors

About the Authors

Author: Katie Wood Ray

Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 260

ISBN-13:

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Based on a profound understanding of the ways in which young children learn, this book shows teachers how to launch a writing workshop by inviting children to do what they do naturallymake stuff.


Teaching the Youngest Writers

Teaching the Youngest Writers

Author: Marcia Sheehan Freeman

Publisher: Maupin House Publishing, Inc.

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 164

ISBN-13: 0929895266

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Provides guidance in teaching writing at the K-2 level, discussing daily writing workshops, the writing process, content, evaluation, and parent education. Includes lessons and activities.


Teaching Young Writers to Elaborate

Teaching Young Writers to Elaborate

Author: Megan S. Sloan

Publisher: Teaching Resources

Published: 2008-05

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780545032988

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Provides mini-lessons and strategies aimed at teaching students in first through third grade to elaborate while writing.


Teaching Adolescent Writers

Teaching Adolescent Writers

Author: Kelly Gallagher

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2023-10-10

Total Pages: 266

ISBN-13: 100384426X

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In an increasingly demanding world of literacy, it has become critical that students know how to write effectively. From the requirements of standardized tests to those of the wired workplace, the ability to write well, once a luxury, has become a necessity. Many students are leaving school without the necessary writing practice and skills needed to compete in a complex and fast-moving Information Age. Unless we teach them how to run with it, they are in danger of being run over by a stampede—a literacy stampede. InTeaching Adolescent Writers , Kelly Gallagher shows how students can be taught to write effectively. Gallagher shares a number of classroom-tested strategies that enable teachers to: Understand the importance of teaching writing and how to motivate young writers Show how modeling from both the teacher and real-world texts builds young writers Provide choice of what to write, which helps elevate adolescent writing, and how to fit it into a rigorous curriculum Help students recognize the importance of purpose and audience Assess essays in ways that drive better writing performance. Infused with humor and illuminating anecdotes, Gallagher draws on his classroom experiences and work as co-director of a regional writing project to offer teachers both practical ways to incorporate writing instruction into their day and compelling reasons to do so.


Real-World Writers: A Handbook for Teaching Writing with 7-11 Year Olds

Real-World Writers: A Handbook for Teaching Writing with 7-11 Year Olds

Author: Ross Young

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2020-05-28

Total Pages: 318

ISBN-13: 1000074331

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Real-World Writers shows teachers how they can teach their pupils to write well and with pleasure, purpose and power. It demonstrates how classrooms can be transformed into genuine communities of writers where talking, reading, writing and sharing give children confidence, motivation and a sense of the relevance writing has to their own lives and learning. Based on their practical experience and what research says is the most effective practice, the authors share detailed guidance on how teachers can provide writing study lessons drawing on what real writers do and how to teach grammar effectively. They also share a variety of authentic class writing projects with accompanying teacher notes that will encourage children to use genres appropriately, creatively and flexibly. The authors’ simple yet comprehensive approach includes how to teach the processes and craft knowledge involved in creating successful and meaningful texts. This book is invaluable for all primary practitioners who wish to teach writing for real.


Scaffolding Young Writers

Scaffolding Young Writers

Author: Linda J. Dorn

Publisher: Stenhouse Publishers

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 113

ISBN-13: 1571103422

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The goal of teaching writing is to create independent and self-motivated writers. When students write more often, they become better at writing. They acquire habits, skills, and strategies that enable them to learn more about the craft of writing. Yet they require the guidance and support of a more knowledgeable person who understands the writing process, the changes over time in writing development, and specific techniques and procedures for teaching writing. In Scaffolding Young Writers: A Writers' Workshop Approach, Linda J. Dorn and Carla Soffos present a clear road map for implementing writers' workshop in the primary grades. Adopting an apprenticeship approach, the authors show how explicit teaching, good models, clear demonstrations, established routines, assisted teaching followed by independent practice, and self-regulated learning are all fundamental in establishing a successful writers' workshop. There is a detailed chapter on organizing for writers' workshop, including materials, components, routines, and procedures. Other chapters provide explicit guidelines for designing productive mini-lessons and student conferences. Scaffolding Young Writers also features: an overview of how children become writers;analyses of students' samples according to informal and formal writing assessments;writing checklists, benchmark behaviors, and rubrics based on national standards;examples of teaching interactions during mini-lessons and writing conferences;illustrations of completed forms and checklists with detailed descriptions, and blank reproducible forms in the appendix for classroom use. Instruction is linked with assessment throughout the book, so that all teaching interactions are grounded in what children already know and what they need to know as they develop into independent writers.


Getting Started with Beginning Writers

Getting Started with Beginning Writers

Author: Katie Wood Ray

Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 128

ISBN-13: 9780325099149

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"In Lisa Cleaveland's classroom, writing workshop is a time every day when her students make books. Katie Wood Ray guides you through the first days in Lisa's classroom, offering ideas, information, strategies, and tips to show you step by step how you can launch a writing workshop with beginning writers."--book cover


A Young Writer's World

A Young Writer's World

Author: Rebecca McMahon Giles

Publisher:

Published: 2020-09

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780942702668

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A Young Writer's World is a book about creating environments and opportunities that foster children's engagement with print, writing, and literacy.


Writing for Pleasure

Writing for Pleasure

Author: Ross Young

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2020-12-29

Total Pages: 206

ISBN-13: 1000298841

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This book explores what writing for pleasure means, and how it can be realised as a much-needed pedagogy whose aim is to develop children, young people, and their teachers as extraordinary and life-long writers. The approach described is grounded in what global research has long been telling us are the most effective ways of teaching writing and contains a description of the authors’ own research project into what exceptional teachers of writing do that makes the difference. The authors describe ways of building communities of committed and successful writers who write with purpose, power, and pleasure, and they underline the importance of the affective aspects of writing teaching, including promoting in apprentice writers a sense of self-efficacy, agency, self-regulation, volition, motivation, and writer-identity. They define and discuss 14 research-informed principles which constitute a Writing for Pleasure pedagogy and show how they are applied by teachers in classroom practice. Case studies of outstanding teachers across the globe further illustrate what world-class writing teaching is. This ground-breaking text is essential reading for anyone who is concerned about the current status and nature of writing teaching in schools. The rich Writing for Pleasure pedagogy presented here is a radical new conception of what it means to teach young writers effectively today.