34
Writing Across the Curriculum: http://youtu.be/OfHh9c6wN94

Writing Across the Curriculum:

  • Upload
    akiko

  • View
    75

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Writing Across the Curriculum:. http://youtu.be/OfHh9c6wN94. Learning. Writing in the content areas. Expository writing Collaborative Reports Mulitgenre Projects Quickwrites/ Quickdraws Notetaking Summarizing Journal Writing R.A.F.T. Enduring Understanding. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Writing Across the Curriculum:

http://youtu.be/OfHh9c6wN94

Page 2: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Learning•Writing in the content areas.• Expository writing• Collaborative Reports•Mulitgenre Projects• Quickwrites/Quickdraws• Notetaking• Summarizing• Journal Writing• R.A.F.T.

Page 3: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Enduring Understanding

•Writing is a tool used for thinking, learning, and communicating.

Page 4: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Goal as educators…..

•Life long learners …....

Page 5: Writing Across the Curriculum:

EQ

• How can writing be used in an elementary classroom to get students to think, learn, and communicate?

Page 6: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Expository Writing• Purpose: learn and share information• Audience: wide, often unknown audience. Such as posted in

library, hallway, or displayed in the community• Forms: reports, posters, diagrams, charts, multigenre projects

Page 7: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Collaborative Reports

Shared writing report on Hermit Crabs(4 students)

•How they look•Where they live•What they eat•How they act

Page 8: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Multigenre Projects• Acrostics• Biographical sketches• Cartoons• Charts• Clusters (Word Web)• Cubes• Letters•Maps• Songs

Page 9: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Your turn:

Acrostic• Science Words: Magnets, Electricity,

Weather, etc.• Social Studies Words: slave, land

forms, etc.

Page 10: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Quickwrites/Quickdraws

• Informally write or draw, rambling on paper, generating ideas, making connections•Write/draw on a topic for 5 to 10 minutes• Don’t focus on mechanics• Example: students choose a word from

word wall to quick/draw write about an end of unit review…or could be a cluster about word.

Page 11: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Notetaking

• Students draw a line lengthwise down the middle paper. • As the student reads or listens, major headings

or concepts are recorded in the space to the left, supporting details in the space to the right. Only one side of the paper is used. • When it comes time to study, the paper is folded

down the center line so that either the main ideas or the details are visible, but not both at once.

Page 12: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Summarizing Cooperatively

•paired summarizing• Students are expected to complete an

individual retelling before they come together as pairs

Page 13: Writing Across the Curriculum:

ProceduresFirst, immediately after reading, a student writes a retelling of the selection.• If students have difficulty remembering, they should

refer to the text to verify or re-cue their thinking.• The students are not permitted to write any of their

retelling while they are looking back at the text.• Students might want to compete with their partners to

see who can write the most extensive retelling. The goal here is elaboration and you should tell students not to worry about spelling, grammar, punctuation, or other mechanical considerations.

Page 14: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Next, students exchange papers with their partners. Partner A writes about Partner B's retelling and vice-versa.

• At this stage students are not allowed to converse with one another.• If something is not clear to one of the

partners, he or she must work to figure out what was intended.

Page 15: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Next, summaries are complete, pairs discuss the retellings. During the discussion they do each of the following:

• specify what each understood as readers of the retellings.• identify what they collectively cannot come to

understand in the passage of story they read to create their individual retellings.• formulate questions for their classmates and

teacher.

Page 16: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Last

• students have completed these tasks, they convene as a class to discuss the questions prepared by each pair of students and/or to share what they have written.

Page 17: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Journal Writing

• Purpose: record personal experience, explore reactions, interpret: reading, videos, or content: record and analyze information about social studies and science• Audience: usually limited, writer or known

reader• Forms: personal, dialogue, reading logs,

learning logs, double-entry, simulated journals

Page 18: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Personal, Dialogue, Reading Logs• Personal- Events from own life or topics of

special interest• Dialogue- written to be shared with

teacher or classmates. These journals are a written conversation.• Reading Logs- Respond to reading, write,

draw entries after reading, record key vocabulary, make charts, write quotes.

Page 19: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Learning Logs, Double-Entry Journals

• Learning Logs- part of Social Studies, Science, or Math units. Students write “quickwrites,” draw diagrams, and take notes.• Double-Entry- divide each page into two

columns, write different types of information in each column. Could be predictions one side, what happened on other side. Could be quotes one side, reactions on other side.

Page 20: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Simulated Journals

• Students assume role of a book character or historical personality and write entries from that person’s viewpoint. Writing should include details from the reading or historical period to add authenticity.

Page 21: Writing Across the Curriculum:

What is a RAFT Writing Assignment?

•R.A.F.T. writing prompts challenge students to assume a Role before writing, to write for an imaginary Audience, to write using a given Format, to write about a certain Topic.

Page 22: Writing Across the Curriculum:

RAFT writing assignments ask student to ……..• Think and write from another person's

perspective.• Shape their ideas to appeal to an

audience outside the classroom.• Consider perspectives as they go

through the writing process, students are being asked to think at a much deeper level of Bloom's Taxonomy

Page 23: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Assignment• Role: a scientist• Audience: lunchroom ladies• Format: A top ten why list• Topic: germs

Page 24: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Directions:You will write as though you are a scientist. You are writing a list to be read by lunchroom ladies in an elementary school. You will write a top ten “why” list of why germs are dangerous. The purpose of your list will be to convince lunchroom ladies to always wear their hair nets and gloves.

Page 25: Writing Across the Curriculum:

R.A.F.T.S.

• transform the R.A.F.T. prompt into a R.A.F.T.S. prompt. •Assign verbs:• convince, encourage, assure, or sway,• These strong verbs transform the

prompt into a persuasive writing activity.

Page 26: Writing Across the Curriculum:

R.A.F.T.S. Assignment

•Role: a scientist•Audience: lunchroom ladies• Format: A top ten why list• Topic: germs• Strong Verb: sway

Page 27: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Possible Writer’s Roles• Laboratory Scientist• Forensic Scientist• Environmentalist• Veterinarian• Astronaut• Biologist• Zoologist • Characters: Magnet, Electricity, Wind, Water

etc.

Page 28: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Audience

• An Enemy• Computer program designer• Space Alien•Meteorologist• President of the United States• Newscast audience• A wealthy group of people giving away

money

Page 29: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Formats• Top ten reasons why list•A classified add•3 minute speech•An invitation• Letter to the editor• an important e-mail•A book report•An obituary

Page 30: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Topics• Research techniques• Fossils• The animal kingdom• Heat and temperature• Natural disasters• Genetics• Environmental issues• Recycling• Food cycle

Page 31: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Writer’s Purpose (Strong Verbs)• Contrast your topic with something

interesting.• Object strongly to something.• Disprove someone’s thinking.• Argue against or for something.• Persuade the audience to do something.• Complain about something.

Page 32: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Your turn• Create a RAFT

Page 33: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Links for Assessment of R.A.F.T.• http://writingfix.com/

Page 34: Writing Across the Curriculum:

Quick write-5 minute

•How did/didn’t today’s learning connect to learning in other courses or field?