1 / 17

Kid Writing By Lorena Montoya-Vargas & Gloria Gibson

Kid Writing By Lorena Montoya-Vargas & Gloria Gibson. What is it that makes Kid Writing different from other young children’s writers workshops?. A Balanced Early Literacy Program. Reading to Children Reading with Children Reading by Children. A Balanced Early Literacy Program.

blithe
Download Presentation

Kid Writing By Lorena Montoya-Vargas & Gloria Gibson

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Kid Writing By Lorena Montoya-Vargas & Gloria Gibson • What is it that makes Kid Writing different from other young children’s writers workshops?

  2. A Balanced Early Literacy Program • Reading to Children • Reading with Children • Reading by Children

  3. A Balanced Early Literacy Program A Balanced Writing Program in one that complements the reading program and includes these three components: • Writing to/for children. • Writing with children. • Writing by children.

  4. Introducing Writing: • Assure children that they already know how to write! • The goal from day one is…For every spoken word, there is a matching written word. • The magic line strategy for when they don’t know what letter/s to use. • Train students to the procedures of journal writing.

  5. Introducing the Basics: A mini lesson This lesson will be repeated many many times with each child, until the child can independently write a message that the teacher can read.

  6. How are you going to do this with 22 or 24 kids in your room? Remember every student can write…3 ways to write Draw a picture Label the picture Kid writing Kid Writing Web Site: http://kidwriting.homestead.com/

  7. The Right Way to Sound Out

  8. The….Magic….Line What is it?...I’m glad you asked! A place holder for a word. A strategy for when a student gets “stuck” in writing their message. A life long writing strategy.

  9. Underwriting: Adult Writing Teacher reads the story and writes the story under the student story using conventional or adult writing. Teacher praises student for doing great kid writing! Teacher uses this as an opportunity for an individual mini lesson!

  10. The Group Mini Lesson The teacher’s objective and the students can be very different. How do I know what to teach? What do I write on my lesson plans if I don’t know what I’m going to teach ahead of time?

  11. Share their Writing! It is also important to allow students time to share with each other! Let them read their writing to a partner.

  12. Publication Time Displayed in the room Choose a journal entry to “edit” Make a book How do you publish?

  13. Kid writing Student Supplies Teacher Supplies Small groups, black sharpie or pencil Material box with marker, dry erase markers etc. Writing Tablet or Magnet Write & Wipe Sentence Mat • Pencil pouches/boxes (contain pencils, markers, and crayons) • Writing Journals; • Writing Notebooks; or • Writing Folders

  14. What does Kid Writing look like in the classroom? • Will I need a meeting area, where will it go? How will I use it and can it be used for other purposes? • Do the students and I need areas for small groups, writing areas, and pair groups? How many will I need? • How many writers per table and much space should students have between each other on the floor or rugs? • Where will students keep their notebooks, folders, pencils and paper etc? • How will students use the word wall, anchor charts and displays? First ask yourself these questions: There is no wrong answer, it’s how the room reflects your beliefs in teaching and learning. Debbie Diller

  15. Putting our thinking on DISPLAY IDEAS for Writing Visible Thinking Capturing exactly what a child dictates on paper, anchor charts and/or quotes to be placed for displays—Remember authenticity is essential. • Discuss in whole group; and brainstorm ideas for writing so students will have a variety of topics to write about. (Create a list) • Prompt questions: How do I celebrate my birthday? What’s my favorite thing to do at home, color or movie?

  16. A Typical Day Writing Process Daily Schedule Mini-Lessons approximately 7-10 minutes. Kid-writing Process approximately 20-30 minutes. Mini-Sharing approximately 5 minutes. • Writing Workshop process consist of learning phonics and writing strategies, and creating the foundation of how written language works. • A typical day of Kid writing should be 45-50 minutes.

  17. Seize the Opportunity Book Writing • How-To Books • Silly-Funny Books • Alphabet Books • Nonfiction • Adventure Books • Fairy Tale • Big Stories • Pocket Chart Stories • Photo Stories • Story Murals • Menus • “If” Stories • Functional Writing • Responding to Literature/Current Events Book writing-children develop many skills through book writing. Able to keep their focus on a topic, sequence events, and increase their vocabulary and complexity of sentences structures. Children should have the opportunity to write a variety of formats.

More Related