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Risa Gluskin York Mills C.I. (risa.gluskin@tdsb.on) Jan. 13, 2014 Blog: gluskin

Teach Writing With Confidence: For Teacher Candidates in Social Science & the Humanities and Canadian & World Studies. Risa Gluskin York Mills C.I. (risa.gluskin@tdsb.on.ca) Jan. 13, 2014 Blog: gluskin.ca. Talk About Writing…. Adjectives are your best friends….

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Risa Gluskin York Mills C.I. (risa.gluskin@tdsb.on) Jan. 13, 2014 Blog: gluskin

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  1. Teach Writing With Confidence:For Teacher Candidates in Social Science & the Humanities and Canadian & World Studies Risa Gluskin York Mills C.I. (risa.gluskin@tdsb.on.ca) Jan. 13, 2014 Blog: gluskin.ca

  2. Talk About Writing… Adjectives are your best friends… The writer is like a tour guide for the reader… That’s a good topic sentence because… Use strong words to indicate your position… …directly

  3. Whose Confidence? • The title of the presentation is teach writing with confidence: • Did you take confident to refer to you or the students? anxious teacher nervous student

  4. Growth Mindset / Growth Zone Intelligence is not fixed

  5. Inquiry Model • In social sciences and Canadian and world studies courses NOW • Historical thinking concepts Interpretation Documents NOT memorization of facts LOTS TO WRITE ABOUT

  6. Have a Course or Unit Plan • Start small • Paragraph before essay, even in grade 12 • Topic sentences before thesis statements • Start with in-role writing • It forces students to take a position, from which they learn to argue and use persuasive and descriptive language

  7. Structure 5 Teach paragraphs first Is flexible • Is adaptable • in-class essay • visual essay Is a great place to start -build to longer essays

  8. Scaffold Support your students Don’t assume they can do things without being taught how

  9. Integrate with Course Material • Skills + content can be taught together • They don’t need to be separated • Linking to course content makes it easier for students to use the skills • Requires planning ahead • Reinforce skills orally through debating (oral language is the foundation for writing)

  10. Use Formulas • Thesis = main argument + sub-topics • Topic Sentence = main argument + sub-topics • Adjectives help to convey a strong position

  11. Thesis • Glue = what holds the sub-topics together Sub-topic 1 Sub-topic 3 Sub-topic 2

  12. Seesaw Argument Light = a list Light = opinion only, a rant Heavy = a list Heavy = opinion only, a rant Evidence

  13. Build a Hypothesis (Social Science) High poverty levels and low levels of health literacy are directly related in Canadian society; the lack of education options available for low income earners as well as communication barriers between new immigrants and health professionals are clear indications of systemic discrimination within the health and education sectors.

  14. Build a Hypothesis • Strong words: • High • Low • Directly • Barriers • Clear end point

  15. Topic Sentence Scaffold • Life in the 1930’s was a hardship for most Canadians as demonstrated by… • Life was a hardship = main argument • Students would then describe sub-topics using STRONG adjectives: • Challenging living conditions • Destabilizing social unrest • Widespread discrimination • Difficult environmental conditions • Stigmatizing feelings of personal shame

  16. Use Common Terminology • Be consistent • Point = general idea • Example = specific evidence, detail, proof • Argument = explanation, connection or link to thesis or topic sentence • How the evidence proves the thesis or topic sentence

  17. Note-Taking • Support and encourage the right kind of note-taking • Teach a format that will encourage students to look for and record detailed examples • Practice using this format in class • Start with the textbook • Have students distinguish between general ideas and specific examples in the textbook

  18. Note-Taking Method #1 • Support and encourage the right kind of note-taking • Teach a format that will encourage students to look for and record detailed examples • Practice using this format in class • Start with the textbook • Have students distinguish between general ideas and specific examples in the textbook

  19. Note-Taking Format – Method #1 afterlife 13 The Book of the Dead contained scenes that illustrated how a person was to be judged worthy or not of the afterlife…

  20. Note-Taking Method #2

  21. Using Your Own Words • Most common problem: • Students copy directly from the source without quoting • Even if they cite the source they are still plagiarizing by copying the words of the author(s) • Solutions? • Check hand-written notes (handed in) • Do a class example together of how to paraphrase and cite

  22. Plagiarism Prevention • Proactive tips: • Change assignments or topics often • Put special twists in them that are particular to your course • Have students write the final product in-class • Make assignments date-restrictive (e.g., use articles written after Sept., 2013) • Have note-taking done by hand

  23. Highlighting Sub-Topics in Notes • Have students highlight their notes using different colours for different categories: • categories = sub-topics • 3 colours = 3 sub-topics • Encourages students to use their notes more effectively • Helps them see patterns and relationships (and repetition)

  24. Sample of Notes

  25. Outline Stage • Transition from research to writing • Allows teacher to see students’ progress BEFORE the essay / paragraph • Encourages good habits: • Preparing in advance • Citing sources • Connecting evidence to argument • Teacher can provide electronic template

  26. CHC 2D – 1930s Argumentative Paragraph Scaffold Example/Evidence #1: Source: Explanation/Argument:

  27. Outline Point- form outline

  28. Outline Electronic template

  29. Go Forth and Be Confident • Talk about writing casually and formally • Get students to write often • Give feedback • oral and written • Use a journal

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