Friday, January 8, 2010

Family Write Night

Teachers at Clarendon at Portsmouth organized a family write night in December. They invited familes to come to school and write together. This was a wonderful celebration of writing and families.

The teachers organized the event to follow the same routines they use in their writing classrooms. First, they relied on a strong model poem to guide the work. They supported the writing with specific prewriting activities, had opportunities for sharing and left plenty of time to write.

Clarendon at Portsmouth is a dual-immersion school, so the family write night they planned also included writing in both languages.

A wonderful community event!

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

3rd grade spelling

Strong Word Choice Grows from Paying Attention to Words

Mark Hansen, a 4th grade teacher at Faubion, surrounds his students with anchor charts and environmental print to support them as writers. These students are adding to charts about interesting words. Other students' words are already listed and more will continue to add words they read, hear in conversation or catch in songs.
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Lisa Hass Leads a Lesson on Sentence Variety

Remember Why We Write

Recently I was trying to put together a workshop proposal for a conference about writing. I knew that I wanted to share an example of a lesson that tied my classroom together as a community around something that matters. I wanted to share one of my lessons about honoring all the different kinds of families my students are part of or one about making a difference in the world or just one about the simple everyday moments in life that we all need to remember to cherish.
I looked back through my notes from what I had been working on for the last month and found none of that. Sure, I found some good lessons on paragraphing or leads, and those are extremely important lessons. I just didn't find anything with heart in it.
I realized that I have been paying way too much attention to all the little craft elements of writing and not enough attention to the real reasons to write at all.
We write to share our vision of the world or to celebrate who we are and where we come from. We write to rage against injustice or to praise grandmas' cooking. We write to illuminate our unique way of understanding the world and our place in it.
As we all work harder to make sure students have the vital skills they need to succeed as writers and thinkers, let's also remember to pay attention to why people write at all.
In the words of Katie Wood Ray, "Before you can do a revision, you have to have a vision."
Remember the vision.
-Katharine