Our Writing Units of Study are filled with teaching points, tips, conferring ideas, share ideas, examples and much more. I think the best way to process how to effectively teach a Unit of Study in Writing Workshop is to do the work (the writing) our students will be doing. Here are some tips I have to help prepare for teaching a writing unit:
- As you read through the unit, identify the teaching points and annotate the sides of the page with your thoughts on potential anchor charts, conferring opportunities, your own writing ideas, and so on...
- After you have read the unit and have the "big picture" in mind, do some writing! I find it most valuable if you do this writing with others, your colleagues. This way, you can discuss interpretations of teaching points, writing process, areas you and others are getting stuck, and share ideas
- The writing you do can serve multiple purposes!
- It will allow you to develop mentor texts for mini lessons, conferences, and small groups
- It will show you places where writers get stuck...
- As an example, you may find it difficult to come up with ideas or get started - Don't we always have kids that struggle in the same way? What do you do when you get stuck? What behaviors do you exhibit when you get stuck or struggle? How can you help your students persevere through this?
- Do you find yourself talking with the person next to you to or seek out some writing examples to help you get started? Spy on yourself as you do your writing and find tips and strategies you can use with your kids.
- It will help you find the most authentic ways of teaching.
- When you sit down to write a short story, maybe you first make a timeline of how the story will unfold. You might sketch out some scenes...You will most likely talk out our story with another person to receive feedback...You might jump in and start writing to get all of your ideas down...
- You will probably not first create a worksheet and then start writing. Think, how do I write? How do real writers write. I must teach my students, no matter how young, how to really write.
- Most importantly, it will show and prove to your students that you are a writer and have a writing life, just like them!
- You can prepare writing and deliberately leave out key elements (such as: elaboration, transitions, or any other writing component you think some of you students may need support in). In my example, I will use elaboration.
- After you write a piece and have left out the key writing element (elaboration), make copies of that writing and put it in your conferring toolkit (See the picture below). The reason you will make copies is because when you confer with students, you can model how you go back and reflect on not having elaboration in that portion of the writing. You can show the student(s) right then and there how you elaboration (or add the key element you are teaching them).
- I label my example writing with a sticky note or tab so I can easily find it in my conferring folder.
In my Writing conferring toolkit, I keep my mentor writing, sample writing with elements "left out", mentor text, conferring ring of strategies, checklists, learning progressions, and writing paper. For older grades (3rd and above), most of my writing is in my Writing Notebook. I could keep this in the folder, as well.
Participating in this work will be incredibly valuable for your teaching and even more so for your students learning and growth as writers. You will have a greater understanding of what the unit is calling your kids to do and the struggles they may face. You will come into the unit armed and ready to teach and push them to become stronger writers!
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