Reciprocal Processes: Reading and Writing. By Janelle Carter

Similar documents
Key Components of Literacy Instruction

District 203 K-4 Elementary Summer School 2015

Reading Competencies

Literacy Institute August 2013 Jessica Plemons

Workshop 6 Conversations Among Writing Peers

Balanced Literacy in Seattle Public Schools

Virginia English Standards of Learning Grade 8

Alignment of the Hawaii Preschool Content Standards With HighScope s Preschool Child Observation Record (COR), 2nd edition

Workshop 5 Conversations With Student Writers

A GUIDE TO THE SHIFTS IN THE ELA COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS

Program Overview. This guide discusses Language Central for Math s program components, instructional design, and lesson features.

Guided Reading: Constructivism in Action. Donna Kester Phillips, Niagara University. Abstract

Planning Assessment. with Instruction. Assessment for Learning Video Series VIEWING GUIDE

P-3: Create objective-driven lesson plans

Language Arts Literacy Areas of Focus: Grade 5

Study Guide. Developing Literate Mathematicians: A Guide for Integrating Language and Literacy Instruction into Secondary Mathematics

A Principal s Guide to Intensive Reading Interventions for Struggling Readers in Reading First Schools

Hoover Elementary School School Improvement Plan

Language Arts Literacy Areas of Focus: Grade 6

What is The Daily Five?

Correlation Map of LEARNING-FOCUSED to Marzano s Evaluation Model

Pre-Requisites EDAM-5001 Early Literacy Guiding Principles and Language

Key Principles for ELL Instruction (v6)

ILLINOIS CERTIFICATION TESTING SYSTEM

3rd Grade Reading Standard Exceeds (4) Secure (3) Developing (2) Beginning (1)

Best Practices for Displaying Print in My Classroom

ELL Considerations for Common Core-Aligned Tasks in English Language Arts

LITERACY COLLABORATIVE

Muhammad Ali Presents Go the Distance! Aligns to Title I, Part A. June

Crafting an Argument. Students need to know how to state facts and express their opinions. Organized, Well-Supported, Convincing

TEACHERS OF READING.

The Three-Part Lesson in Mathematics

READING SPECIALIST STANDARDS

Unit/Lesson Planning Guide: Key Questions to Consider While Planning

Identifying and Describing Polygons: A Geometry Lesson

1 REVISOR C. show verification of completing a Board of Teaching preparation program

Character Traits. Teacher Talk

Research Base. Units of Study for Primary Writing, K-2 Units of Study for Teaching Writing, grades 3-5 TCRWP Writing Curricular Calendars, grades K-8

TAKU RIVER TLINGIT FIRST NATION LESSONS FOR LANGUAGE ARTS GRADE 4-6

Integrating the Common Core Standards into the Music Curriculum

Content Strategies by Domain

SALT LAKE CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT MENTOR SUPPORTED COLLABORATIVE ASSESSMENT/REFLECTION LOG 2 nd and 3 rd Year Provisional Teachers

Teaching All Students to Read: With Strong Intervention Outcomes

Technology Integration Learning Plan: Fostering Authentic Writing through Blogging in the Classroom

Learning and Teaching

First Grade Core Knowledge Addendum

SIXTH GRADE UNIT 1. Reading: Literature

Up Close with Close Reading: Principal Professional Development Session

Mastery approaches to mathematics and the new national curriculum

Evidence of Learning in the 21 st Century Classroom Classroom Observation Rubric To Guide Leadership for Learning by Instructional Leaders TASK

Students will know Vocabulary: purpose details reasons phrases conclusion point of view persuasive evaluate

Main Idea in Informational Text Grade Three

Communication Process

LitTOGETHER Teacher Leader Project

Common Core Writing Rubrics, Grade 3

The Fantastic World of Stellaluna

Grade 4: Module 1B: Unit 3: Lesson 11 Writing the Essay: Body Paragraph

Primrose Hill Primary School Literacy Policy: A baseline for outstanding practice

Teaching Reading and Writing to Struggling Middle School and High School Students: The Case for Reciprocal Teaching

Helping English Language Learners Understand Content Area Texts

parent ROADMAP SUPPORTING YOUR CHILD IN GRADE FIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS

Teacher Evaluation. Missouri s Educator Evaluation System

A STUDY GUIDE. Nonfiction Matters. Stephanie Harvey

Alignment Guide Supplemental Educational Services Featuring ReadAbout

President Abraham Lincoln s Speech The Gettysburg Address, 1863

Exam papers from RE 5100, Beginning Readers and Writers. Assessment Summary Sheet from RE 5715, Reading Assessment and Correction

Purposes and Processes of Reading Comprehension

How To Teach Reading

xxx Lesson Comprehend the writing process 2. Respond positively to the writing process

3. Principles for teaching reading

American Literature, Quarter 1, Unit 2 of 3 The Puritan Tradition and The Crucible. Overview. (1 day = minutes)

COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY IN TEACHING READING

Second Grade Core Knowledge Addendum

LITERACY: READING LANGUAGE ARTS

Teaching ESL Students in Mainstream Classrooms: language in learning across the curriculum Information for Schools

St. Petersburg College. RED 4335/Reading in the Content Area. Florida Reading Endorsement Competencies 1 & 2. Reading Alignment Matrix

Program Models. proficiency and content skills. After school tutoring and summer school available

Tennessee Educator Acceleration Model (TEAM) TEAM Evaluation Supplemental Materials 2014

Q & A: New Writing Program

Research on Graphic Organizers

INTENSIVE READING INTERVENTIONS FOR STRUGGLING READERS IN EARLY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. A Principal s Guide

Reading Apprenticeship: An Introduction

TOOL KIT for RESIDENT EDUCATOR and MENT OR MOVES

Common Core Writing Standards

Reading Street and English Language Learners

Studying Skillful Teaching

Professionals Responsible for Campus Turnaround Plan Development: Name:

BUILDING CURRICULUM ACCOMMODATION PLAN

Self Assessment Tool for Principals and Vice-Principals

Silicon Valley Mathematics Initiative Student Focused Math Content Coaching

Pre-service Performance Assessment Professional Standards for Teachers: See 603 CMR 7.08

Unit Map Columbia University Teachers College Collaboration / Writing* / Kindergarten (Elementary School)

Ms Juliani -Syllabus Special Education-Language/ Writing

Elementary Writing Project Team Supporting ESL Writers

Present Level statements must: Goals and Objectives Progress Reporting. How Progress will be determined: Goals must be: 12/3/2013

Requirements EDAM WORD STUDY K-3: PRINT AWARENESS, LETTER KNOWLEDGE, PHONICS, AND HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS

Grade 4 Writing Curriculum Map

Monitoring for Meaning

MUSIC. Assessment at a Glance. Early and Middle Childhood. Choosing the Right Certificate. Reviewing the Standards

The University of Texas at Austin

Transcription:

Reciprocal Processes: Reading and Writing By Janelle Carter

About Me

What you will walk away with today: Think time-what do you want to learn about the reciprocal processes of reading and writing? Write time-write it down! Share time-share with those around you.

What we hear, what we see What do we say and/or feel when it comes to students in the area of reading and the area of writing? Reading Writing What do we notice about these students and what they are/aren t doing? Reading Writing

What we hear, what we see I taught it and then I re-taught it. They clearly aren t listening! He/she could do it but then he/she stopped.

A Shift In Thinking: What learning did the student walk away with at the end of my lesson? How could this question change the way we talk, feel, and reflect on the education of students? Instead of it being about what the teacher taught, let s shift our thinking to be about what the student learned.

A Marriage Between Reading and Writing Reciprocity Reciprocal Relationship Mutually Supportive Processes (Laminack, 2015)

Literacy Breakdown: A Closer Look Reading-the action or skill of reading written or printed matter Writing-the activity or skill of marking coherent words on paper and composing text How does a teacher choose which comes first?

Scope and Sequence State standards set the stage Districts develop curriculum maps and resources Teachers teach it What next? Is there a better way to reach students especially struggling students?

Reciprocity, Reciprocity, Reciprocity! The chicken and the egg Without one, the other cannot exist Connected and dependent on each other Authentic and Strategic Author and Audience

Baking: My reciprocal example

Anderson, N. L., & Briggs, C. (2015, February 13). Reciprocity Between Reading and Writing: Strategic Processing as Common Groung. Retrieved October 27, 2016, from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/227757222_reciprocity_between_reading_and_writing_strategic_processing_as_common_ground

Being Purposeful In Math, how do we teach students to view the four operations, measurement, or geometry? Discuss In Reading and Writing, how can we teach students to view craft, conventions, strategic processes, genres, etc?

Purposeful in the Eyes of Students Do students need to know about this connection or just teachers? Why? Discuss Think about the last lesson you taught, or observed, in reading and/or writing. Turn and talk about how you linked reading and writing or how you could have linked the two. What could you have done differently?

Connections for Emergent to Transitional Letters Sounds Print moves left to right Reflect on other relationships for a Dialogue requires inflection Quotations Visualization Craft Reflect on other relationships for a Spacing emergent or early reader/writer. transitional reader/writer. Write on a postit Write on a postit Discuss with those around you Discuss with those around you Share Share Using what is known in different ways and in different contexts!

Effective Teachers Make Meaningful Connections in Reading & Writing

Anderson, N. L., & Briggs, C. (2015, February 13). Reciprocity Between Reading and Writing: Strategic Processing as Common Groung. Retrieved October 27, 2016, from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/227757222_reciprocity_between_reading_and_writing_strategic_processing_as_common_ground

What that looks like in a classroom

As the reader begins to gain confidence and independence, we pose the notion that the writer had to do something to set that up on the page in some way. So we return to that text to explore the same segment with the lens of a writer (Laminack, 2015).

How can we build on the known to activate the new? Author-Reader knowledge Build on student s experiences and knowledge Sensory Descriptions Character Motivations and Traits A book s characters are at the center of multiple relationships; this suggests that deep comprehension is dependent on the reader s ability to infer and analyze characters (Dorn & Soffos, 2005). Sensory Descriptions Genre Studies Structures Author s Purpose

Genre Study & Language Workshop Provides authentic, rich experiences with multiple texts as a reader Develop student s vocabulary and content knowledge Scaffolds & resources (such as a text map) are used to organize what was read but then utilized to organize what the student plans to write Students also have opportunities to explore more texts in reader s workshop or writer s workshop where they can respond to the text.

Genre Study & Language Workshop Continued Discussions are able to center around the experience of the reader and then explain how writers use that same skill, strategy, craft, etc. Allows student to re-read and transform their view to that of a writer Students take their learning about how to read this particular text and transfer that knowledge in order to write their own piece. Writing is scaffolded by the teacher through conferences, anchor charts, and student notes from the in-depth study

Choice in Reading and Writing Motivation is a key element for learning. Teachers must also provide children with opportunities to learn how to self-select books; One of the biggest barriers to comprehension is a reader s inability to select a book (Dorn & Soffos, 2005). In [independent writing], they choose their own topics and apply their knowledge of the writing process to their work (Dorn & Soffos, 2001).

Reading & Writing Conferences What children do and say while reading and writing can provide evidence of their mental activity or higher order cognitive processing (Vygotsky, 1978; Anderson & Briggs, 2011).

Video Examples

Explicit Language

Can we say too much without saying anything at all? Teacher clarity about learning expectations, including the ways in which students can demonstrate their understanding, is powerful. Every lesson, irrespective of whether it focuses on surface, deep, or transfer, needs to have clearly articulated learning intention and success criteria. What am I learning? Why am I learning this? How will I know that I learned it? Fisher, D., Frey, N., & Hattie, J. (n.d.). Visible learning for literacy, grades K-12: Implementing the practices that work best to accelerate student learning.

What WILL you do... tomorrow to build this connection for students? to foster purposeful connections in the classroom? to begin, or continue, purposefully teaching reciprocity in reading and writing?

Take Aways: What were your three? Reflect & Share

???Questions??? Thank you for being here!

Contact Me Janelle Carter Branson Cedar Ridge Intermediate Literacy Coach (417) 334-5137 ext 1201 carterj@branson.k12.mo.us

References Anderson, N. L., & Briggs, C. (2015, February 13). Reciprocity Between Reading and Writing: Strategic Processing as Common Groung. Retrieved October 27, 2016, from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/227757222_reciprocity_between_reading_and_writing_strategic_proc essing_as_common_ground Clay, M. M. (2015). Change over time: In children's literacy development. Auckland: The Marie Clay Literacy Trust. Dorn, L. J., & Soffos, C. (2005). Teaching for deep comprehension: A reading workshop approach. Portland, Me.: Stenhouse. Fisher, D., Frey, N., & Hattie, J. (n.d.). Visible learning for literacy, grades K-12: Implementing the practices that work best to accelerate student learning. Laminack, L. L., & Wadsworth, R. M. (n.d.). Writers are readers: Flipping reading instruction into writing opportunities. Meichenbaum, D., & Biemiller, A. (1998). Nurturing independent learners: Helping students take charge of their learning. Newton, MA: Brookline Books.

References Continued Moran, Renee and Billen, Monica (2014) "The Reading and Writing Connection: Merging Two Reciprocal Content Areas," Georgia Educational Researcher: Vol. 11: Iss. 1, Article 8. DOI: 10.20429/ger.2014.110108 Available at: http://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/gerjournal/vol11/iss1/8 Pennington, M. (2009, July 15). Pennington Publishing Blog. Retrieved October 28, 2016, from http://blog.penningtonpublishing.com/reading/twelve-tips-to-teach-the-reading-writing-connection/