Creating & Managing the Writer’s Workshop – Judith Gould
Shapero – Tips, Tricks, and Lessons Learned
*Ordinary things make interesting writing topics. Write about what you know. It doesn’t have to be about the winning homerun to make a good writing piece. Write about your life: the pumpkin pie you made with Grandma, getting into a fight with your brother. Students should give us a peek into their world.
*WHAT??
- W – Walking: What walking is allowed in the room? None? Some? For a drink of water?
- H – Help: What should you do if you need help?
- Is there a place to sign up for help?
- What do I do while I’m waiting for help?
- Is there other writing to be done? Work to catch up on?
- Message Pad: give to teacher explain how you need help
- Should do a mini lesson on message pad if you use this.
- A – Activity: What activity should I be doing?
- T – Talking: What talking is allowed?
- None: It’s a silent writing time today.
- Some: You can share your writing with a friend today.
*Sharing, Debriefing
- Popcorn: find the one best sentence you wrote today
- Students standup and share like popcorn popping
- Saves a lot of time and it’s quick
*Student’s Writing Log
- | Date | Title/Topic | Actions Taken | What next? |
- Lunch poem half way thru how to end
- Teacher can have a log and make same notes to know where each student is in their writing project.
*Don’t spell words for students
- Try it yourself
- Guess and Go spelling: (ie: hippopotamus h______s
- They can highlight their guess & go words to come back & revise
*Don’t fix the writing – fix the writer!
- Don’t try to solve every problem on the page
- Ask the student what they think and help them get started
- Don’t correct their work – get them to see what’s good and what’s weak
*Don’t try to solve every problem
- Concentrate on 1 or 2 things – any more can be overwhelming
- Can be mechanics, concepts, put spaces between your words, anything.
*TIME SAVER: We don’t always have to look at the whole writing piece.
- What’s the area of concentration? Topic sentence? Endings? – focus on that.
- It’s okay to skim
*Not every writing piece needs to go to final copy.
- For evaluating something very specific, such as just topic sentences
- At times, it’s even okay to assess only a first draft
- Get a STAMP: Not a final copy
- Keeps you credible with parents
*Writer’s Conference – IPTN
- I – Invitation: What are you working on today? How’s it going?
- P – Probe: Ask them questions about their work or process
- T – Teach: Make observations about their work. Give suggestions.
- N – Next: Ask what the writer will do next.
*Fixing / Revising
- Octopus arms for insertions
- I prefer *A insertion, but kids might like adding an arm
*Peer Conferences
- Some years you might not do it – depends on the class
- LNQ (Link)
- L – Like: Find something you like about it? Tell writer.
- N – Notice: Is something missing? Getting in the way?
- Q – Question: Ask the writer what s/he plans to do next.
- Model a Peer Conference up front a couple times
*Keep them Writing
- Give them another project of high interest for that student
- No instructions from the teacher (can be a center)
- No grading -or- can give a participation grade
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