Great Professional Development Offered Through the All Write!!! Project:
Local coaches train teachers by leading workshops, providing in-service
training and conducting after school study groups.
Nationally known authors and staff developers present workshops during the
school year addressing best practice strategies in the field of writing.
Workshops Available To Schools
Beginning
the Writing Workshop: Four
day course (days can be split or condensed) introducing teachers to the
philosophy and structure of the writing workshop.
Course includes strategies in the management of a writing workshop, the
writing process from prewriting to publishing, the craft of writing, using
quality literature to teach writing, and assessment.
Instructors will model the workshop in a real class setting.
Teachers will be able to observe, ask questions, and reflect.
This course is perfect for new teachers and teachers wanting to gain new
techniques that help students write well.
Beginning
the Writing Workshop at the Secondary Level (grades 6-12):
Four day course introducing teachers at the secondary level to the
philosophy and structure of the writing workshop.
This course is angled to the specific needs of teachers and students at
the secondary level.
Telling
the Stories of Our Lives Through Narrative
Writing: Children come to us
telling stories. Our job is to
teach them to write those stories well.
This workshop will take teachers through a unit of study in writing narrative,
beginning with oral story telling, teaching focus, writing with a variety of
details, building tension, and satisfying the reader with endings.
Conferencing,
the Key to Individualized Instruction:
Meeting with students one on one during the writing time of the workshop
is the core of what makes the workshop so successful:
students receive individualized instruction according to their needs.
This course focuses on improving conferencing skills, how to listen to
the student writer’s intentions, decide on a teaching point, how to teach that
point, and then nudge the students to grow from the instruction given.
This course is available to teachers who have used the writing workshop
in their classrooms.
The
Study of Craft and Revision in Writing:
Many teachers were taught the conventional techniques of writing but few
the actual skills that make quality writing stand out and shine.
This course will focus on writing well, narrowing the focus, looking at
grabber leads, how to stretch scenes, endings, a way with words, structure of
text and much more. It will give
students the knowledge to make quality revisions in their work.
As our students become much more savvy in their writing, teachers must
also increase their knowledge in writing so we can continually challenge our
students to grow. This course is available to teachers who have used the
writing workshop in their classrooms.
Nonfiction
Writing- It Doesn’t Have to be Boring! Grades 1-3:
This course focuses on nonfiction writing for the less experienced
writers showing ways to take the young writers through a genre study helping
them to plan, write, and revise “how to” pieces (teaching someone how to do
something) and “all about” pieces (presenting information about a topic of
interest).
The
Pillars of Poetry: Yes, even
poetry can be fun to write and it can enrich the writing of prose.
This genre study of poetry is designed to take the fear out of poetry
writing and provide techniques to help kids enjoy writing poetry!
Focuses more on free verse, but will touch on rhyme and other forms of
poetry. This course is available to teachers who have used the writing workshop
in their classrooms.
Using
Writer’s Notebooks in the Classroom:
Many teachers begin the year with activities to get writing notebooks started.
Once drafting begins, the notebooks are often forgotten or used only for
drafting pieces. This one-day
workshop will give teachers ideas for notebook use throughout the year so the
notebook can become the tool for writing that is was meant to be.
(For grades 3-8)
Teaching
Grammar in Context: If
you're frustrated that the old methods to teach punctuation don’t work, then
this workshop is for you! The
focus will be on exploring model texts and using student writing to teach
grammar skills. Students will
begin to recognize that punctuation is a tool for making meaning.
Writing
Editorials and Feature Articles:
This workshop is for intermediate and secondary teachers that want to help
their students write meaningfully and with voice in informational writing.
The focus will move from immersing students in these two genres with
model texts to techniques in craft that will help them write well.
(For
intermediate and secondary teachers)
Advanced
Kindergarten Workshop: Working
with Kindergarteners in Nonfiction Informational Writing and Poetry:
Kindergarten teachers always ask, “When will there be a workshop just
for us??” Well, here it is.
This workshop will give practical ideas to teach informational writing
and poetry to kindergarten writers in a way that is fun for all involved.
Writing
in Response to
Reading
:
Students are asked to write about the reading they have done, but
the work is often dull or just a summary of the selection read.
How then, can we get students to think critically about what they read
and then communicate that thinking in a meaningful way?
This workshop is designed to help teachers gain strategies in the
classroom that will help students formalize their thinking and write in real
world genres such as book reviews and literary essays. (For Grades 3-8
teachers)
Advanced Writing
Workshop: You have your
writing workshop in place. You
have certain genres you teach during the year.
What do you teach when you aren’t doing a genre study?
This class will focus on lines of thinking that will provide students
with the opportunity to write in any genre and give teachers ideas for
fostering independence in student writing. (For elementary and secondary.
Will split groups)
Preparing
Students for High Stakes Writing Tests (Grades 3-8): This one
day workshop provides teachers with focused lessons to prepare students for the
ISTEP + writing test. Examples of
top scoring student writings from previous ISTEP tests (available on the IDOE
website) will be used to provide teachers with the groundwork for a focused
writing study. Students will gain
the confidence and understanding of what is expected to do well on this kind of
writing test.
Assessing
Student Writers: How to Individualize Instruction:
Assessing student writers is possibly the most challenging work we
do as teachers of writing. Yet we must assess well to be able to design our
instruction to meet individual and whole class needs.
This workshop will present characteristics (or traits) of writing that a
lifelong writer needs to write well.
Student writing samples along with conferences with those students will provide
teachers with practice in assessing student writers.
|