Saturday, August 10, 2013

Education Read List Post 2009

I'm planning on including a "bragging" section at the back my professional portfolio when I go job searching.  One of the items I plan to include is a list of the professional reading I've done while out of the classroom.  (I also plan to include my other list projects such as Newbury, Printz, possibly Caldacott, Oscar best picture, and for personality Bravo's 100 Scariest Movies)

This list includes everything I've read about education, teens, or books since leaving teaching. 

Making the Match by Teri Lesesne
Read-Aloud Anthology by Janet Allen
Fires in the Bathroom by Kathleen Cushman
The Homework Myth by Alfie Kohn
Read Aloud Handbook (3rd and 6th editions) by Jim Trelease
The Hurried Child by David Elkind
Never Work Harder than Your Students by Robyn Renee Jackson
What to Read When by Pam Allyn
 Eisenstein Never Used Flashcards by Kathy Hirsh-Pasek
500 Great Books for Teens by Anita Silvey
A Family of Readers: The Book Lover's Guide to Children's and Young Adult Literature by Roger Suttan
Raising Bookworm: Getting Kids Reading for Pleasure and Empowerment by Emma Walton Hamilton
Minders of Make-Believe: Idealists, Entrepreneurs, and the Shaping of American Children's Literature by Leonard S. Marcus
Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell
1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die
1001 Children's Books You Must Read Before You Grow Up
1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Words, Words, Words by Janet Allen
Not Much Just Chillin: The Hidden Lives of Middle Schoolers by Linda Perlstein
Branded: The Buying and Selling of Teenagers by Alissa Quart

Monday, August 5, 2013

First Year Reflection: Thoughts on Bloom's Taxonomy and Differentiation

I'm not sure if all teachers feel this way, but when I look back at my first year of teaching, I cringe. 

My first year teaching I had three preps, but four groups of students.  Two groups were labeled "advanced" and two were labeled "academic."  I then saw each group again for half a period for a writing lab.  While I had a lot of curriculum problems that first year (which took another year or two to work out), the biggest problem was differentiation.  

Here's a scary example of how I made the advanced work "harder:"  The advanced students had to supply the authors of the texts we read and match the titles and plots, while the academic kids only needed to match titles and plots.  Wow.  Why didn't someone stop me?

Looking back now, supplying the authors and matching the titles and plots both seem meaningless, but it sure did make for a test that was easy to grade!  However, the fact that I thought adding more to memorize would make a course more advanced, that appalls me now.  I'm positive that everyone around me let this type of mistake slide because I was a first year teaching, which by definition means learning everything on the job. 

As the years went by, I stopped having students memorize information almost entirely.  I lost a lot of my fun material when I stopped giving tests and quizzes.  No more fun bonus questions, review games, or prizes because we no longer had content to drill for a test.  No more tests because we no longer just retold information.  It was hard to let go of these fun aspects of my teaching, but I enjoyed my new content so much more when I was no longer rewarding the wrong type of performances.  Why reward a student memorizing when he can use all the sources I've been supplying to look information up?  Instead, there is no need to memorize who the author is because I'm going to let you have a copy of the text as you write me an essay showing some critical thinking on the text. 

Partly what I missed in terms of leveling my courses was a utilization of Bloom's Taxonomy.  I had learned about Bloom's Taxonomy in college and probably even had to implement it for some course work.  But honestly, it got lost among everything else.  Now, I know that when I create an assignment and its assessment tool, I need to think about Bloom's Taxonomy. 







First step, am I at least moving beyond remembering?  Remembering is the start of learning, but it can't be where the lesson ends or where the assessment ends.  That horrible work I did my first year often stayed on the first level no matter which class it was.  Does it matter if a student can match definitions or even write them from memory if she can't restatement or use the terms?  It isn't much use if a student can remember what a fragment or run on are if he can't remove them from his own writing.  Essay writing is fabulous in this respect because it forces students to move beyond remembering and understanding to at least applying.  A real high school level essay does more than restate content. 

Of course, the whole concept of an essay was another area of struggle.  I taught freshmen, so none of them had written an analytical essay, no matter their level.  When all the students are learning the content for the first time, how to do I make it "harder" for the higher leveled class?

  1. Pace.  A teacher can always move slowly for the struggling students, and faster with the advanced students.  But, this assumes that just because you are "smart" you learn or work quickly and vice versa.  I can personally attest to the falsity of that assumption.  Part of what drew me to an English major was the analysis had nothing to do with speed.  As a dyslexic, I did not read fast, but that didn't matter in how I thought about the content.  Its true that an "honors" level course can move more quickly, but it is more because of the generally better class behavior, the homework completion, higher levels of attention and participation.  There are many top tiered students who need extensive time and practice to master new complex content.  Most of my core content (citing and thesis statements) took both sets of students the same amount of time to master, which was the whole year.  
  2. Materials.  Provide different leveled courses with different materials to preform the same tasks.  Say your goal is to write an essay with a thesis statement supported by evidence.  Both courses can have the same goal assessing the grade appropriate new material.  The texts being used can be different such as Hunger Games versus 1984.  Or even, watch Star Wars versus reading Joseph Campbell, then write an essay on archetypes. 
  3. DepthAnimal Farm or Harry Potter are great examples of using depth.  There is a surface story which allows plenty of discussion about character, style, and theme.  Meanwhile, more advanced students can look at the same text on a much higher level of analysis, using much more content specific lens or themes.  Yet, the end product remains the same: an essay with a thesis and support. 
  4. How much?  Much like pace, its traditional to just give advanced students more work.  Write longer papers, read more pages, do more practice problems, provide more examples, use more sources.  Unless the increased depth is also required, this is unproductive.  For some skills, more is just fruitless for any skill level.  If you don't know how to diagram a sentence, asking you to do two times or twenty times won't make a difference; if you do know how, the number of times you do it doesn't change your learning either.  With other skills, such as general reading and writing skills that are refined through practice, its probably, though not absolute, that higher tiered students are not the ones who need this practice the most, so why are they being given more? 
  5. Support.  One piece of baggage I carried from my education was that providing supports somehow lowered the rigor.  For most cases, I now no longer believe that.  At first, when a special education student was allowed to use notes on a test as an accommodation, it seemed unreasonable.  But as I learned that many accommodations are just best practices, I started to see things differently. What if we let everyone have their notes?  Well, that changes the assessment.  I'm no longer going to ask students to restate content and I've been pushed to increase the rigor of my course, not diminish it.  Why not let students work collaboratively to reach goals?  Why not increase feedback from the teacher?  I've become a strong believer in gradual release, and that theory requires lots of supports in your teaching until students reach the mastery level.  A teacher can remove supports for higher categorized courses and add them to lower ones, but to what purpose? 
  6. Last stop of Bloom's.  When a teacher needs to cover content, she can decide where to stop on Bloom's Taxonomy.  Maybe applying poetic literary terms is enough for one level of students to cover the material, while a second group stops only after they have evaluated the poetic literary terms use.  Its unclear which skills equate to covering the content sufficiently and how we decide it for which students, but we must ask:  Do the students grouped in the lowest level have opportunities to practice the higher skills on Bloom's Taxonomy? Never allowing these students to move beyond remembering and understanding is a disservice. 
  7. Move up a grade level.  A good example is that I typically wouldn't actively teach academic freshmen essay organization structures outside a five paragraph essay because, at my school, that was sophomore content.  But, I did teach this to advanced freshmen as necessary.  If individuals or groups of students in the class were ready for the material, I would be begin to teach the content for the next year as it suited their intimidate needs and interests.  They had mastered the goal for their grade level, so we moved to the next one early.

A former collegaue commented on Facebook today that the golden rod is out early provoking his allergies.  Having little personal experience with golden rod, I remembered a poem I was forced to memorize and recite in the fifth grade containing a line on golden rod.  Why did my teacher have me memorize this poem and several others for recitation?  Was it a throw back to old fashion practices of recitation?  Were other skills being assessed of which I was unaware? 

I'm left wondering, is there value in memorization?  Yes, some content needs to be memorized.  Sight words when learning to read or basic math facts such as the multiplication table.  Do students need to know all the states?  I'd say, yes.  The capitals?  I'd say, no.  But how do I make that distinction?  It seems to come down to what we as a society consider a solid base of common knowledge.  And then, is it my job to make sure students become citizens with this knowledge base or that they can preform the higher levels on Bloom's Taxonomy?  Are the higher levels just for "honors" students?  For me, these questions are what makes creating a curriculum and differentiating it for all students so difficult, because it is my job to make sure all students have the knowledge base and the ability to apply, analyze, evaluation, and create.

I sure as hell wasn't getting anyone anywhere matching titles, authors, and plot summaries. 









Sunday, August 4, 2013

Outline for Possible Adult Ed Study Skills Course

Every semester, we get a booklet from our local adult ed program offering courses ranging from knitting to personal fiance to GED credits.  There is always a statement asking anyone who has something to share in a course to contact them, but I've never been able to think of what I could teach.  Until now.  For this setting, I think I could give a strong study skills course. 

My ideas thus far:
  • Textbook reading including text features and note taking
  • Lecture note taking
  • Literature note taking (if requested)
  • Writing process (briefly)
  • Time management including breaking down large assignments
  • Reading a sylabus
  • Test taking tips (all types of questions)
  • Active studying
  • Creating a study environment
  • Ideas for organizing course materials
  • Research skills?
  • Plagiarism and citing (briefly)
Each topic shouldn't need a whole night, but it would be a multiple session course.  

Friday, July 19, 2013

Classroom Jobs

When on Pinterest, I often see pins about class room jobs and how to manage them. However, this is always for the elementary teacher who has one set of students. Yet, I'd like to give my high school students more responsibility, since they are teenagers, which would then free up some of my time. But, I'm a bit at a loss for how to manage the job assignments, choosing which jobs to give up control over, and how to hold kids accountable for completing their jobs, because it doesn't save me time if the work doesn't get done or I have to nag.

I like the various charts I see where the student names are removable and can be placed in the different jobs. I think the chart where a clothesline represents each child would be the easiest to manage with possibly 100 students. I could color code by class as I already like to do, and at the start of each day have the jobs posted for all periods. I would use a basic rotation for assigning the jobs. 

What jobs is more difficult. Students can't handle anything dealing with confidential information, returning graded work is out. I already have a system for handing out handouts at the start of the period as well as for turning in work to be graded.  Jobs I've seem before are to gather work for a scent students, and another to take notes for the class record.  I've heard of updating the class web site with homework and what happened in class as well, but could the students access the program? What if homework information changes by the end of the period ?  I think I would like to keep that job to myself. I can think of other jobs we might use sometimes, but not daily. Having a designated runner who drops off or gather items could useful. There wouldn't be raging over who gets to go, but what if the student in the rotation is unavailable? What if your posted student is absent? How do you reassign without it being a hassle?  Could phone answered be ajob if they were taught how to do it correctly?  Researcher who looks up word definitions or other facts that come up in discussion might be a good one so I don't have to stop the flow.  Materials manger? Board or overhead cleaner?  Jobs like hanging student work or taking it down I could ask for volunteers during prep or before or after school and reward them with candy.  My goal is to really reduce the time we spend in class off topic as well as unwanted time in the building.

I have no ideas on how to get students to preform their jobs without added work from me. Some it won't matter.  I'll just ask the student to run and get us more copies or to look up a word. But the other ones that need to be automatic, I am concerned about as had students who took forever to get into the habit of collecting their paper as they came in or following the diractions on the board.  (Speaking of gathering papers. It would be easier if they had to walk by them naturally if inconsolable the room set up work for that).

Friday, June 21, 2013

Why Not Sylvan?

I'm feeling a bit frustrated that I can't find a student to tutor for the summer.  Thus far, I've only taken moderate measures to find a student, but I've gotten no leads.

While talking with a friend today out at a  play date, she said she had seen that Sylvan was looking for tutors.  I told her I'd worked there before.  Not only does the job not offer the pay or hours I'm looking for at present, but I don't agree with their teaching practices.

This is how it worked when I worked at Sylvan almost ten years ago.

The administrator preforms an assessment (i.e. a standardized test).  Based on the assessment, the work targets specific skills.  The tutor does not see the assessment or choose the activities.  The administrator gives a list of the activities and photocopies of the needed materials wait for the tutor in the student's binder.  While this was a plus for the tutor because it meant no prep work, it also meant the tutor was disconnected from the content.  Additionally, the tutor works with three students at once at one table.  Most of the work is skill and drill.  When I tutored, I worked with grade school students practicing basic phonics; these were not subjects I was qualified to teach.  But, I didn't need to know how to teach it because all I had to do was read what was on the cards.  I was paid minimum wage until I hit a certain number of hours, then I got a small raise.  Meanwhile, Sylvan is charging parents about $50.  They require at least two hours a week, but recommend four.  Sylvan was happy with my performance and wanted me to give them more hours, but I couldn't because I taught full time and worked on a master's.  So, they dropped me from the schedule; they never officially fired me or even collected my key! 

Just now, I looked up the pricing information for Sylvan.  I've looked before and couldn't find it.  The web pages always said to call to find out and that it varied depending on the length of services the child needed to reach the goals.  But, today I found a Sylvan page that gave prices.  Here it is word for word here:

Get started at Sylvan for just $155 for a single program test, $230 for a comprehensive evaluation in Reading, Math, and Writing. The Registration Fee, due at enrollment is $75 (lifetime family fee).

The hourly teaching rate will vary depending on how you pay. You can get a discount by prepaying for your program, and we have a Payment Plan. The hourly rate is $45-50. Students usually come 2-4+ hours per week for fastest growth. 


After reading this, I went to my local Sylvan's page and the one for Portland, and neither one gave this information on pricing.  But, I did see promotions for $100 off or $25 off an assessment.  Obviously, the price must be steep to offer such discounts.

This same individual Sylvan page said that a private tutor is a "band-aid" to your child's problems.  I agree with this to some extent, but only because that is what the parent wants.  Usually, the parent wants the child's score at school to go up.  With the student I tutored a couple months ago, I could have worked more with him and fixed some of the problems he was having, but I was there to make sure he passed the 8th grade.  Getting the assignments completed was the primary goal.  That is more about what the parent wants out of the tutoring than my teaching.  A good teacher / tutor should be able to do a better job of accomplishing the same goals as Sylvan if the parents allow the tutor to do so. 

Also stated on this site was that the Sylvan tutor is always sitting right with your child, which apparently is not the case at some of the other big tutoring centers.  This is true, but the tutor could have two other children to help, so its not one-on-one instruction.  They claim that they don't do skill and drill through worksheets, which is possible it has changed over the years, but I would be surprised.  The page simultaneously claimed that the students aren't teaching themselves, which is true.  The students were not teaching themselves through the worksheets; they were going through lots of practice exercises.  I never felt like I was really helping my students while working at Sylvan.  The materials I had to work with were not engaging them and I had no way of knowing if they were achieving long term success with any of the material we covered.  When a student need more help with a topic, I didn't have the time or resources to cover it.  It was not student centered learning. 

I'd also like to point out that Sylvan makes up to $150 an hour for the work one tutor does with three students, but the tutor is not paid even a tenth of that.  That shows how much Sylvan values the tutor:  They don't.  And with their program, they don't need to.  The tutor could be just about anyone reading off the prescribed materials.

Here is why a private tutor is better.

First of all, a private tutor will be able to tailor all work around your child as a person with unique interests and abilities.   Sylvan's approach was impersonal; any time spent getting to know my student was time off task which I could not use inform my instruction.  But, if I am a private tutor, I can take just about anything I learn about a student and use it to inform my instruction in various ways.  A private tutor has the option of personally making all materials and making all selections for texts.  This ability to choose really allows the child to be engaged and the materials to be tailored to the student.  And even though Sylvan totes that its rewards system promotes self esteem, it is still only focused on what a student can not do.  A private tutor can teach the necessary material utilizing the child's strengths. 

Second, a private tutor probably does not use a standardized test. Instead, a private tutor uses several ways to gather data about your child.  The discussion will start with the parents, but doesn't end there.  The tutor talks with the child, and perhaps most importantly, examines actual student work.  (Student work is the best source to see what a student really knows.  It doesn't mater if a student can preform a skill in isolation on a work sheet if the student can't apply the skill in a real situation).   A private tutor could even form a strong relationship with classroom teachers to get maximum results. As the tutor works with the child, she collects data through multiple venues instead of scores on worksheets and a second standardized test.  Not only can a tutor use any type of assessment, but also can use informal interactions of observing and talking with the student to inform instruction.  Through real interaction, the tutor and student can work until the child truly understands the material. 

Third, a private tutor will be an expert in the subjects.  At Sylvan, I rarely felt like an expert.  Even when I was working within my comfort zone of high school students, I wasn't following my own curriculum.  When I worked with the younger students, I had no training on the material.  But as a private tutor, I am only going to accept jobs that cover what I know.  I decide the pace and curriculum (based on the student needs), and can prep myself accordingly.  At Sylvan, I had no idea what I would be covering or even which students I would be seeing until I arrived. 

There are other small benefits, too, such as more flexible scheduling, the ability to meet in your home, and more direct and meaningful communication for the parent.  These seem small, but can make a world of difference to the ease of the tutoring on the family.

Really, it comes down to this: Who would you rather fix your car or your plumbing?  Someone who is specifically trained and experienced and can diagnose and address the problems directly, or someone who is hired to read a manual and run tests?  If you'd choose the professional for your car or home, why wouldn't you for your child?

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Teaching the Semi Colon

The semicolon appears on the common core for grades 9-10.  In the past, I only taught the semicolon once with my one tenth grade class.  It went well.  While the semicolon seems scary, it is actually much easier than the comma.   For my freshmen, I would tell them to avoid the semicolon if they didn't understand it because a semicolon is a punctuation mark you can live without.  I like the idea of teaching the topic with sophomores, who have hopefully mastered complete sentences and commas. 

Previous Skill Set:
  • Understanding of a complete sentence, including fragments, run-ons and comma splices.  (Ideally, seeing this in the student's writing). 
  • Understanding of comma rules.  (Ideally, seeing this student's writing).
  • Know the visual difference between a comma, semicolon, and colon. 
  • Know the conjunctions (FANBOYS) to exclude them from other transitional phrases. 

Items to be Taught:
  • When items in a list contain comas, use semicolons to break apart the items in the list.  
  • Use a semicolon to link two complete sentences (independent clauses).  
  • Use a semicolon to fix a run-on sentence (especially a comma splice).  
  • Semicolon notes a connection between the two ideas being linked.  
  • Use of a conjunctive adverb or transitional phrase can help foster the connection between the two ideas.  

How: (not necessarily all ideas or in this order)
  • Start with lecture and notes for the two rules including at least one example for each.  
  • Put sentences on overhead and have students volunteer where and why a semicolon would be placed.  
  • Give each student or pair a sentence to correct, share using an overhead. 
  • Give the class a topic (perhaps based on a class reading), and generate sentences using a semicolon in pairs.  Share with class.  To make sharing easy, have students write on transparencies. 
  • Watch a video about semicolon rules.  With a quick YouTube search, I found Power Points, lectures, and funny student videos. 
  • Find a semicolon in a text.  Determine why it was used.  
  • Take a piece of writing (old or current) and add a semicolon.  
  • Take a sentence from a text and add a semicolon.  
  • Discuss the purpose of the semicolon, using specific examples.  Discuss the impact on a single sentence and idea, as well as using to vary sentence structures. 
  • Do grammar exercises using sentences that either need semicolons or commas.  Just a few at a time.  Require to annotate why placed comma or semicolon where did. 
  • Require use of a certain number of semicolons in a finished writing piece.  No more than four required in an analytical essay. 
  • Read chapter on semicolons in Eats, Shoots & Leaves by Lynne Truss.  
  • Have students create a unique presentation of their knowledge of the semicolon, such as a children's book or a wonderful video like this one


Monday, June 17, 2013

Common Exams and Standards

Even though I still have about three more years before I hope to be in the class room again, I can't help but think about teaching at this time of year.  Summer vacation just started for all the surrounding districts and today happens to be a true summer day reminding me of those stuffy, humid days grading finals in my classroom.

Final exams is one of the things on my mind.  I ran into a former colleague at the corner farm stand a couple days ago.  Even though it was about 4pm and they only had a half day, she was just heading home from the last day of school.  She said it took her extra time to clean up her room; I kidded that I was always running late because of my grading.  She then told me that the English department now has common final exams (which technically I knew from a friend) and that they are essay questions.  She sympathized for the department because the last final ended at about noon and grades were due the next morning at 8am!  Now, on its own, one set of essay exams in that time frame is fine, even for a slow grader like me.  But its really six classes of essay exams over four days, with potentially two-thirds of them coming in over 48 hours depending on where a teacher's prep periods fall.

When I heard about the common exam before, I was on the fence about it.  I really liked the idea that students in all classes are getting the same basics and that the exams are holding teachers accountable for getting to that material.  The scores also give the teachers data on if those grade skills are being mastered.  This is good.  But, I don't like anything that jeopardizes my freedom in the classroom.   A little control and structure and accountability is fine, and I think such measures would force me to be a better teacher.  But, I am at a place in my teaching where I do not want to be dictated what to teach, how, and when.  Not only is it stifling for me personally, but I don't agree with it for best learning for the students. 

Hearing that this common exam was now making a huge grading inconvenience (and perhaps crisis), did not warm any to it.  My last year or two of teaching, I swapped the final exam for the final essay to make the final exam grade more meaningful while still allowing me maximum grading time.  This common exam forces me to use set material for the exam while demoting our final cumulative project.  The sheer amount of grading to do over last few days of school makes me uncomfortable about how I would accomplish it with children at home, not to mention how my feeling rushed could affect the quality of my grading.  And, that's not even mentioning if I agree with the importance of the skills featured on the common exam.

In the past, I haven't felt too compelled to worry about curriculum.  I find that I hit everything I am meant to without having to pull out my curriculum every time I plan something.  The essential skills my department focused on over the years were a mixed bag.  Some of them I agreed with completely and worked on diligently over the year.  Others, I taught for the couple weeks leading up to the assessment and nothing more because they were generally isolated and not useful for my students.  For example, I taught mostly freshmen.  A skill I believed in was learning how to cite properly and we worked on it for months, while frivolous skill was memorizing and implementing a set list of supporting techniques. 

Having been out of the classroom since the start of the 2009 school year, I've missed the implantation of the common core.  I only now just researched it, because, seriously, who reads curriculum for fun during the few awake hours while the children are asleep?  I quickly found The Common Care State Standards Initiative, which, to the best I could tell, easily presented exactly the curriculum information I needed.  Reading it quickly (with Natalie loudly singing in the background), I agreed with everything I saw.  While it would need some unpacking and time to break the standards down to make the presented standard the final product at the end of tenth grade, I felt all the presented material, excepting maybe the reading of primary historical documents, were skills I valued in my classroom and naturally taught.  Some of the under reading literature stated very clearly what it is we "do" in English, which is sometimes hard for me to explain.

While I felt the bar might be too high for many students to fully achieve all these standards by the end of the tenth grade, my concern would fall under the next step.  Are these standards the basis for standardized testing?  Is data involving how students meet these standards used to assess a school or teacher?  Is completion of these standards in anyway attached to funding?  Will meeting these goals equate graduation?  These are the tricky areas for me.  As just a curriculum, I thought it was spot on.  But if a student needs to meet all of them fully in order to graduate, then I am not.  Hell, I'm the teacher and I don't even "spell correctly," to just use one simple standard as an example. 

Back to the idea of a common final exam, how would the department pick which of the roughly forty standards to use on a final?  Its fair to say that listening and speaking would be out, but that does not limit the selection by much, especially considering all the subcategories under writing.  While I admire a common assignment that strives to keep the education of all students at each grade level standard, I fear that actually grading the exam in the allotted time frame undermines the pursuit. And not only my time requirements for the scoring, but also the student time requirements for the test.  Unless the exam is made a long term assignment due the day of the final, then there is considerable time pressure on the student to preform, and completing the task quickly is not part of any standard I saw.  And, if you are going to take away the time factor for taking the exam, why not just give the assessment a week early to allow less frenzied grading time?

While talking to my friend, I was bravado.  I told her that I guess guidance would have to delay starting vacation for me to finish my grades because I was not going to stay up all night to finish my grading when the circumstances were not my fault.  I've always felt bad that guidance gets stuck late that last day, but also have resented their pressure to all grades in so quickly.  But that is a school structure problem to think about another day.  Right now, Natalie is demanding I go get her some "fruit milk" in a princess cup like we used "at the park with the tiger." 

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Whenever grade an assignment, appropriately mark the quarter rubric.

Continue to use tradition book for ease of looking at class date, missing assignments, and computer data entry.

Make a binder with a quarter rubric for each student. Each assignment should connect to a standard on the quarter rubric. When grade, mark the appropriate descriptions. I'm imagining this like check marks. Probably should color code by date to map progress on a standard. Could place check actually on descriptor words. At the end of the quarter, will be faster, easier, and more accurate to determine quarter score.

This will pivot on strong quarterly planning. Need to have clear goals for each quarter and a well made rubric at the start. If I can do that, then this process should help force me to keep all assignments relevant to our goals. Also, focusing on a fewer skills to keep grading more manageable would mean slowing down. I could really go deeper on vocabulary (both content and reading) or use a true gradual release over weeks instead of days.

For progress, I could photocopy the rubrics. Also at quarter's end I would photocopy, and then save a rubric and send one home. The organized data should make summarizing a students progress (or lack of) easier.

Excited about this idea. It seems to be a tool that would have made teaching much easier. I hope that my new position will allow the necessary freedom to do it, and that I will be hired with enough time to plan. I can envision this work easily with my old curriculum for 9th grade, but wonder how it would look with new material at a new school or grade level.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Encouraging Reading in the Early Teen Years

I currently live in board book land.  I rarely venture to the other side of the children's room at the library to where the novels live, unless its to hold William up to see the big dinosaur statue.  Between my literacy course work and my life experience, I've developed a lot of advice for helping parents introduce children zero to four years to reading.  But, as soon as my kids are out of this stage, what use is that information to me and my profession?  Unless I decide to become a district literacy coach, I'll be putting all that hard earned knowledge away.  (Its similar to my wealth of knowledge on breastfeeding that will be useless until I have a grandchild in twenty something years!)  It makes me a little sad to think of my new areas of expertise becoming personally obsolete.

So, I got to thinking, what do I know about reading in the age span I do teach.  And there is a fair amount to share. 

  • Any type of text is reading, so give value to all texts.  A book doesn't have to be a classic novel to "count" as reading.  We read all day long in various fashions.  While it is true that most teachers want to see students reading books because the long term commitment engages different thinking skills, reading comics, manuals, blogs, and magazines are still reading and should not be disregarded.   A teen who reads Sports Illustrated cover to cover or has read every Manga title available at the library should not consider his or herself a non-reader. 
  • Don't be fooled by classics. I grumble to myself when I see The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn or To Kill a Mockingbird placed on a "children's" book list.  Even an advanced child reader who can decipher the text will miss much of these books have to offer because of their age appropriate deficiencies in maturity and life experience.  Are children really intellectually ready for the huge topics presented in these classics?  Do you want your ten year old reading a book centered around a rape trail?  Because that is what To Kill a Mockingbird does.  Or, do you trust your ten year old to understand Huck's role as a bias and unreliable narrator?  I wouldn't trust mine, or my fourteen year students.  Just because a story is narrated by a child doesn't mean it should be read by children.  Save the classics for a time when the child can make the most meaning of the full text, which I suggest is much closer to 14 than to 9.  And another word about classics.  Excluding maybe Hemingway and Fitzgerald, most of our cannon is not easy to read on just a surface level.  Have you visited Hawthorne or Dickens recently?  Long, drawn out sentences with confusing structures.  Dated and pretentious vocabulary.  References to historical data unknown to the average "child," and often to adults.  Don't make your child suffer a classic until she has the reading strategies to manage these pitfalls comfortably.  
  • Don't expect a book to be a silverbullet because it won an award, or is popular, or is recommended by a librarian.  Even your own favorite texts as a child or teen might not be the right fit for your child.  Help your child figure out who he is as a reader, starting with where he is right now.  If that is Goosebumps, so be it. 
  • Let them read "junk" or other annoying texts.  After learning how to decode words in the first years of school, from around third grade on your child works on fluently reading increasingly challenging texts.  How does this occur?  Practice, practice, practice.  For this reason, starting around second or third grade, there are many series.  To adults, these books can be shallow and repetitive, but kids can't get enough.  Let them devour a series.  The practice is just when they need it.  Even older kids in middle school still need this practice; they are just trading Flat Stanley and Junie B Jones for Cirque de Freak or The Clique.  When something works, run with it for as long as you can.  Even if you think its junk, go with it and milk it dry.  You might be shaking your head at another vampire love story or eating disorder drama or survival adventure, but your child loves it and it feeds the need for practice through an inviting text.  When it is time to branch out, use the knowledge of what your child likes to find the next step.  Librarians are wonderful at taking this information and turning it into concrete recommendations. 
  • Consider your own reading habits.  What do you like to read?  How do you like to read?  Do you consider it work?  Model and discuss these topics with your child.  Help your child compare and contrast different types of reading.  Teens need to see the huge difference between reading a best seller for fun at the beach and reading a textbook and reading a classic novel to write an essay.  Help your child to see the differences between pleasure reading and various types of academic reading.  Not a big reader?  That's okay, too.  Just don't say, "I hated English, too," and leave it at that.  Explain to your child your struggles or frustrations with reading, especially how you overcame them if you did. 
  • Encourage variety in genres.  If a child is engaged in a topic, you can help her try various genres.  Sometimes the pairings are obvious.  Your child loves a particular author, then offer his biography.  A teen can't get enough non-fiction about a topic, then find a novel surrounding the topic.  But don't be afraid to try graphic novels, short stories, poetry, or plays.  (Again, librarians are wonder resources!)
  • Help provide books.  Let's admit it, young teens are distracted often resulting academic irresponsibility.  Don't let the lack of a books be the reason your child struggles.  If he can't get his act together to get to the school library, then make some books he'll like accessible at home.  Take him to the library.  Get him the next book in his series.  Have a couple books on his favorite topics mix in with the birthday presents.  Pick up a few used paperbacks at a yard sale.  Swap books with another family.
  • Help provide time and space for reading.  You can help your child fit reading time into their day by setting limits to other activities, creating a family reading time, or helping your child schedule a time for reading.  Make sure that there is a time in your home when your child can read.  A time where your child will be undisturbed by siblings or chores.  Consider providing a reading lamp or even a cozy reading chair. 
  • Don't enable cheating, but instead teach your child to use all sources available to create meaning.  Go ahead and rent the movie of the assigned book, but help your child use it to understand a challenging text or explore larger themes.  Don't banish SparkNotes or other such sites.  Help your child use these summaries for review or clarification.  Why not sometimes let your child use an audio book, or read aloud to your child?  Teach your child that research and finding help are respectable academic qualities, as long as they do not replace the originally assigned work. 

Saturday, April 20, 2013

What is Your Weakness? : Quick Grading

Grading was the bane of my teaching existence.  I continuously wound up with foot tall stacks of papers to grade.  I was always rushing at the end of the quarter, especially the last one. More than once I had to pull all-nighters to complete all the work. When I return to teaching, I will be a parent of a 7 and 5 year old.  I will not have the time to grade like I did before, so something is going to need to change. 

Reasons why I have trouble grading quickly:
  • Even though I've come a long way over the years, I have to be honest that I am a slower reader than most of the people in my profession.  I just read an essay slower than my peers because of my dyslexia.  
  • I have trouble focusing in on just a couple correction areas.  Its either all or nothing with me.  I can easily grade and mark nothing, or I find myself needing to stop and mark everything.  
  • A contributing factor to the above is that my previous job had a very cumbersome common writing rubric.  It had thirteen indicators, including writing process and grammar and spelling.  Eventually, I learned to par it back, and that helped, but when I had to use the whole rubric just making sure I was being fair about thirteen areas took a while.  
  • Some of my grading troubles is procrastination.  I prefer the planning and executing aspects of teaching.  I would much rather read YA novels or trade books, organize my classroom, or create handouts than grade most of the time.  
  • The volume of work coming in was also a problem.  Even if many students failed to turn an assignment in, I could have anywhere from fifty to ninety essays in at a time.  Also, I tended to give many assignments of varying sizes. 

Ways to work on this weakness:
  • One of my concerns is how to reduce the amount of grading when I use writing workshop.  My idea is that I will focus mini writing lessons on assessable skills that I will look for in student writing.  To give plenty of time for students to understand concepts and give practice time, I anticipate only a few skills per time span students would spend for each writing piece.  I would then focus the covered skills, and possibly one or two others (a review skill or maybe writing process).  This should make the grading of pieces more manageable.  Then, at the end of the quarter, I could use a more in-depth rubric to review the students best work.  Maybe a choice of three pieces?  Revision would be expected, so that would be on the rubric.  Theoretically, since I would have read all the pieces before, grading them again would go more quickly.  However, I should NOT include a very detailed standard to assess that would require lots of close reading (such as general grammar or spelling where I must mark all the mistakes).  The question would be how do I keep students going all quarter?  A minimum number of pieces or pages?
  • Assign more small assignments.  I am excited about this idea also because it will be a MUCH better teaching tool.  Previously, I would get so bogged down in grading that the results couldn't guide my teaching or help students improve in a timely manner.  Giving more frequent, informal, small assignments would allow me to whip through them quickly getting a picture of what needs to be adjusted perhaps even daily.  
  • Stagger assignments by class period.  Previously, I had all classes that were the same level turning in big assignments at the same time.  I need to find ways to stagger due dates so that I am not overwhelmed.  This could also include incentives for turning in large assignments early.  
  • One thing I think I do well is use rubrics.  I create a rubric along side the assignment directions to guide my instruction and the students.  When the rubric is well crafted, it makes grading move much more quickly.  
  • Use more often simple grading scales such as check / check minus or the smiley face scale I once created (probably even more relevant now with texting).  Sometimes it is as simple as yes, the student got it, or no, the student did not.  Other times, it is more about checking in with a class than individual assessment.  
  • Put more responsibility on the students to fix errors instead of doing it for them.  When applicable, leave errors unmarked and let the students find them.  Instead, make notations on the rubric, such as "missing thesis statement" or "no citations" or "errors with quotation marks."  With errors like punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and basic sentence structure, I could make a cut off of marked errors, then stop.  Maybe, I mark the first ten errors in these areas (unless they are part of a FCA) and then grade accordingly or ask the student to resubmit.  Just thinking about this in context of some papers I've received in the past makes me feel liberated!
  • If it does not break school policy, make exam scores reflect long term work (such as a final essay) and collect them before exams begin to provide more grading time.  Work given during the exam period should be fast to grade (items with one right answer) or unnecessary to grade (reflection). Reduce or halt new incoming assignments as complete final exam essay.  Progress scores determined via conferencing. 
  • If use a quarter rubric, devise a system to keep track of individual scores by standard. Can the scores be categorized in the computer, and then display chosen to sort them?  (Ex. old system could group quizzes or HW together in a row). 

Easy to grade assignments:
  • Observations
  • Short written work (notes, exit notes, reflections, graphic organizers, post-its, etc)
  • Informal writing (journals, notes, reflections, reader response, letter essays)
  • Discussion participation
  • Self assessment rubrics (participation, anything else??)
  • Conferences
  • Quizzes
  • Timed writing
  • Presentations
  • Worksheets (ex. grammar pretesting or practice)
  • Surveys

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Example of Writing with Your Students

I tried to write with my students frequently.  This is an example of revising.  I put up various drafts of the same piece with different class periods over several days and revised aloud as they watched.  I did everything as usual, excepting that I thought aloud.  Sometimes I'd ask for student input as an example of conferencing, and other times I just modeled. The pictures below are overhead transparencies.  I like to revise by hand on a typed copy, so this method worked well.  You could also use a Smart Board.  I encourage you to show your students how a writer works by sharing what you do.  After you've done this several times, you can invite students to take a turn revising or conferencing in front of the class.  

Draft 1:



Draft 2:

Draft 3:


Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Peer Revision Guidelines



What is peer revision?
Peer revision is when a peer (a classmate, sibling, or friend) reads over your work giving you advice on what you should change to make it better as well as complimenting what is done well.  An adult isn’t your peer, so adult comments don’t count as peer revision. 

How are peer editing and peer revision different?
Peer revision is more than just looking at spelling and grammar.  A computer can do most of that for you.  But a computer cannot think about what you wrote and suggest how to make it clearer or more interesting.  A person can do that.  So, peer revision focuses on revision changes, such as idea development, word choice, organization, and clarity, while peer editing focuses on only editing. 

What does your peer do during revision?
Your peer reads your paper several times over.  The peer writes you comments on your paper about revision and editing changes.  You peers will also fill out a sheet with some specific questions, including a question you write.  Lastly, you peer will discuss his or her suggestions with you. 

What do you do during revision?

You provide your peer with a question or area that you would like him or her to pay particular attention to.  After that, you follow the same steps with your partner’s paper. 

Are you eligible for peer revision?
To peer revise you must have your draft with you in class.  So, you cannot peer workshop someone else’s paper if you do not have one for them to read.  You also must have revised your essay on your own before you can have a peer read it for peer revision credit.  

What is a FCA?
A FCA, or focus correction area, is a topic that you would like to improve on.  It is an area that you are focusing on correcting.  Before you swap papers, you will write down a FCA for your paper that your peer will look at closely while reading.  You can choose a FCA that you feel you need to improve on the most overall or that is troubling you about the assignment in particular.  Avoid vague FCA’s such as “writing better” or “better grammar.”  Also avoid using only editing skills, such as spelling or capitalization. 

The Steps:
1.    Determine if you are ready to peer revise.
2.    Get a copy of the peer revision sheet. 
3.    Set a FCA.
4.    Swap papers with your peer. 
5.    Get a writing utensil that is a different color than your peer used to write his or her draft. 
6.    Read the whole draft once and only mark places that confuse you. 
7.    Read the whole draft again this time looking at the draft with more detail.  This is the time to use the revision sheet to look for different areas to improve.  As you do so, note any editing changes you happen to notice.
8.    Fill out the peer revision guide for the piece. 
9.    Give paper back to the writer and discuss your comments and suggestions. 

Writing Workshop Guidelines



1.    Bring writing to class everyday.  Bring writing home or to study hall as necessary.

2.    The first 5-10 minutes will be for silent writing.  This allows everyone to gather thoughts and re-enter their writing without distraction.  Everyone writes during this time. 

3.    Each day you will have a menu of options for what you can work on.  When I do the status of the class, you will commit to one or two of these tasks and a piece you will work on.

4.    Choose topics and genres that interest you.  Consult your writing territories and genre list for ideas.  However, a few times over the course of the year you will assign you a genre or topic.  

5.    Not all pieces are meant to be published.  You can abandon a piece for good or decide to just put it aside for a while. 

6.    Not all pieces need every step of the writing process.  However, I suggest that all pieces are edited. 

7.    Not all pieces need a conference and some may need more than one. 

8.    You set the purposes, goals, and questions for conferences on your writing. 

9.    When conferencing a fellow writer's work, make suggestions.  Do not rewrite. 

10.    Do as much as you can. 

11.    Do nothing that distracts others. 

Reading Workshop Guidelines

Guidelines for Reading Workshop

1.    Come to class with enough reading material to last you the whole time.  Reading time is not for browsing the classroom or school library.  Remember, you can get passes to use those places or use them before or after school.  Also remember to bring home enough reading material, particularly for longer periods like weekends. 

2.    You must read a book.  The only exception is on a day when you finished your book as homework and have not yet had time to get a new one.  On these days, you may read a magazine or cartoon collection.  The rest of the time, you need to read a book because shorter pieces of text don't develop your reading skills. 

3.    Don't read a book you don't like!  Don't waste time with a book you don't enjoy when there are so many awesome titles to try.  Create your own criteria and system for abandoning an unsatisfying book.  When you abandon a book, write a few notes or a short journal about why you are abandoning it. 

4.    If you don't like your book, find another.  Check out the lists and displays in the classroom. Check your someday list.  Browse the class and school library shelves.  Ask me, the librarian, or a friend for a recommendation.  You can also bring in books from home or browse a bookstore. 

5.    It's okay to reread a book you love.  This is something good readers do.  But, you should not only reread the same book over and over; you need new experiences, too. 

6.    Skimming or skipping parts of a book if you get bored or stuck is something good readers do this sometimes.  However, if you are skimming and skipping more than you are reading straight through, you might want to abandon the book for something you find more interesting. 

7.    In your notebook, record the title of every book you finish or abandon, its genre and author, the date, and your rating of 1 to 5 stars.  Collecting this data about yourself as a reader will help you look for patterns and take satisfaction in your accomplishments. 

8.    Understand that reading is thinking.  Not only is this important for understanding and improving how you read, but also to keep a proper reading environment.  Try to do nothing that distracts others from “the reading zone.”  When you talk with me about your reading, use as soft a voice as I use when I talk to you: whisper.

9.    Take care of our books.  Sign out each book you borrow with the book slips posted on the bookshelves.  Be careful to copy the information neatly and correctly.  Put completed slips in the designated box.  When you finish with a book, return it to me and I will destroy your slip as long as the information on the slip and book match.  If you damage a book, don't stress over it.  Most of the time, the book is still readable.  If not, well, it gives me a reason to go to the bookstore for new books. 

10.    Read the whole time during reading workshop (unless you are conferencing with me). 

11.    Read as much as you can. 

Research on Writing Workshop

 This is the write up for first hand research I did for my Master's in Literacy Education. Upon reading it, I'm wondering where my final draft is because this isn't it!  The lit review seems to be missing some, and there are obvious places I wrote notes to myself on more info to add later.  I can't seem to find the file for the final draft, though.  I'll tidy this up sometime in the future.  I had charts, too, but I can't seem to get those to transfer over.  Come to think of it, this was the final paper I asked my professor to mail back to me, but he never bothered (even though I sent postage) because he was removed from the university staff.  Its possible that I have no final copy available to me.  What is even more sad is that I turned in all my raw data as part of a binder, so I can't even look back on it to fill in the gaps.  :( 



 Introduction

Back in 2003, my student teaching adviser forced all her advisees to read Nancie Atwell's quintessential text In the Middle.  I hated it.  Atwell's ideas were pie-in-the-sky.  Of course, this workshop system worked for her when she worked in her own school and developed the class structures and procedures herself.  How date my adviser make me read this text when this system could never work in a real school, with read students, and real accountability?  Yet, when I revisited the text this semester and her words reemerged in my memory, I saw my experiences from the last four years in Atwell's narration. 
   
I feel I can sympathize with Dianne Dodsworth who wrote a short piece titled “Nancy, you lied!”  She explained how she excitedly jumped into writing workshop expecting to follow In The Middle like a cookbook.  Yet, as she went, she realized that she had to adapt the information provided by Atwell to fit her teaching style as well as her student's experiences.  I could identify to this very much.  I was ready to give all these ideas a try, but was not sure how they would work in reality.  Her comments made me feel very secure in having asked my students about their writing pasts.  Just like Dodsworth's students, some of my students have never experienced writing workshop, and I needed to know that information if I was going to fully understand what was happening in my class and how best to modify my teaching to support my students.

Question

Thus this year, I made the decision to teach all my courses using reading and writing workshops.  Two factors manifested this change.  First, the lowest and middle levels at my school were combined so that I would have a wide range of abilities and motivation in a single class.  My old method of telling students what to read and write and when would not work with such a diverse group.  This course adjustment alone would not have brought about the changes in teaching.  My course work for my master's over the past year focused a lot on providing choice for students and authentic reading and writing situations.  Slowly, my aversion to Atwell's approaches changed, and by the end of the summer, I dedicated myself to giving students reading and writing in class daily as well as free reign to choose what and how they completed these activities.

Once the year has started, the reading portion of my class ran well.  Student's commented in reflections that they are learning about what they like to read and how to choose and abandon books.  The library return pile at the back of my room often overflows the bin and I'm having a hard time keeping up with end of book conferences.

However, the writing portion of class was a different story.  I feel that often other elements of class run over into writing time and that the directions I am giving are confusing to the students.  While they seem to understand the idea of choosing anything they want to read, many are having a hard time choosing from any topic about which to write.  As a result, I have some very silly writing pieces, some boring writing pieces, and also some nonexistent writing pieces of students who are stuck or overwhelmed.  When I give the students time to write, I don't feel that much writing is actually taking place and I'm not sure why.

I want to investigate what is actually occurring during my writing workshop time.  Are students writing?  How many students are sitting there lost or stuck?  How many of those conversations are about writing?  Is more “work” occurring during the silent time versus the time they are allowed to talk? 

Context and Sample

Leavitt Area High School is in a rural area.  When I first moved here from a Boston suburb, I had a lot to learn about how this area of Maine differed from where I grew up.  Not only did I have learn about four wheeling, hunting, and different types of skiing, I had to realize that in a rural community the students have fewer college options, less wealthy families, and longer distances to get to “town.”  Over my four years at Leavitt, I have learned that we have all ranges of students from Special Education students with heavy modifications to valedictorians that go on to Harvard; in my current class load, I have representatives of the whole range.

I teach five freshmen classes (91 students total); two of these classes are “academic” (36 students) and three are “advanced” (55 students).  Seven of the academic freshmen are really sophomores or juniors who are repeating, only one of which had me last year.  I also have one class of “advanced” sophomores (14 students), all of whom I had last year, one of which moved up a level. Of these students, I have two Latino student and one African American student.  Eight of my students have Special Education modifications.  Sixteen of my students are the younger sibling of a student I had in a previous year.

With this as a possible sample, it was challenge to decide which students to focus on for my study.  Using the full sample would be too much for the time span of my course, but any one class wouldn't show accurately the the range of students I teach.  In the end, I decided to go with my top group of advanced freshmen and one group of my academic student.  The advanced class was an easy choice since it contained some of the top caliber students I've encountered at Leavitt (as well as some very involved parents).  Meanwhile, the the academic class contained three students with special education modifications and three students repeating the course, each for very different reasons.  In both classes, some student were better at the subject of English than others, preferred the subject more than others, or were more motivated than others.  I also wound up with a range of personalities from shy to talkative, leaders to followers, inquisitive to disinterested.  These two classes also met on the same day, which I thought would help me in planning around my observations.  The advanced class met first period and thus I will refer to them as Group 1 for the duration of the study; the academic group was my second class of the day, though met third period after my prep, and they thus will be referred to as Group 2.

At Leavitt, we have 80 minute class periods every other day.  When I decided to start free choice reading and writing workshop, I needed to break up the period.  I followed the time table Atwell shares in The Reading Zone and gave more time to writing than to reading based on her assertion that more reading will get done at home than writing. Thus, I started each period with 20 minutes of time to read, followed by 30 minutes for teacher led instruction, and wrapped class up with 30 minutes of time for writing, the first third of which I asked to be silent.  There were problems with this set up from the get go.  I often had trouble completing what I needed to and still have 30 minutes for writing.  Sometimes I would fall behind due to my own over planning; other times it was because the students were unfocused slowing down my lessons.  Still on other occasions, we were delayed by students' unexpected questions or problems.  Another problem I encountered was the problem I had when I used to teacher our semester long essay writing course for freshmen, Writing Lab.  I would give my lesson about writing, tell the students what I wanted them to work on, and then make myself available to conference with students, but no students would want to conference.  Thus, almost all the period for almost the whole course was spent with the students working on their writing.  Not only did this leave me feeling I wasn't teaching, which I wasn't, but the students quickly got bored with the predictable structure.  I soon found what I was falling into my old patterns with class writing time. 

Literature Review

Since my central question was to discover what was happening in my classroom so that I could then modify the structure and my teaching to enhance student productivity and products, I primarily researched how other teachers structured their writing workshops.

 The next text I referenced was The Nine Rights of Every Writer.  I read this as part of Denis Enrico's course on the Writing Process.  That course was the first stepping stone in my decision to try writing workshop. The author outlines nine rights of writers spending a chapter explaining how each one is necessary.

I then began to think about what it was that I needed to teach.  What should these mini-lessons be about?  I had my school's curriculum to guide me, but it was so cold a document.  So disconnected from the actuality of teaching.  So, while searching for articles, I kept coming across Katie Wood Roy's text What You Know by Heart: How to Develop Curriculum for Your Writing Workshop.  Roy describes how writing teachers can use their own experiences as readers and writer's as curriculum for their classrooms.  She recommends telling the story of a writing experience.  Each of these experiences can be molded into a stories that teach multiple understandings and experiences about writing.

Roy's text lead me to Breathing In, Breathing Out: Keeping a Writer's Notebook by Ralph Flectcher.  This short text gave a lot of information on the tricky task of helping students generate ideas to write about. 

Data Collection

I first decided to observe my students.  How were the students interacting with each other?  How were they tackling the task of writing?  I thought being able to stop and watch and listen to what the students were doing, instead of all the other teacher duties, would allow me to see this part of my class in a new light.  But before I started observations, I had students answer two questions: What do you think is going well in this class? and What do you think is not going well in this class?  This data allowed me to focus my observations on the silent time of writing workshop because the biggest complaint was that silent time wasn't actually silent and students were distracted.

Since the short questionnaire worked well, I decided to give my students a longer survey to complete around the same time I started observations.  (See survey at the end of the post).  At the suggestion of my professor, I asked my students many questions about their past experiences with writing, which I hoped would provide insight now how they adapted to my class.  I also asked my students several questions that asked for feedback on their current opinions on how they write.  All put one survey that went out came back in.  Only one additional student didn't complete the survey because she was absent when it was given.  From their answers, it appeared that students understood the questions quite well.  I only noticed one survey with answers that didn't match what the question asked.

With survey completed, I started observing.  I observed Group 1 four times on November 3rd, 14th ?, 12th, and 18th.  Meanwhile, I observed Group 2 of students on November 3rd, 5th, 7th, 12th, 14th, and 18th for a total of six times.  I realized that it was harder for me to remember to do the observations first period in the morning and thus completely forgot to observe the students working on two occasions.  On the first occasion, the discussion the students held before writing time ran over into the allotted time.

When I observed, I sat at my desk and watched and listened to the students as they were asked to work silently at the beginning of their writing time.  The way my room is organized, I could see all students sitting at the desks clearly.  Students who moved to sit on the floor to write were partially obstructed by students in the seats or by the table at the back of the room.  (insert pictures of my classroom).  My observations usually lasted for ten minutes, which was usually the portion of writing time that was silent, but I often would jot down another note or two after a few more minutes.

I ran into two additional complications with observing.  I found that students had a hard time not coming up and talking to me while I was trying to observe.  This was hard for several students in Group 1 who often need to ask questions.  In Group 2, there were a couple of students who needed to ask questions, but more often it was two students who wanted to talk with me because they didn't fit in with their classmates.  After addressing this problem with the students and asking them to hold their questions and comments until the end of the ten minutes, it improved.

My second obstacle was that I found I could not exactly tell what students were doing or saying from where I was sitting.  I worked on this problem in a few ways.  During a few observations, I made a cycle around the room to see what students were doing.  On another occasion, I asked students to put in writing what they had been working on.  Mostly though, I started to watch the students who sat closest to my desk to see and hear their actions.  This lack of knowledge about their actions also led to my decision to analyze work samples.  I wanted to now look at what they had been doing while I watched previously.

I originally planned to conduct interviews of several students who stood out during observations.  However, I realized that looking at actual samples of student work created over the observation period would be more interesting.  The students completed two assignments during the period I was working on my study.  The first was a rewrite of a piece they did first quarter or in middle school.  the second was their third free choice writing piece.

The largest complication with this collection of data was unfortunate, yet very predictable.  For the rewrite assignments due November 20th, all but one student in Group 1 turned in the work; this student forget the assignment at home in her rush to catch the bus.  However, in Group 2 only seven students turned in the work.  As part of another class procedure that works on helping students turn in all their work, I had students with missing work tell me in writing why the work wasn't completed.  There was a wide variety of reasons from note having a printer, not being finished, losing the original piece of work, forgetting to do the assignment, forgetting to bring in the assignment.  Two additional students did not hand in the assignment; one was absent that day from class and the other was a transfer student who had joined class too late in the assignment to catch up by the due date and was thus exempt.   This happened again with the free choice writing assignment due on December 5th.  This time Group 1 had three missing assignments and Group 2 had eleven missing assignments.

As the study continued on, I asked students to submit an exit note stating a writing strategy they used as well as a short informal reflection on the piece of work submitted at the end of the observation period.  I asked for these pieces to get more immediate information on to inform my teaching as well as to make sure that the students were thinking about what were they were doing during writing time and holding themselves accountable for producing some results.  I affixed the exit note to the reflection and photocopied them in order to analyze them looking for patterns.  These reflections will guide me as I look at the product the student submitted.  In the end, I decided to use the exit notes and reflections as my third piece of data collection because the products (rewrites and third free choice piece) were just too much information to analyze properly given the time scope of my study and too many assignments were missing. 

Data Analysis

I started my analysis with the easiest pieces to process: The surveys.  I found the percentages of students who answered each question each way for the multiple choice questions.  Some of this data met my expectations.  For example, most students were not used to being expected to write for an extended period every class.  Only 32%, or eleven students, said they wrote every class in the past.  For the open answer question about how the teacher structure writing time, five students had comments that supported the low percentage of students who wrote every class in middle school.  There were also six students who answered stating that the writing time in middle school was inconsistent.  Overall, I now know that the majority of my students are not used to writing for thirty minutes every class.  In addition, I began to wonder if it was possible that the students didn't understand how their writing time was structured; could what seemed inconsistent to the students,  have been a plan to the teacher?

While there were other items I did not expect, such as that 56% of my students were used to have writing pieces met a couple times a quarter, some data fell in the middle.  For example, when I asked students if they thought they were writers or not, a little over half said no, about a third said yes, the the remainder said something in-between.  I wasn't expecting the in-between comments.  (Share some comments).  Another interesting fact was that before I mixed the two groups of surveys, I happened to look at this question and I discovered that all but three students in Group 2 felt that they were not writers.

After computing the percentages for the multiple choice questions, I coded the data from the open answer questions.  The clearest pattern arouse when comparing the lists of areas about which students felt confident or uncertain.  Five categories dominated their answers: Finding topics, different genres, parts of a piece, steps of the writing process, and grammar or mechanics.  All of the comments on confident areas fell into these five areas except for two students that said they were confident in all areas, one student who said the amount of time to write created confidence, and a last comment simply said “the easy stuff.”  Likewise, almost all the answers about which areas students felt uncertain fell into the same five categories.  Outlying answers included two students who said they were uncertain of most areas, one student who didn't know, and one comment on making writing interesting.  What was most surprising to me was that these answers didn't show exact deficiencies across the board.  Instead, the needs of the two classes were very diverse.  Also, 88% of my students were able to clearly identify an area of weakness and strength.

Next, I coded the reflection and exit notes I received from students.  I found three reoccurring categories.  Many students said they were surprised at the amount of revision they did.  Many students confused revision and editing or focused on fixing mistakes.  Many students mentioned that working with a peer was very helpful.

Lastly, I coded my observations.  I noticed a few small items, such as that I didn't really keep track of how long students were in the bathroom, but mostly I discovered three big items.  Ordinarily, when I am at my desk, I don't just stand around watching because it is boring and awkward.  I don't like hovering over students because I feel it invades their space.  Yet, when I work at my desk, I noticed that I miss out on a lot of data from the students.  I wind up checking them out in order to get small tasks done.  I also realized that most of my students have specific body language that they engage in when they are writing.  This furthered my feeling that hovering over the students would invade their space.  Lastly, I realized with my academic students, it wasn't so much that it took them a very long time to settle in to work, but that they would always pack up five or more minutes before the bell.  For many students, this meant that they would only write with any focus for two or three minutes.  Group 2 had this problem far worse than Group 1.  In fact, most of Group 1 didn't notice the time.  I am not sure if this is because Group 1 has more motivated student or more students who enjoy writing or if it is because Group 2 goes to lunch following my class. 

Further Research

This study has left me curious in a few areas.

I want to explore further how students view themselves as writers.  How would the students define a writer?  What kind of writing does a writer do?

I also want to further explore how students perceive the structures teachers put in place.  What do the students think about how much time they are given to work?  About the requirements they are given?  The freedoms they are given?

Implications

I had hoped that my research would give me insight into one large area.  Instead, I have many small findings that I now can apply to my classroom practices.

First of all, I am more prepared for helping my students to assimilate into my workshop now that I know the types of experiences they have down at the middle school.  I can call upon the fact that these students are used to frequent pieces being due, but also provide more support to help them know how to use their time to write and how to select topics and genres where they didn't have much choice in the past.

Additionally, I need to help the confidence my students have in themselves as writers.  It was staggering that so few of my Group 2 students didn't believe they were writers and that overall only about half of my students saw themselves as a writer.  I want to have more students who see themselves as this individual: (quote).  Next year, I want to work more on discussing early on what makes a person a writer and what qualifies as writing.

The students are using the language of a writer to describe their strengths, weakness, and their experience with writing.  I need to further encourage this practice by talking to students in that language and introducing more terms to them as we go.  Furthermore, I should include more opportunities for them to reflect on their work, either during or after completion, so that they can continue to make this language their own.

However, I also need to do more work to make sure that there is meaning behind the language students use.  The reflections showed me places where students may be parroting back what I expect (that revision brought about surprising amounts of change) or where terms are still not fully understood (that revision and editing are synonymous).

I also need to work on a plan so that I can address more fully the individual strengths and needs of my students as writers.  The pressure of my top students has made this a concern in my mind all year, yet I was resistant because of the attacking approach used by the parents.  This data now makes it clear to me that part of writing workshop is finding a way to get the individual needs of all students, not just the top ones with pushy parents, met.  This could be a useful item to work on in my network as other teachers teach our heterogeneously grouped Writing Lab course as well as the mixed ability Academic courses.  Having a plan in place would also allow me to remediate the skills I teach throughout the year, such as revision isn't editing and run-on sentences, to students who need it during class time without boring those who have it.

One way to provide this instruction is perhaps the easiest accommodation to make based on my data: Start giving the students instruction on how to use different types of writing manuals and handbooks.  This will help them to work on their own individual needs, both remediation and further challenge, while also making them independent learners.  I have already started this step by pulling different reference books, making a display for them as I do our reading books, and sharing this display with the students.  (more description and add pics).

Lastly, I need to pay more attention to how I interact with student during writing workshop.  In the past, I wanted to give students space during this time.  I understood that students need time to think, talk, and work through their writing.  But, I would wind up preoccupying myself with all the other tasks that can overwhelm me as a teacher, such as tidying up the room, responding to emails, or grading.  Sitting down and watching my students work has allowed me to see how they work more as individuals and a group.  I can see who is just shuffling papers and not really writing, who is staring off into space, who is just talking the whole time, and who is really invested in their work.  I plan to make observation of my students working a regular part of my classroom practices.  However, I have also learned that it appears my feeling about giving students space is well founded.  I can see how protective the body language students have of their work is.  Also, I can see how when they are really into their writing, they pull into themselves and their own world that doesn't need me intruding or hovering over them.  Observing from my desk will allow me to discover which students need redirection, guidance, or space. 

Works Cited
Atwell, N. (1998).  In the Middle: new Understandings About Writing, Reading, and Learning.  2nd ed.  Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. 
Fletcher, R.  (1996).  Breathing In, Breathing Out: Keeping a Writer's Journal.  Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. 
Ingalls, B.  (1999).  “Learning School / Learning to Write.”  Teacher – Researchers at Work.  Berkley, CA: National Writing Project. 
Painter, D.  (1999).  “What Happens When Students Engage in Peer Interaction During the Writing Process.”  Teacher – Researchers at Work.  Berkley, CA: National Writing Project. 
Ray, K.  (2002).  What You Know by Heart: How to Develop Curriculum for Your Writing Workshop.  Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. 
Spandel, V.  (2005).  The 9 Rights of Every Writer.  Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. 



 Survey

1.    Circle the one that best describes your past experiences.  In the past, my teachers gave me ...
  • total free choice on what to write
  • free choice with a couple guidelines
  • a whole bunch of guidelines with a little bit of choice
  • all guidelines and no choice
2.    If you were given guidelines, which of the following did they give you guidelines on, circle all that apply:
  • topic
  • format / genre
  • length
  • grammar, mechanics
  • appropriateness of content
  • appearance

3.    If you were given guidelines, star the one above your teacher emphasized the most. 

4.    Do you like guidelines or having free choice?  Explain why.

5.    In the past, were you given class time to work on writing?  Yes   No

6.    If yes to #4, explain how did your teachers structure your time to write?

7.    How often did you have to turn in a big piece of writing?
  • All the time!  Something was due every three or four weeks. 
  • Occasionally.  We had something due once or twice a quarter / trimester. 
  • Rarely.  We did only a couple of pieces over the course of the year. 

8.    How often did you work on a big piece of writing in class?
  • Every class.
  • About once a week. 
  • We'd work for a few days in a row ever month or so. 
  • Rarely. 
  • Never.  All writing was homework. 

What Makes a Good (or Great) Reading Conference?





This is a handout I gave my students to help them understand reading workshop conferencing. 
 

The Basics:
  • Show that you know what's happening in your book THEN go beyond the plot.
  • Show me you are thinking!
  • Back up what you say with references to specific things in the book. 

When to ask for a conference:
When you are stuck
When you finish a book
When you are not sure if you should abandon a book
When you have a question about reading
When you have an exciting idea
When you feel like I might being over looking you (Sorry!)

What to say about plot:
  • When I ask you what is happening in your book, tell me concisely.  Focus on the most important events or characters.  I don't need a blow by blow recap.  
  • Answer my questions about the plot.  If you can't answer, tell me why.  
  • Remember that I want to know more than the plot, I want to know what your thinking.  If you take a ton of time just retelling plot, we don't have time left for me to hear about or ask questions about your thinking. 

What to talk about in a conference:
  • Tell me why you like or don't like the book you are reading
  • Explain how things like flashbacks, point of view switches, breaks in the text, use of italics or punctuation affect the book and / or your experience reading it
  • Describe the author's writing style and explain how it affects the book and / or your experience reading it
  • Explain how the format of the book (poems, short stories, letters, IMs, emails, etc) affects the book and / or your experience reading it
  • Explain how literature or poetic devices affect the book and / or  your experience reading it
  • Tell me why you are stuck
  • Explain to me how you got unstuck
  • Share with me questions you have about the book (whether you think I can answer them or not)
  • Share predictions with me and why you have them
  • Share if your predictions are right or wrong
  • Make connections to your book between your experiences, other books you've read, or real world events past or present
  • Explain to me the significance of the title or cover of your book
  • Explain to me why you chose your book
  • Explain to me if a book is meeting your expectations or not
  • Explain to me why you chose to abandon a book
  • Share with me new things you learned from your book (not just for non-fiction!)
  • Share with me what you got out of the book overall
  • Explain to me what you think the author's message or purpose was for the book
  • Tell me if the book changed how you think
  • Tell me if the book changed or questioned your values or beliefs
  • If it is a frequently challenged book, share your thoughts on that with me
  • Compare and contrast the book to its film adaptation

When in doubt, refer to the rubric for the quarter! 

Favorite Revision and Editing Tricks



As I've said in other posts, writing as a process is a topic I stress with my students.  Here are my favorite six revision and editing tricks. 

  1.  Use color.  When revising on a printed document (which really should be tip number 7), always use a colorful writing utensil.  If you revisit the same draft more than once, change colors.  Lastly, when you go through your printed draft to copy the changes on to the computer, use a colored pen or marker to cross them off as you go.  When working directly on the computer, use the highlight function to make problem areas stand out for later attention.  Examples include citations you need to look up, notes to yourself about material to add, or anything that sounds off, but you can't fix immediately. 
  2. Read it backwards.  Reading an essay backwards is strictly an editing trick.  Reading the words out of context interrupts your memory of what the text was meant to say.  That allows you to focus on individual words and punctuation marks.  This trick helps find typos, misspellings, capitalization errors, incorrect punctuation, and citation errors. 
  3. Read it out loud to yourself.  An AP teacher in my building used to make all the students circle the room facing the wall.  They then read their papers aloud simultaneously.  Reading aloud forces you to listen to how the words sound rather than just remembering what you meant.  This helps with editing and revision problems involving grammar, punctuation, word choice - all the problems that lead to the vague teacher comment "awkward."
  4. Use find to look for specific errors.  Using the find function in a word processing program can target specific problems.  A student could search for trouble words.  With my dyslexia, I would always search for my common mistakes that formed real words (form / from, who / how).  This is an easy way to check words on the commonly confused list, such as effect / affect or the three there's.  A student can use it to add variety to word choice by searching the over used word and substituting synonyms.  Also, synonyms could be swapped out for vague or weak words.  Lastly, it can be used as a citation checker by searching parenthesis or quotation marks. 
  5. Have someone read it to you.  Ideally, I would ask my students to read their partner's work aloud to them during peer work shopping, but time and volume level requirements often didn't allow it.  Listening to how your writing sounds without reading along can bring those awkward problems to the surface.  Students realize words are left out or in a strange order.  Suddenly, the pronoun references are no longer clear.  Or, maybe the flow between ideas or quotations is now noticeably awkward. 
  6. Distance.  I give my students enough time to work on their writing so that they can put it away for a night or two to get the objectivity time and space offer.  (That is not to say that students budget their time to make use of this opportunity).  Putting a piece of writing away for even just one day offers a fresh light.  The results are very similar to hearing your writing read aloud.  Distance is my favorite trick because it empowers the student to revise and edit independently, and provides the best situation for the student to dive into serious revision.  When someone else is holding the paper, the student can't rip it away to tear a paragraph a part.