This is a great resource, and when I taught second grade I used a similar 
strategy to get my students writing. What can I do for fourth grade students 
who have not had this opportunity? If they come to you without these thinking 
skills, where do you start?










Joy/NC/4
 
How children learn is as important as what they learn: process and content go 
hand in hand. http://www.responsiveclassroom.org
 

--- On Sun, 6/22/08, Beverlee Paul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Beverlee Paul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [Understand] more on chapter six
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, June 22, 2008, 10:03 PM

Bev:  Judy, you've explained it very well!  I could see and hear.  One of
the greatest things about being a literacy coach is getting to celebrate!! 
It's such an honor.  In regard to your posts, I'd like to say that one
of our kindergarten teachers does a fantastic job of teaching her
kindergartners exactly what you've described, Judy.  They have all the
skills they need to talk to the teacher, the group, and amazingly EACH OTHER
about books and writing.  They have substantive discussions every day.  That
particular teacher has taught "how to discuss" literature for years,
but this year things took a dramatic deepening as we read Talking, Drawing,
Writing by Martha Horn and Mary Ellen Giacobbe as a study group.  The depth of
conversation, questioning, comprehending, composing, writing, (and on and on)
is incredible.  If you teach kindergarten and haven't yet read this book,
do yourself a favor this summer!!  It's WOW!  If you teach primary grades,
the nitty-gritty of the book isn't as relevant to you, but you will
recognize the true roots of writers workshop and the writing process.  If your
kindergarten teachers uses this technique (developed by Teachers College), you
have to read it so you can take advantage of the foundation that has been laid
for the kids you'll be getting.  For any first grade teacher who has ever
asked, "Why do these kids tell me they don't know what to write
about?" or "I have to give sentence starters or they just sit,"
or "Why do the kids say, 'Can I be done yet?' -- read this book
and see the difference between early instruction leading to real writers
writing -- or to kids fulfilling assignments for the teacher. I was in awe of
our kindergarten teachers this year as well as our kindergartners.  Fun, fun,
fun...   

> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[email protected]> Date: Sun, 22 Jun 2008 18:43:58 -0700>
Subject: Re: [Understand] more on chapter six> > Joy: I have to admit
something. Please don't laugh or think less of me, but > I need to know
more about questioning. Although on every review I've ever > received,
questioning is cited as a strength (for me), I struggle with > teaching it
to students. How to get students to ask questions that go beyond > the
surface, how to get them to rephrase their questions, be more specific, >
etc. During lit circles it becomes very evident that they are clueless. I >
will hear them trying, but I struggle with getting them to stretch and go >
outside the mold.> There's more to it than even Ellin has written in
Mosaic, so even though I > will go back and read it again, I need more
information. Are there any books > about questioning?> > > Judy:
What wonderful questions you ask, Joy. I'm waaaaay behind you folks > in
To Understand (because I've been seriously sidetracked by a proflit that
> speaks to my current needs in writing), but I do have some thoughts about
> your dilemma. A few years ago I came to the conclusion that a lot of great
> learning happens through conversation. I went on a conversation quest, >
reading snippets and whole texts (Spiegel's Clasroom Discussion, Cole's
Knee > to Knee, Routman's Conversations, etc.). Two years ago my friend
and I > built a short unit based on 1 chapter in Routman's work; we
tried to teach > the kids how to have a literary conversation. Routman bases
this on asking > questions about text. We broke down her chapter and really
taught, modeled, > gave stems. Our goal was for small groups to sustain an
independent (no > teacher) literary conversation for at least 10 minutes. We
did this in > Spring a year ago. Last year we taught it in January and we
were amazed how > it sustained many conversations--across content. When we
taught Synthesis > at the end of the year, the kids incorporated the
questioning and > conversational techniques we'd taught them and we were
thrilled. We had > started with questions to spur conversation, but the kids
went so much > further, from questions about text to "I think..."
and "I wonder..." to > "Piggybacking on what Garfield
said..." and (my personal favorite) "You know > how Jericho said
blah blah and Jessmina said blah blah, well, if you put > those together and
then think about blah blah..."> Sorry, I've rambled and am not sure
I've described our work very well.> > > > >
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