Hi everyone;

I just wanted to underscore the important point Jan has made here.  The
writing example she raises was really the genesis for much of what we did at
the PEBC in Denver in the early years.  We spent time writing, sharing our
writing and refining it before extrapolating lessons from our experiences
into the classroom.  It not only made the lessons so much more authentic, it
seemed to build on the real needs writers have rather than on some
curriculum list that a publisher created.  It's not that some of those
skills aren't important, but are much more easily taught and applied when
they come from the real experiences of the teacher, first, and later, of
course, from the children.  

 

The same thing is true in reading, but so much of our reading experiences
are cognitive and therefore, not visible or audible and much tougher to
define and describe.  As you know, the Dimensions and Outcomes I describe in
To Understand came directly from observing both teachers and children in the
process of coming to understand.  All I really did was to apply a set of
descriptors to what I observed-those descriptors became the Outcomes and
Dimensions.  I think the potential that you all bring to this work is to
continually observe (yourself and your kids) to discover Dimensions and
Outcomes I may have missed!! What do you observe when you closely watch
yourself and/or your kids in the process of understanding?  If we can define
and describe those observations, we can increase the likelihood that more
children will use them!  I'd be curious to hear if any of you have
discovered new Outcomes or Dimensions in your own reading and/or in your
classrooms. . . . 

 

Very best,

ellin keene 

 

 

I think it is very important for teachers to experience the dimensions of
understanding at a conscious level before trying to implement these ideas in
the classroom.  When we have experienced it, the experience becomes part of
our schema.  It helps us to understand what the students are going through
if we go through it ourselves.  The best teacher is experience.   

I was part of a 7 district collaborative on writing workshop.  One of the
things the leaders had us (coaches who were going to be training teachers)
do was to try the lesson ourselves -at an adult level.  We experienced what
it felt like to pick a topic, find a great lead that hooks the reader, how
to observe and take notes, etc...  We also were asked to keep our own
writer's notebook -well, that's what we asking the students to do.  By
experiencing it ourselves, we knew what it was like (at least for us).  It
helps build empathy for the student who has trouble picking a topic (it
wasn't all that easy for me).

 

Jan

 

_______________________________________________
Understand mailing list
Understand@literacyworkshop.org
http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/listinfo/understand_literacyworkshop.org

Reply via email to