About VWC

The Vermont Writing Collaborative is a group of teachers in Vermont (and elsewhere!) whose mission is to help all students, K - 12, write thoughtfully and effectively.
The five founding members are: Jane Miller of Burlington, Karen Kurzman of Derby Line, Eloise Ginty of Thetford, Joey Hawkins of Strafford, and Diana Leddy of Strafford. Among us, we have over 130 years of public school teaching experience at all grade levels.
In the fall of 2008, we published a book through Authentic Education (with a foreword by Grant Wiggins) called Writing for Understanding:Using Backward Design to Help All Students Write Effectively.
Since then, we have offered courses and workshops in the principles of Writing for Understanding around Vermont, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and elsewhere.

Welcome, VWC members!

June, 2011 - what a grand Summer Institute! We held four different strands, and had the honor of working with both old friends and new ones. It was a joy!
Teachers are working on a whole new batch of Writing for Understanding sequences, and those will begin appearing here. If you're a course participant, thanks for posting and giving your thoughtful feedback.
If you're a VWC follower, your feedback is most welcome as well!


Saturday, August 1, 2009

Writing for Understanding

Writing for Understanding Teacher Plan
Teacher: Steve Crimmin Class: 3rd_Date: 8-1-09 Writing genre: Report
Central Ideas

Content: European exploration and settlement of the Americas produced costs and benefits for Europeans and native people.

Reading: Reading and re-reading for background, to build understanding,

and to find information to support a focus.

Writing: In writing a report, it is important to state a focus that responds
directly to the question, to support that focus accurately and thoughtfully
with evidence from the text, and to conclude effectively.
Focusing Question

What are the costs and benefits of exploration?

Focus (answers to focusing question)

· Some explorers lost their lives, but thousands of native people lost their lives and their land.

· Trade benefitted both Europeans and native people to some extent.

· European nations became wealthy by exploiting the natural resources of the Americas.

Building Content Knowledge

· Examine world maps from the time of Columbus to modern times.

· Explore vocabulary (exploration, cost, benefit) using Frayer Model.

· Establish a two-column wall chart (Costs – Benefits) with examples in words and pictures.

· Readers’ Theater (Columbus, We Have a Problem) as a prelude to reading Encounter by Jane Yolen. (Pay attention to lengthy author’s note at end of story). Briefly discuss the text. What does it all mean?

· Have students imagine alien beings landing in their yards, planting flags, and claiming the land for the King of Pluto. Have students write about how that would feel and how they would respond.

· Read articles about Columbus and practice finding supporting information.

· Practice highlighting, taking notes, or marking supporting information.

Lessons on introduction, transitions, etc., as part of painted essay introduction and again as needed.
Structures

· Introduce painted essay model and color template.

· Create teacher model of a completed cost-benefit report about Columbus for students.

· Introduce Vermont report rubric. Discuss model in relation to rubric, and score model.

Writing/Revising

· Student pairs will research an explorer. Each partner will write an individual report about that explorer.

· Following the painted-essay model, students will write one paragraph at a time, pair share, proofread, and revise.

· Sharing with full group also will be encouraged.

Lesson Sequence

· Begin by examining examples of early maps to show how Europeans at the time of Columbus viewed the world. Compare with modern maps of Europe and the Americas.

· Frayer Model: Exploration, Costs, Benefits

· Establish 2-column wall chart (Costs – Benfits) to track examples of each as we encounter them in our reading. Record examples in words and pictures.

· Readers’ Theater. I will read “Columbus, We Have a Problem,” while students follow along. Students partner-read the script. Divide class into two groups, assign roles, and have groups perform the piece.

· Teacher read-aloud of Encounter by Jane Yolen, including lengthy author’s note at end of story. Provide copies of text for students to follow along. During first reading, students will be encouraged to mark places (?) where they have questions. Discuss. During a second reading, they will mark places with C for cost and B for benefit. Discuss.

· Ask to students to imagine aliens landing in their backyards during a family picnic. The aliens plant flags and claim the land for the King of Pluto. Have students write about how they would feel and how they might respond. Share responses.

· Introduce report focusing question: ”What are the costs and benefits of exploration?”

· Explain that students will use the painted-essay model to structure their reports. Each student will use watercolors to create a painted essay template.

· Hand out teacher written model report. Working in pairs and guided by their templates, students use colored pencils to appropriately color introduction, focus, etc.

· Teacher models process of reading and highlighting information from text to support the focus, “Columbus’s voyages of exploration resulted in costs and benefits for the native people and the explorers.”

· Pairs of students read about a famous European explorer and use index cards or sticky notes to collect background information for introductory paragraph.

· Students work on writing introductory paragraph that catches reader’s attention, includes two or three sentences of background information, and a focus statement regarding costs and benefits. Pairs share, proofread, revise, and receive teacher feedback, Self-assess using paragraphs from model.

· Follow the same procedure for supporting paragraphs and conclusion, with emphasis on finding two or three costs and benefits related to the journeys of each explorer.

· Students format and type completed drafts.

· Each student reads finished report aloud for third-grade audience.

Assessment

· Students self-assess using model and rubric.

· Teachers assesses using rubric, paying attention to structure, depth of information, effectiveness of conclusion and “so-what” statement. Look for common strengths and weaknesses. Sort reports into three groups: got it, almost there, and major problems.

Next Steps

· Prior to writing another report, plan small group instruction for students based on needs determined during assessment (structural problems, depth of supporting information, so what, etc.).

· Retain extensive focus on building background for next focusing question.

· Give more leeway for got-it students to write individual reports on next focus.

1 comment:

  1. Steve, I was drawn to your lesson because it directly relates to my lesson that I posted. It is interesting how you chose to do a report on this topic and mine is a response to literature. I think your central idea works nicely with a report. I’m quite surprised that you do exploration in 3rd grade, as my students don’t get this until the 5th grade.
    I like your focusing question, “What are the costs and benefits of exploration?” because it has so many open ended answers. You highlight a few of them but students can take these in any direction and put their own spin on it.
    You share that you are going to be using the Frayer model to teach three vocabulary words but I’m wondering how 3rd graders are going to understand the word exploitation? Depending on what students choose for an answer to the focus question will you then figure out different ways to teach kids the vocabulary that they will need to proceed? I can’t imagine that you would have time to do the Frayer model for all of the vocabulary that may come up.
    In the Building your Content section of your plan, you have some wonderful ways to help students get exposed to this exploration idea. I love that you will be using Readers Theatre as well as reading Encounter by Jane Yolen. This is a wonderful book that really gets at the heart of a Taino perspective. Might I also recommend reading parts of the Christopher Columbus Log, as this is a wonderful counter perspective. I used both of these books to teach about points of view in my 5th grade classroom last year.
    I absolutely love your idea about having students respond to aliens landing in their back yards and claiming that land for the King of Pluto. I think this is going to be really fun for students and I’m sure you are going to get a wide variety of responses. I’m wondering why you have chosen to put this alien idea in the middle of your lesson sequence? I think this would be a wonderful introduction to your overall lesson and theme. I can even see this as a seven minute writing prompt. It seems that it would be a natural lead in to introducing exploration, costs, and benefits.
    Do you already have articles picked out for students to read about Columbus and other explorers? I’m just imagining that if you don’t, this could be very time consuming for 3rd graders to find. I know that when I was doing report writing on explorers last year with my 5th graders, they had extremely difficult time finding information that was written at their level to understand. I felt like we wasted a lot of time on the research part of the report and the writing didn’t reflect much understanding.
    I like that you are going to actually use paint with the students to introduce the painted essay. Showing the students your model and having the students color the parts will be helpful. Have you thought about what your model will look like? Have you already created one yourself or are you currently working on this? It is wonderful that you are having students write their report in chunks. I think it will be important to do a lot of pair sharing and formulating the report orally before any writing takes place.
    Steve this is quite an ambitious undertaking for 3rd graders. I’ll be interested to hear about what works well and what changes you might make as you go through it. Good Luck, Windy

    ReplyDelete