Showing posts with label Narrative Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Narrative Writing. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Writing realistic fiction stories

One of my favorite parts of the school day is writing time.  I love joining together on the carpet to discuss what writers do, I love the mini-lessons that are to the point, I love hearing Martha Stewart's lullabies everyday and I love scooting in beside a writer and conferring.

This year we have incorporated Lucy Calkins' Units of Study for the Common Core.  I have to say I like it a lot better than the old Units of Study but still love to create my own lessons. Below are charts based off the charts in the book (with slight changes).
I really love the checklist for each genre.  My students are constantly at the chart or looking at their personal one inside their writing folder.



I said above that I love creating my own lessons.  If you have read my blog before you know I love to use mentor texts as examples.  In every genre, we use several books to name authors' introductions and conclusions.  It can be quite eye opening what the students notice.
For this realistic fiction chart we used Junie B. Jones, Mittens, Amelia Bedelia, and Knuffle Bunny.



For this next chart we really explore one text, I Am Too Absolutely Small for School by Lauren Child.  Everyone in my classroom loves Charlie and Lola, including me!
To prepare the chart I only have the title and the book pages.  The students decide how to label what the author is doing. 

An ABSOLUTE must for our writing time is a rubric with writing examples that we call Stage Pages.  Before the unit our first grade team reads over the rubric for the county and we create pages that look like Emerging, Progress with Support, Meeting and Exceeding.  We keep them in page protectors so we can model how to add on to a paper that isn't meeting standards or how to enhance a meeting to an exceeding story.

Three stars = meeting standards

The students and I refer to the rubric every day.  We make goals for our time each day based off the rubric and it really helps to refer to during conferring.


NOW comes the number one thing that influences my students writing....other student's writing!
Each day we start our workshop by admiring someone else's work.  I purposefully select students' work that hits on the lesson from the day before, shows tremendous growth, hits on our lesson of the day, or extends the  work we've been doing but tries something new.  By the end of the unit (20 days), I usually have selected  a page from each student.  





During the workshop, I usually try to look out for pages to admire.  I'll say to the student, "At the end of writing can I borrow your paper?"  Then I make a copy (so we can keep it up in the classroom) and then the only other thing you need is Post-Its.

Happy Writing!





Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Using Research to Write Fictional Stories

The Perfect Place for an Elf Owl
 

My reading coach handed this book off to me with the intent of encouraging our students to write their own books based off their inquiry circle research.  I read it to the kids and told them what the thought was.  They reacted by saying, "We can't do that.  How do we tell a story and use our research? It's too hard!"  I let them off the hook that day and said maybe we can think of another way to share what they've learned.  In reality I had a sneaky little plan to show them how to write a fictional book based off their research I just didn't tell them what I was up to!

While in our inquiry circles I have been researching octopuses to model my thinking and to work through the process with them.  We have been tracking our thinking all along.  Last week, I told them I wanted all our octopus tracks on one chart.  So we wrote fact after fact.  They were so proud of our research.  The next day we delved into write a story but I eased them in slowly by prompting them with questions.  It naturally flowed after that.  I was amazed by the research they included! Now they are doing their own within their inquiry circle...it's so exciting!!

Here is a document I made to help them along the way, Using Research to Write Fiction (Borders are by From the Pond; Fonts by Fonts for Peas).
The story, Octopus in Trouble, was the story that my class wrote...just genius!








Sunday, April 22, 2012

Super Sunday

My Sunday has been full of work!  My intern finished her last week of teaching...so I am back at lesson planning and creating to fulfill the lesson plans.  I'm also trying to get prepared for my week away.  I'm so excited to go to Denver for the Thinking Strategies Institute but not so pumped about the week of sub plans.

Tomorrow is our final day of our very first inquiry circle.  Three weeks of work gets accumulated into presentations.  The students have surprised me each day along this journey and I know they will do a great job tomorrow.  I have a rubric for you, which goes through each phase of  inquiry circles.



Our new writing unit, Extended Personal Narratives, begins in a week.  Here is a 10 page pack to get you started,






 Enjoy!







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