Sunday, March 20, 2016

Module 4 Writing


As content area teachers, there are a few things we can do to help motivate and engage students to write.
            In “A Range of Writing Across the Content Areas,” Fisher and Frey (2013) stated that the most important things to keep in mind is for teachers was to build stamina, discussions and knowledge. As long as a teacher keeps that in mind, then the activities will follow. It is also important to start establishing writing routines in content areas. Fisher and Frey (2013) give three instructional routines that any teacher can follow and adjust according to their own classroom and subject. The first one they introduced and resonated to me the most was what they call Power Writing. Power Writing is a method for improving writing fluency through brief, timed events (Fishery & Frey, 2013, p. 97). The teacher simply gives the class a word or phrase, the students are then as to write as much and as well as they can on that topic. The teacher can do this for a minute and this routine is repeated two more times. As they finish each section, students will reread what they wrote, circling errors they made, and then they count the number of words they wrote, keeping track of this in a designated area. The goal is to have their number of words increase the more they practice this. This activity builds their writing fluency, activates knowledge, and provides teachers with information about student error patterns (Fisher & Frey, 2013, p. 97).

            I believe that this is an activity that you can make a routine in your Mathematics, Social Studies, or Science class. It also allows students to then engage in discussion about it, sharing students’ thoughts and building on other students’ ideas. The activity is flexible for any secondary classroom content area and will work on various topics. Another positive thing about this activity is that it doesn’t take up too much time, so teachers can still focus on the main part of their lessons, while working on writing as well.

            Another strategy teachers can use to engage and motivate students is annotating texts. Fisher and Frey (2013) explained that you should use this to help students write from sources to inform and explain. This is most beneficial to science and social studies, due to the fact that it is a CCSS writing anchor standard- “Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects based on focused questions, demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation” (Fisher & Frey, 2013, p. 99). Students are given texts that they must collect evidence from and turn it into an informative/explanatory prompt. When students learn how to annotate texts, they build on their critical thinking skills and learn how to carefully read texts. This will help collect their evidence that is needed. Fisher and Frey (2013) mention a teacher, Mr. Martin, who before letting students annotate texts, give them text-dependent questions to guide their annotations.





Scenario:
Subject: United States History II course
Before teacher starts Chapter 29 Unit 1 on the Civil Rights, teacher can start with Power Writing activity (Fisher & Frey, 2013). Teacher will write these words/phrases on board the board. Timing each one for 60 seconds.
·         Segregation
·         Martin Luther King Jr.
·          Civil Rights

Between each power writing students will circle errors and count correct words. This topic has not been covered since students were in primary grades, therefore this activity will help activate prior knowledge on the subject. Fisher and Frey said they had more than one student tell them that “I didn’t know what I thought until I wrote it down” (p.97).

After the three writing activities, teacher can then start a discussion on civil rights. Students can then share ideas that came to mind. This incorporates the discussion and oral fluency needed that Fisher and Frey recommend.

Teacher will then introduce Chapter 29 Civil Rights. Before they begin to read, teacher will give students their opinion writing prompt for Unit 1: “Do you think the nonviolence used by civil rights activist was a good tactic? Explain. Keep in mind the Montgomery bus boycott, television coverage of events, and sit-ins.” “Writing from sources in an important aspect of content area learning” (Fisher & Frey, 2013, p. 99).

Now students can annotate copied pages of Unit 1, keeping this question in mind. This gives students a purpose to the reading and will help keep them engaged in the lesson. Teacher will review key annotations that Fisher and Frey (2013) recommended such as underlining, asterisks, circling key words/phrases, highlighting, writing in margins or at the top and bottom of pages.
After reading the lesson, students will then be able to formulate their own opinion and find the necessary textual evidence to support their opinion.

References
Fisher, D., & Frey, N. (2013). A range of writing across the content areas. The Reading Teacher, 67, 96-101.

5 comments:

  1. Yes, I liked and learned that power writing is a good activity with students. Students can benefit since Fisher & Frey (2013) stated writing is thinking. If students are not writing fluently, they probably are not thinking fluently.

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  2. Yes, I liked and learned that power writing is a good activity with students. Students can benefit since Fisher & Frey (2013) stated writing is thinking. If students are not writing fluently, they probably are not thinking fluently.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I too used the power writing activity in my scenario. I think it's a great Do Now for students to recall what was learned and to apply it in their writing. I like how you used the power writing for social studies. It just goes to show that teachers in content areas can teach writing for their contents.

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  4. I too used the power writing activity in my scenario. I think it's a great Do Now for students to recall what was learned and to apply it in their writing. I like how you used the power writing for social studies. It just goes to show that teachers in content areas can teach writing for their contents.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I like how you laid out the potential teaching scenario in a history class - it's always interesting for me to see how teachers outside of English class would structure writing assignments. I think power writing is an effective writing tactic in any classroom, but particularly in subjects like science and history. This is a great way for students to pull out information they've learned but may have trouble reproducing on tests. Power writing increases literacy overall, so I think it can be a very strong tool for boosting writing that is truly engaged with the text.

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