One strategy used in the classroom that I love is their writing journals. They are writing every night about what they are reading or an open ended question from the teacher. They are finishing up their space unit and finalizing their moon journals. Every night over the first semester they were asked to look at the moon and write about their experience, what they saw, what they felt, where they where and so on. Then they were asked to sketch the moon and do some scientific observations such as where the moon was in the sky and other numerical representations for the science aspect of the class.
The teacher said she chose this project because the children were having trouble writing in complete sentences. They were able to understand subject easy enough but it was the predicate that they were having trouble with. Mrs. L told me that children have an easier time understanding active verbs, so this practice was designed to help them in writing in an active voice. They also did activities where they would come up with active verbs, dissect sentence structure and even did some linguistic trees. The students have come a long way in making their sentences interesting by using varied word choice, but they are having issues translating their skills into passive voice for their creation myth stories.
Mrs. L also told me that it is important to revisit key topics such as sentence and paragraph structure throughout the year in various different situations. Being creative is an exciting part of being a teacher, and instrumental in how well the children will learn. At the moment they are concentrating on passive voice and transitions sentences to connect paragraphs and give a better flow to their writing. The most challenging part of teaching English, according to Mrs. L, is knowing when to stop and how much to correct. She says it is hard not to correct everything about a child’s writing and it is important to make sure that even through all the suggestions you may have as a teacher that you let the child’s voice remain in their writing. I did notice that if you give a child a suggestion on how to word something or ask them what they mean and how they could say that differently that they often times take your words and do not try to use there own.
Expectations are challenging for me to pin point because everyone appears to be on slightly different levels. I think that everyone is expected to be capable of forming complete sentences, formulating paragraphs and also asking questions when they are confused. One thing I noticed is that their final drafts were done via word processor and the children were using the spell check feature! Ok I know this is hypocritical but it worries me that they depend on the feature instead of learning how to spell the word.
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
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Sorry this post is so late, I hit the save feature instead of the post :( oops
ReplyDeleteI think that it's great that they're writing every night! And what a cool project! I kinda wish that Mrs. L was my 5th grade teacher :) I really liked that they had options on what they wanted to write about (the position of the moon,how they felt, what they saw, or an open ended question). It gives guidance without the "my way or the highway" option we sometimes associate with school. Do you think that you'll incorporate some of Mrs. L's ideas and suggestions for creativity into your classroom?
ReplyDeleteDarn Gena asked the question I was gonna ask. Great minds think a like. Lets see.... Do you think that spell check can also be used to identify how to properly spell words and in turn help students learn how to spell these words? I'm not sure if that's a question or an alternative point of view maybe both. :)
ReplyDeleteGena,
ReplyDeleteYES! I love Mrs. L’s teaching strategies. She is so creative and the students really excel in the environment she creates. Some assignments are mapped out while others give the students a lot of room for creativity. I did notice that she uses the writing process with every project they do. She has her own spin on it and creative way of doing it, but it is the same idea.
Nicole
ReplyDeleteI like that the word processor identifies misspelled words, but I wish the students had to look it up in the dictionary to figure out how to spell it. Its sounds silly but there is really not enough time involved in right-clicking on the word processor and finding a word they believe is the right one. Often times the program will pick an entirely different word than the writer intended without the student recognizing it. By looking the word up, the students have the opportunity to read the definition and identify the correct spelling for the correct word.
To connect with readings we have done in class, I hare to admit that I raised my eyebrowsk a little when you said she had them doing a little light linguistic sentence diagramming.
ReplyDeleteThe diagramming drives me nuts! In the book we read for this semester, the diagramming instructins seemed a little different than the book I had last semester for intermediate grammar. And no matter which book you believe, it still makes you want to throw your hands up in the air and change your mind about loving the English language!k So the bottom line is: KUDOS TO THOSE KIDS!