Posts Tagged Lucy Calkins

Digitized Writing Workshop

“Teach the writer then the writing” a phrase coined by Lucy Calkins that still holds true despite the fact that I have moved my fifth grade writing class into the computer lab. For several years I have embraced Lucy Calkins’ model of the Art of Teaching Writing.  It has been a journey that has not only given the students a framed sense of choice but has liberated my instruction as well.  I am simply standing on the shoulders of the good work that Lucy and so many others have already accomplished and I have transposed that writing model into a digital format.

Here is a brief overview of what our Digitized Writing Workshop looks like.

First

We are working on writing Personal Narratives and many of my first mini-lessons have been focused on Strategies for Generating Personal Narratives.  During the first 5-15 minutes of class I have the students huddled around the screen as I take notes on Our Wiki and model a particular strategy for the students.

Then

I will usually give the students some think time to get a few ideas on how they could use the particular strategy I have just modeled.  They will then turn to their writing partners and have a conversation.  We usually go around and give several students an opportunity to share their ideas with the whole group.

Next

I will ask the students to log on to the computers and sit next to their writing partners.  I then direct them to open up their Microsoft Word document and Our Wiki so they can have the tabs open and an example to refer to if needed.  During this time, the students are composing their personal narratives just as they would if they were using a Writer’s Notebook.

That is it for the moment ~ no blog, no digital collaboration through a wiki BUT this model is a scaffolding step in that direction.

While the students are composing their personal narratives I am circulating about the room taking a knee and having one on one conferences with students.  I can easily scan the room and see 15 computers at any one time to see if students are having any technical difficulties or struggling with the days work.  I am about 2 weeks into this model of a Digitized Writing Workshop and there are indeed pro’s and con’s.

Con’s

  • slow typing skills can get in the way of fluent writing
  • organizing Microsoft Word files
  • managing technical problems
  • sending and receiving documents through Blackboard

Pro’s

  • EVERY student loves Writing Workshop (based on the number of “yeah’s” shouted out when I mention that it’s time to go the computer lab)
  • I can track writing data with Microsoft Word
  • practice authentic computer skills daily
  • students can send and receive documents through Blackboard
  • I can insert comments into all Microsoft Word documents that can be considered and then deleted by students

The reality of this framework is such that not only am I trying to help children become better writers but they are also learning a technical skill set.  My ultimate goal is to help them improve their writing but to get there I must also help them attain a certain level of technical proficiency at the same time.  It’s messy at first but within a couple class periods the students are comfortable enough to manage a 30-40 minute writing experience with little to no technical difficulties.

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Re-Visioning the Writing Classroom

“Show me, don’t tell me,” a line I have no doubt lifted from the famous Lucy Calkins. In all of the writing we do in our class I am constantly asking my fifth graders to do just that, show don’t tell. “If in your story you are writing about a time when you are scared then how can you show me that with your words? If the alien you are writing about is “ugly” then describe that crazy beast in a way that will create a visual and mental image in your readers mind.

We have made incredible gains over the last couple of weeks in our writing and the students work is jumping off the page. Their word choice is strategic and well planned, they’re finding their voice, and becoming much more confident with the conventions of writing. Perhaps it’s because spring has sprung or is it something more?

So let me dig in and reflect for but a moment.

I believe the difference is the computer lab. After our planning time and the first drafts were written on paper in class I then had the students type those rough drafts using Microsoft Word at the computer lab. Their first drafts were then sent to me through the Digital Drop Box within Blackboard where I had a chance to embed comments within their work and resend it back to the student within the Digital Drop Box.

I very quickly realized that there were immediate advantages with conferencing this way and there were immediate disadvantages as well. Ultimately, I want my writing class to be a fluid time where conversations about word choice and voice are common among all but much of that writing talk disappeared and I found the Digital Drop Box became a bottle neck during class time.

So the immediate solution was to have the students print out their work so I can sit with them and write comments and suggestions all over their papers. Then they could go back to the computers and take their time with my comments and play around with their work until they found how they liked it. It really worked for me. It was fast, very business like, and gave me a chance to see immediate progress in the writer not just the writing.

Through this process however, I was able to identify an immediate gap within my class; they really don’t know how to use Microsoft Word very well. So, not only did I have mini-lessons on how to incorporate dialogue or how to use similes in their writing, but many of my mid-point lessons were about the basic skills of using Microsoft Word.

Our writing class has been at the computer lab over the last week or two and the students have discovered that Microsoft Word is a tool that can take some of the sting out of revising; they are no longer dreading having to rewrite each draft over and over by hand. Rather there has been a huge weight lifted off the shoulders of these young writers and they are free to express themselves and don’t mind the hard work or the Re-Visioning of their stories.

It has been as much a learning experience for me as it has been for the students, and as Brian Crosby would say, “it’s messy.” The look and feel of my writing class has changed. If at any time you walk into my classroom/computer lab you will see kids conferencing with one another, other students helping out with basic tech skills, other students might be fixing a printer issue, or other students discussing some other crafty cool gadget that they discovered Microsoft Word could do. These kids are talking about changing their opening paragraphs or starting with the last paragraph and moving text around and playing with words in a way that I have never really experienced before.

It is an amazingly productive time and I am so proud of how hard these kids are working.

I will post a link to their blogs so those interested can read their final copies.

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