Monday, January 21, 2019

The importance of interactive read-alouds and learning how to design a writing workshop

While I believe all students should have a chance to write about their interests so that they can find joy in writing, it’s important to guide students to become better writers. Teachers use interactive read-alouds to give students examples of good writing and to introduce various genres (Tompkins, 27). In my library, I would choose both fiction and nonfiction high-quality books to read to my students. Exposing them to a wide variety of literature in different genres would open their eyes to the many styles of writing. Once exposed to these texts, we could discuss what makes them unique and then students (working with their classroom teacher) could create their own stories using the elements they learned about from the mentor texts.

Tompkins references Heffernan’s research (2004)which found that young students needed guidance to write about topics beyond the superficial. While students may initially delight in writing about their loved ones and pets, he noticed the essays began to lack passion and students were bored with writing. However, they didn’t know what to write about next. Heffernan successfully used mentor texts to introduce students to social issues. These issues were reflected in their writings (as cited in Tompkins, p. 26).

When thinking about encouraging students to write, my inclination would be to let them write about their passions. It surprised me that even a favorite topic could grow stale, but it surprised me even more that young children could be influenced to write about deeper issues based on age-appropriate mentor texts for interactive read-alouds. Using these mentor texts appropriately would help develop young writers into critical thinkers. I also had not considered that any example of writing could be a mentor text, including, as Tompkins states, “poems, magazines, Internet articles, email messages, newspapers, and instructions manuals. (p. 27) The modern school library media specialist is expected to embrace all modes of text, including those beyond the library shelf. It would be interesting to see how I could use texts to share examples of different kinds of writing with my students.

While I haven’t led a reading/writing workshop, I believe it would be relatively easy to set up my library or classroom for optimal learning and lay the groundwork to establish a community of learners. As an adult, I have attended several writing workshops. The best ones had the students arranged in a way that allowed for easy collaboration, such as facing each other around a table even though we were focused on individual writing projects. Even better ones allowed time to share our works and receive compliments and light feedback from our peers.

What would be challenging is learning how to differentiate instruction, especially when working with struggling and advanced students in the same grade. I’m not sure yet how a librarian may need to differentiate instruction, but I do believe that all teachers (including the librarian) need to know how to meet the needs of all their students.

Tompkins provides some useful tips for differentiating instruction, including the use of tiered writing projects (p. 36) in a writing workshop. She explains that in tiered writing projects, “teachers create several tiered or related activities that focus on the same essential knowledge but vary in complexity (36).” Students work on projects with various levels of complexity, and use different mediums (create posters, write reports, etc.) to achieve their goals. Like all means of differentiating instruction, it’s important that tiering be made invisible so that students don’t make comparisons between one another.

I look forward to learning more about how to tier reading/writing workshop and differentiate instruction so that all students can be successful.

2 comments:

  1. Michelle,
    I am impressed with the way you were able to pull key ideas from Tompkins and think about how they would work in a media science curriculum. I look forward to hearing more in the coming weeks how you will continue to think about how you can implement these ideas in your own curricula as well as how you will use this information to be better prepared to support the teachers in your building as they engage in additional R/W work in their classrooms.

    In regards to the format of your blog, it is bright and engaging -- I find it a delightful reflection of your personality.

    One question -- I don't have my textbook next to me at the moment, but I'm thinking that Hefferman was a work that Tompkins cited? If so, you will want to make it clear that this was a secondary citation.

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