Authors as Writing Mentors
As a kindergarten teacher, my goal is to make all of my students understand that writing is a form of communication. Through this blog, I will show how popular authors are writing mentors through the use of 6 Trait writing.
Miss K's Literacy Page
Writing is a key component in any educational program. Through this blog, I hope to portray different authors of picture books that use Six Traits in Writing as well as provide great literacy websites for educators to use!
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Saturday, October 15, 2011
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Last week for graduate class, I was the discussion director for an article by Don Clark about different leadership styles. After discovering my leadership type (participative), I made connections with the three main types to a college psychology class I took years ago. This connection was the correlation of leadership styles to that of parenting styles. I wanted to share this website with you as well as some interesting research articles that correlate leadership styles and emotional intelligence!
Happy Reading! :)
Happy Reading! :)
Monday, September 19, 2011
Wow! It has been awhile since I have logged on to the blog. I must admit, teaching kindergarten full-time, attending grad school, and well, just life in general has kept me busy! This quarter for grad school, I will be updating my page and including different literacy websites. This will be a work in progress, so if you would like to share a site, please feel free!
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Conventions
Conventions, in writing, are what makes the piece. It is the difference between asking a question, reading with excitement, and making the piece understandable for the audience to read.
When teaching conventions to students, there are several questions to keep in mind:
1. Did you use proper spacing? Spacing is important in order to differentiate between sentences.
2. Could another person read my writing? Is it clear?
3. Are spelling errors fixed? Did you use a dictionary or a thesaurus?
4. Did you use capital letters appropriately?
5. Did you use punctuation marks correctly?
Punctuation Takes a Vacation by Robin Pulver.Holiday House, 2004.
"On the hottest day Mr. Wright's class has ever seen, the teacher gives punctuation a vacation! Insulted, the punctuation marks take off, and a few days later postcards arrive from Take-a-Break Lake."
Minilesson:
Ohio Academic Content Standards
Writing Conventions: Punctuation and Capitalization
5. Place punctuation marks at the end of sentences.
Another phenomenal book to read about conventions is from the same author:
Nouns and Verbs Have a Field Day by Robin Pulver. Holiday House, 2007.
"The nouns and verbs decide to have some fun of their own while the kids in Mr. Wright's class are away participating in a field day. The nouns pair up with other nouns and the verbs with other verbs, until they realize they must cooperate to accomplish anything."
Minilesson:
Ohio Academic Content Standards:
Writing Conventions: Handwriting
2. Leave spaces between words when writing.
When teaching conventions to students, there are several questions to keep in mind:
1. Did you use proper spacing? Spacing is important in order to differentiate between sentences.
2. Could another person read my writing? Is it clear?
3. Are spelling errors fixed? Did you use a dictionary or a thesaurus?
4. Did you use capital letters appropriately?
5. Did you use punctuation marks correctly?
Punctuation Takes a Vacation by Robin Pulver.Holiday House, 2004.
"On the hottest day Mr. Wright's class has ever seen, the teacher gives punctuation a vacation! Insulted, the punctuation marks take off, and a few days later postcards arrive from Take-a-Break Lake."
Minilesson:
- Review punctuation with your students.
- Read the story.
- Brainstorm a list of sentences and ask the students to fill-in the correct punctuation marks.
Ohio Academic Content Standards
Writing Conventions: Punctuation and Capitalization
5. Place punctuation marks at the end of sentences.
Another phenomenal book to read about conventions is from the same author:
Nouns and Verbs Have a Field Day by Robin Pulver. Holiday House, 2007.
"The nouns and verbs decide to have some fun of their own while the kids in Mr. Wright's class are away participating in a field day. The nouns pair up with other nouns and the verbs with other verbs, until they realize they must cooperate to accomplish anything."
Minilesson:
- Review nouns and verbs with your students.
- Read story.
- After reading the story, look at cards (noun cards and verb cards). Put sentences together using the cards. Read sentences. Does the sentences sound correct?
- Have each student write sentences using the cards.
Ohio Academic Content Standards:
Writing Conventions: Handwriting
2. Leave spaces between words when writing.
Labels:
6 traits,
conventions,
kindergarten,
picture books
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Voice
Voice is the sense the reader gets that a real, honest, and personal individual is behind the writing and is speaking directly to them. When voice is evident in any writing piece, there are many pieces that fall together:
Dear Mrs. LaRue: Letters from Obedience School by Mark Teague. Scholastice, 2002.
A dog named Ike LaRue gets sent to obedience school to learn some manners. He writes letters to his owner, Mrs. LaRue, about his time at obedience school.
Minilesson: Write a letter about a time you were in trouble.
Diary of a Worm by Doreen Cronin. Harper Collins, 2003.
This is one book of a series of books, in diary form, from the perspective of a worm. Worm and Spider have adventures throughout this book that are from the months March to August.
Minilesson: Write a story from the perspective of choice by the student.
Writing Applications:
The True Story of the Three Little Pigs by Jon Scieszka. Penguin Publishing, 1998.
This story is told from the point of view of the wolf. He claims he was really not a bad wolf...
Minilesson:
Research
3. Recall information about a topic, with teacher assistance.
- The reader feels a strong connection with the writing piece. In order for this to happen, students need to ask themselves, "Does this writing sound like me?"
- The piece of writing shines with personality.
- Does the paper shine with the writer's personality and confidence?
Dear Mrs. LaRue: Letters from Obedience School by Mark Teague. Scholastice, 2002.
A dog named Ike LaRue gets sent to obedience school to learn some manners. He writes letters to his owner, Mrs. LaRue, about his time at obedience school.
Minilesson: Write a letter about a time you were in trouble.
- Take a picture walk.
- Read the story.
- Brainstorm different times that the children were in trouble.
- While the children are drawing about their experience, conference with each child to help them stay on task.
- Share stories when they are finished.
1. Listen attentively to speakers, stories, poems and songs.
2. Connect what is heard with prior knowledge and experience.
3. Follow simple oral directions.
Diary of a Worm by Doreen Cronin. Harper Collins, 2003.
This is one book of a series of books, in diary form, from the perspective of a worm. Worm and Spider have adventures throughout this book that are from the months March to August.
Minilesson: Write a story from the perspective of choice by the student.
- Discuss what you would write in a diary...emotions, celebrations, great days, bad days...
- Introduce the story. Look at the inside front cover as well as back covers of the book.
- Read story. Point out the dates at the top of each page. Point out that Worm wrote diary entries and sometimes he skipped days.
- Brainstorm a list of possibilities to write about. Write them down. For kindergarten, have the topics narrowed down to four groups. Each group gets one topic to write about. For my class, I had them go by table groups.
- In diary form, have each group write a journal entry.
- Have the students illustrate their journal entry.
- Publish. Have each group share their diaries.
Writing Applications:
- Dictate or write simple stories, using letters, words, or pictures.
The True Story of the Three Little Pigs by Jon Scieszka. Penguin Publishing, 1998.
This story is told from the point of view of the wolf. He claims he was really not a bad wolf...
Minilesson:
- Read the original story of The Three Little Pigs to build background knowledge.
- Read aloud The True Story of the Three Little Pigs to the class.
- Talk about point of view. In the original story, the three pigs are telling the story from their perspective. In the other, the wolf is telling the story.
- Use a graphic organizer (Venn) to compare and contrast the two stories.
- The following day, as a class, reconstruct a different tale, from a different point of view.
Research
3. Recall information about a topic, with teacher assistance.
Labels:
6 traits,
kindergarten,
picture books,
voice
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About Me
- Angela Kessel
- Kettering, OH, United States
- H! My name is Angela Kessel and I am a Kindergarten Teacher from Kettering Ohio. I am currently taking a Master's class in Writing K-12.