welcome wonderful teachers! connecting reading and writing early childhood august 5, 2014

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Welcome wonderful teachers!

Connecting Reading and Writing

Early Childhood

August 5, 2014

Facilitated by:

Gina Flynn: Junior Kindergarten Teacher, Saint Robert School

Courtney Albright: Director of Curriculum and Instruction, Saint. John Vianney

Now let’s “check-in!”

Big Ideas

• Image of self as a writer• Stages of word making development• Vision—honoring the importance of making

books• Reading like a writer

What it means to be a writer

o The children ….o are writing and using that writing to make

picture books!o are given choice and can write about

their worldo are building writing stamina o are sharing their books and can read their

bookso have teachers who honor approximationso have teachers who value their writing

Focused Experiences

o Create a classroom where the children’s experiences lead to…o Problem solving and reasoningo Questioning and problem postingo Keen observationo Imagining, innovating, and respondingo Intellectual risk-takingo Thinking interdependentlyo Persistence

Importance of Bookmaking

o Picture books are familiaro Picture books expand the avenues

for meaning makingo Picture books “forces” the issue of

compositiono Picture books help children read like

writerso Picture books build staminao Making picture books is fun

Side-by-Side Teaching

o Making timeo Difference between nudging and pushingo Responsive action

Child’s Image as Self as a Writer

o Helping children want to make books

o Respecting children’s initiative

o Minimal dictation

Support Structures in Early Childhood

Preschool (K3/K4) K-2

Read Aloud Mini Lesson

Reading Like a WriterEnvisioning Writing

Published Books, Student Books, My BooksBook/Topic Choice

Side by Side Teaching Conferring

Importance of book makingTopic Choice

Always teaching (nudging vs pushing)What a child can do independently with a little support

Teaching of strategiesShare Time Share Time

AudienceTeaching (pointing out smart things a child did)

Structural Differences Preschool (K3/K4) K-2

Children choose when to write

Most children not writing every day

Children aren't writing all at the same time

Strategies appropriate for preschool

Organized by focus

Writer’s Workshop

Weekly schedule

Children are writing at the same time

Strategies appropriate for primary

Organized by units of study

Stages of Writing

• Emerging/Scribble• Pictorial/ Drawing• Pre-communicative/ Letter-like Forms--Letter Strings• Semi phonetic and Phonetic -Invented Spelling• Transitional and Conventional Spelling

Copying Environmental Print

Stages of Writing

Emerging/Scribbles

Stages of Writing

Pictorial/Drawing

Stages of Writing

Pre-communicative/Letter-like forms

Stages of Writing

Invented spelling and conventional spelling (first name)/Semi-phonetic, phonetic, and transitional.

Stages of Writing

Copying environmental print

Stages of Writing

• Transitional• Conventional• Advanced

Understandings About Bookmaking and Composition

•Text •Process•Writer

Why integration?

• What you think, you can talk about.• What you say, you can write.• What you write, you can read or someone

else can read.

Read Alouds/Mentor Text

o The same books that you read aloud are valuable models for writing!

o As you read books, suggest that children can make their own books about topics they care about.

o Use books that you write as mentor texts.

o Read a variety of textso Read texts worth readingo Read interactively

Share Time

o Purpose of picture bookso Learning from other writerso Getting idea for writingo Building identities as writers

Young children learn through…

• Play and exploration• Social interaction with adults and

other children• A “need to know”

-- Northwest Educational

Technology Consortium (2003)

The Book Nook—Not Just for Books and Not Just a Nook

a) b) c) d) e) f) g) h) i) j) k) l) m) n) o) p)

The Book Nook—Not Just for Books and Not Just a Nook

q). r). s). t). u). v). w). x). y). z).

Big Ideas for Nurturing Young Writers

• Image of self as a writer• Honoring approximations• Nudging vs. pushing• Choice• Stages of word making development• Composition dimensions• Vision—honoring the importance of making

books• Reading like a writer

Matt Glover

Acknowledging our References

http://youtu.be/VchgR02k3Qw

Acknowledging our References

Photocopied and referenced with permission from ALREADY READY by Katie Wood Ray and Matt Glover. Copyright (c) 2008 by Katie Wood Ray and Matt Glover. Published by Heinemann, Portsmouth, NH. All rights reserved.

Acknowledging our References

Photocopied and referenced with permission from ALREADY READY by Katie Wood Ray and Matt Glover. Copyright (c) 2008 by Katie Wood Ray and Matt Glover. Published by Heinemann, Portsmouth, NH. All rights reserved.

A Quick Write

• What is your first remembered experience about reading or writing?

• Share your writing with the person next to you.

• Who would like to read what you wrote?

A Quick Write

• A quick write – How do you think reading and writing are related?

• Share your writing with the person next to you.

• Who would like to read what you wrote?

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